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MicroCAT "Sees" Hidden Mouse DefectsThe white mouse sleeps on a narrow wooden trough outside a new high-resolution X-ray computed tomography (CT) system at ORNL called a MicroCAT scanner. The anesthetized mouse is gently inserted into the instrument, where it is scanned for about 20 minutes. Mike Paulus and Shaun Gleason, researchers in ORNL's Instrumentation and Controls Division who developed the MicroCAT scanner, note that the scans show spots indicating the locations of lung tumors of 1 to 2 millimeters in diameter. The mouse is then returned to its cage. The mouse is scanned several times over the next few days to get a profile of tumor growth in its lungs.
The mouse has tumors because it has been injected with lung cancer cells. Steve Kennel, a researcher in ORNL's Life Sciences Division (LSD), creates mice with lung tumors to test how well they respond to a special kind of radioimmunotherapy. When Kennel decides it is time to treat the white mouse, he injects it with a monoclonal antibody tagged with radioactive bismuth-213 (a decay product from ORNL's stockpile of uranium-233). This monoclonal antibody is like a smart bomb because it homes in on the tumor's blood vessels, where the radioactive bismuth-213 parks. The alpha radiation from the radioisotope destroys the nearby tumor tissue. The mouse is scanned repeatedly over a period of days both during and after treatment. The MicroCAT pictures reveal that the tumors are progressively disappearing, indicating that the treatment works. (See Curing Cancer in Mice.)
The MicroCAT scanner, which was developed using internal funding from ORNL's Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program, has been used to provide three-dimensional images for other small-animal studies:
A second-generation MicroCAT instrument is be-ing used for high-throughput screening of mutant mice for internal defects in ORNL's Laboratory for Comparative and Functional Genomics (Mouse House). The device saves time and money because biologists can screen mice individually for internal mutations in 7 to 20 minutes, without sacrificing and dissecting the animals. To improve accuracy and speed in assessing mouse organs for defects and damage, Gleason has developed an automatic organ-recognition algorithm for CT images of the mouse. Gleason has shown that in the CT scan, the software can zero in on the mouse's kidneys and analyze differences in kidney texture that would show up in mice with polycystic kidney disease. He has also used the algorithm to calculate the approximate size of the lung and heart and evaluate the lung's level of fluid or amount of scar tissue, as an indication of its health or disease state. Paulus has also used the MicroCAT scanner for research collaborations that do not involve small animals. For example, he has worked with plant geneticist Gerald Tuskan of ORNL's Environmental Sciences Division to image three-dimensional details of wood cells and cell wall thicknesses in samples of loblolly pine (see Controlling Carbon in Hybrid Poplar Trees). Paulus is writing an algorithm that will enable automatic measurement of the size and shape of wood cells. Paulus and Gleason have developed a new instrument that combines X-ray imaging with single-photon-emission-computed tomography (SPECT). This MicroCAT SPECT scanning instrument could be used to image lung tumors in mice and detect radioactivity from the treated tumors, to map their precise location. With support from UT-Battelle, Paulus and Gleason are on entrepreneurial leave two days a week to run their new company, which manufactures MicroCAT scanners. The companyImTek, Inc. (www.imtekinc.com)has sold and delivered five MicroCAT scanners and is filling orders for three more for 2001. Purchasers include drug discovery companies, universities, and biotechnology firms. Related Web sites ORNL
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