生物发光
生物发光成像
荧光素酶
体内
荧光素
临床前影像学
生物
光发射
分子成像
细胞生物学
病理
化学
生物化学
基因
医学
生物技术
光学
物理
转染
作者
Akiko Satô,Brenda A. Klaunberg,Ravi Tolwani
出处
期刊:PubMed
日期:2004-12-01
卷期号:54 (6): 631-4
被引量:52
摘要
In vivo bioluminescent imaging (BLI) is a versatile and sensitive tool that is based on detection of light emission from cells or tissues. Bioluminescence, the biochemical generation of light by a living organism, is a naturally occurring phenomenon. Luciferase enzymes, such as that from the North American firefly (Photinus pyralis), catalyze the oxidation of a substrate (luciferin), and photons of light are a product of the reaction. Optical imaging by bioluminescence allows a low-cost, noninvasive, and real-time analysis of disease processes at the molecular level in living organisms. Bioluminescence has been used to track tumor cells, bacterial and viral infections, gene expression, and treatment response. Bioluminescence in vivo imaging allows longitudinal monitoring of a disease course in the same animal, a desirable alternative to analyzing a number of animals at many time points during the course of the disease. We provide a brief introduction to BLI technology, specific examples of in vivo BLI studies investigating bacterial/viral pathogenesis and tumor growth in animal models, and highlight some future perspectives of BLI as a molecular imaging tool.
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