Maresca David, Sawyer Daniel P, Renaud Guillaume, Lee-Gosselin Audrey, Shapiro Mikhail G
Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, 91125, USA.
Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, 91125, USA.
Phys Rev X. 2018 Oct-Dec;8(4). doi: 10.1103/physrevx.8.041002. Epub 2018 Oct 4.
The basic physics of sound waves enables ultrasound to visualize biological tissues with high spatial and temporal resolution. Recently, this capability was enhanced with the development of acoustic biomolecules - proteins with physical properties enabling them to scatter sound. The expression of these unique air-filled proteins, known as gas vesicles (GVs), in cells allows ultrasound to image cellular functions such as gene expression , providing ultrasound with its analog of optical fluorescent proteins. Acoustical methods for the detection of GVs are now required to maximize the impact of this technology in biology and medicine. We previously engineered GVs exhibiting a nonlinear scattering behavior in response to acoustic pressures above 300 kPa, and showed that amplitude-modulated (AM) ultrasound pulse sequences that both excite the linear and nonlinear GV scattering regimes were highly effective at distinguishing GVs from linear scatterers like soft biological tissues. Unfortunately, the specificity of AM ultrasound imaging is systematically compromised by the nonlinearity added by the GVs to propagating waves, resulting in strong image artifacts from linear scatterers downstream of GV inclusions. To address this issue, we present an imaging paradigm, cross-amplitude modulation (xAM), which relies on cross-propagating plane-wave transmissions of finite aperture X-waves to achieve quasi artifact-free imaging of GVs. The xAM method derives from counter-propagating wave interaction theory which predicts that, in media exhibiting quadratic elastic nonlinearity like biological tissue, the nonlinear interaction of counter-propagating acoustic waves is inefficient. By transmitting cross-propagating plane-waves, we minimize cumulative nonlinear interaction effects due to collinear wave propagation, while generating a transient wave-amplitude modulation at the two plane-waves' intersection. We show in both simulations and experiments that residual xAM nonlinearity due to wave propagation decreases as the plane-wave cross-propagation angle increases. We demonstrate in tissue-mimicking phantoms that imaging artifacts distal to GV inclusions decrease as the plane-wave cross-propagation angle opens, nearing complete extinction at angles above 16.5 degrees. Finally, we demonstrate that xAM enables highly specific imaging of GVs located in the gastrointestinal tract, a target of prime interest for future cellular imaging. These results advance the physical facet of the emerging field of biomolecular ultrasound, and are also relevant to synthetic ultrasound contrast agents.
声波的基本物理特性使超声能够以高空间和时间分辨率对生物组织进行可视化成像。最近,随着声学生物分子——具有能够散射声音的物理特性的蛋白质——的发展,这种能力得到了增强。这些独特的充满空气的蛋白质,即气胞(GVs),在细胞中的表达使超声能够对细胞功能(如基因表达)进行成像,为超声提供了类似于光学荧光蛋白的物质。现在需要声学方法来检测GVs,以最大限度地发挥这项技术在生物学和医学中的影响。我们之前设计了一种GVs,在高于300 kPa的声压下表现出非线性散射行为,并表明既激发线性又激发非线性GV散射模式的调幅(AM)超声脉冲序列在区分GVs与诸如软生物组织等线性散射体方面非常有效。不幸的是,AM超声成像的特异性会因GVs给传播波增加的非线性而系统性地受到损害,导致在GV内含物下游的线性散射体产生强烈的图像伪影。为了解决这个问题,我们提出了一种成像模式,交叉调幅(xAM),它依赖于有限孔径X波的交叉传播平面波传输来实现对GVs的准无伪影成像。xAM方法源自反向传播波相互作用理论,该理论预测,在像生物组织这样表现出二次弹性非线性的介质中,反向传播声波的非线性相互作用效率低下。通过传输交叉传播的平面波,我们将由于共线波传播引起的累积非线性相互作用效应降至最低,同时在两个平面波的交点处产生瞬态波幅调制。我们在模拟和实验中都表明, 由于波传播导致的残余xAM非线性会随着平面波交叉传播角度的增加而降低。我们在仿组织体模中证明,随着平面波交叉传播角度的增大,GV内含物远端的成像伪影会减少,在角度大于16.5度时几乎完全消失。最后,我们证明xAM能够对位于胃肠道中的GVs进行高特异性成像,胃肠道是未来细胞成像的主要关注目标。这些结果推动了生物分子超声新兴领域的物理层面发展,并且也与合成超声造影剂相关。