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Featured researches published by Janggun Jo.


Nature Communications | 2017

In vivo quantitative imaging of tumor pH by nanosonophore assisted multispectral photoacoustic imaging

Janggun Jo; Chang H. Lee; Raoul Kopelman; Xueding Wang

Changes of physiological pH are correlated with several pathologies, therefore the development of more effective medical pH imaging methods is of paramount importance. Here, we report on an in vivo pH mapping nanotechnology. This subsurface chemical imaging is based on tumor-targeted, pH sensing nanoprobes and multi-wavelength photoacoustic imaging (PAI). The nanotechnology consists of an optical pH indicator, SNARF-5F, 5-(and-6)-Carboxylic Acid, encapsulated into polyacrylamide nanoparticles with surface modification for tumor targeting. Facilitated by multi-wavelength PAI plus a spectral unmixing technique, the accuracy of pH measurement inside the biological environment is not susceptible to the background optical absorption of biomolecules, i.e., hemoglobins. As a result, both the pH levels and the hemodynamic properties across the entire tumor can be quantitatively evaluated with high sensitivity and high spatial resolution in in vivo cancer models. The imaging technology reported here holds the potential for both research on and clinical management of a variety of cancers.Background optical absorption of several biomolecules impedes an effective in vivo pH imaging in tumors. Here, the authors developed a visible light-based in vivo pH mapping method by coupling photoacoustic imaging and pH-responsive modified nanoparticles that selectively target tumor cells.


Analytical Chemistry | 2017

Ion-Selective Nanosensor for Photoacoustic and Fluorescence Imaging of Potassium

Chang Heon Lee; Jeff Folz; Wuliang Zhang; Janggun Jo; Joel W. Y. Tan; Xueding Wang; Raoul Kopelman

Ion-selective optodes (ISOs), the optical analog of ion-selective electrodes, have played an increasingly important role in chemical and biochemical analysis. Here we extend this technique to ion-selective photoacoustic optodes (ISPAOs) that serve at the same time as fluorescence-based ISOs, and apply it specifically to potassium (K+). Notably, the potassium ion is one of the most abundant cations in biological systems, involved in numerous physiological and pathological processes. Furthermore, it has been recently reported that the presence of abnormal extracellular potassium concentrations in tumors suppresses the immune responses and thus suppresses immunotherapy. However, unfortunately, sensors capable of providing potassium images in vivo are still a future proposition. Here, we prepared an ion-selective potassium nanosensor (NS) aimed at in vivo photoacoustic (PA) chemical imaging of the extracellular environment, while being also capable of fluorescence based intracellular ion-selective imaging. This potassium nanosensor (K+ NS) modulates its optical properties (absorbance and fluorescence) according to the potassium concentration. The K+ NS is capable of measuring potassium, in the range of 1 mM to 100 mM, with high sensitivity and selectivity, by ISPAO based measurements. Also, a near infrared dye surface modified K+ NS allows fluorescence-based potassium sensing in the range of 20 mM to 1 M. The K+ NS serves thus as both PA and fluorescence based nanosensor, with response across the biologically relevant K+ concentrations, from the extracellular 5 mM typical values (through PA imaging) to the intracellular 150 mM typical values (through fluorescence imaging).


Scientific Reports | 2017

A Functional Study of Human Inflammatory Arthritis Using Photoacoustic Imaging

Janggun Jo; Guan Xu; Meng Cao; April Marquardt; Sheeja Francis; Girish Gandikota; Xueding Wang

By using our dual-modality system enabling simultaneous real-time ultrasound (US) and photoacoustic (PA) imaging of human peripheral joints, we explored the potential contribution of PA imaging modality to rheumatology clinic. By performing PA imaging at a single laser wavelength, the spatially distributed hemoglobin content reflecting the hyperemia in synovial tissue in metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joints of 16 patients were imaged, and compared to the results from 16 healthy controls. In addition, by performing PA imaging at two laser wavelengths, the spatially distributed hemoglobin oxygenation reflecting the hypoxia in inflammatory joints of 10 patients were imaged, and compared to the results from 10 healthy controls. The statistical analyses of the PA imaging results demonstrated significant differences (p < 0.001) in quantified hemoglobin content and oxygenation between the unequivocally arthritic joints and the normal joints. Increased hyperemia and increased hypoxia, two important physiological biomarkers of synovitis reflecting the increased metabolic demand and the relatively inadequate oxygen delivery in affected synovium, can both be objectively and non-invasively evaluated by PA imaging. The proposed dual-modality system has the potential of providing additional diagnostic information over the traditional US imaging approaches and introducing novel imaging biomarkers for diagnosis and treatment evaluation of inflammatory arthritis.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2017

Photoacoustic evaluation of human inflammatory arthritis in human joints

Janggun Jo; Guan Xu; April Marquardt; Gandikota Girish; Xueding Wang

Photoacoustic (PA) imaging combined with ultrasonography (US) holds promise to offer a novel and powerful tool for clinical management of inflammatory arthritis, including early detection and treatment monitoring. As a complement to US, PA imaging can assess additional hemodynamic changes in inflammatory synovium, including hyperemia and hypoxia, both important and early physiological biomarkers of synovitis reflecting the increased metabolic demand and the relatively inadequate oxygen delivery of the inflammatory synovial tissue. In this study on arthritis patients and normal volunteers, the targeted metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joints were imaged using our real-time US-PA dual-modality imaging system. The blood volume and the blood oxygenation in the segmented synovium were quantified, and the results from the arthritis patients were compared to those from the normal volunteers. This initial study on human subjects demonstrated that PA imaging, by working at the optical wavelengths that are sensitive to oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin, is capable of identifying and characterizing inflammation in joints based on the detection of hemodynamic changes.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Lifetime-resolved photoacoustic (LPA) spectroscopy for monitoring oxygen change and photodynamic therapy (PDT)

Janggun Jo; Chang Heon Lee; Raoul Kopelman; Xueding Wang

The Methylene Blue loaded Polyacrylamide Nanoparticles (MB-PAA NPs) are used for oxygen sensing and Photodynamic therapy (PDT), a promising therapeutic modality employed for various tumors, with distinct advantages of delivery of biomedical agents and protection from other bio-molecules overcoming inherent limitations of molecular dyes. Lifetime-resolved photoacoustic spectroscopy using quenched-phosphorescence method is applied with MB-PAA NPs so as to sense oxygen, while the same light source is used for PDT. The dye is excited by absorbing 650 nm wavelength light from a pump laser to reach triplet state. The probe laser at 810 nm wavelength is used to excite the first triplet state at certain delayed time to measure the dye lifetime which indicates oxygen concentration. The 9L cells (106 cells/ml) incubated with MB-PAA NP solution are used for monitoring oxygen level change during PDT in situ test. The oxygen level and PDT efficacy are confirmed with a commercial oximeter, and fluorescence microscope imaging and flow cytometry results. This technique with the MB-PAA NPs allowed us to demonstrate a potential non-invasive theragnostic operation, by monitoring oxygen depletion during PDT in situ, without the addition of secondary probes. Here, we demonstrate this theragnostic operation, in vitro, performing PDT while monitoring oxygen depletion. We also show the correlation between O2 depletion and cell death.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Light Emitting Diodes based Photoacoustic Imaging and Potential Clinical Applications

Yunhao Zhu; Guan Xu; Jie Yuan; Janggun Jo; Girish Gandikota; Hakan Demirci; Toshitaka Agano; Naoto Sato; Yusuke Shigeta; Xueding Wang

Using low cost and small size light emitting diodes (LED) as the alternative illumination source for photoacoustic (PA) imaging has many advantages, and can largely benefit the clinical translation of the emerging PA imaging technology. Here, we present our development of LED-based PA imaging integrated with B-mode ultrasound. To overcome the challenge of achieving sufficient signal-to-noise ratio by the LED light that is orders of magnitude weaker than lasers, extensive signal averaging over hundreds of pulses is performed. Facilitated by the fast response of the LED and the high-speed driving as well as the high pulse repetition rate up to 16 kHz, B-mode PA images superimposed on gray-scale ultrasound of a biological sample can be achieved in real-time with frame rate up to 500 Hz. The LED-based PA imaging could be a promising tool for several clinical applications, such as assessment of peripheral microvascular function and dynamic changes, diagnosis of inflammatory arthritis, and detection of head and neck cancer.


Photoacoustics | 2018

Photoacoustic tomography for human musculoskeletal imaging and inflammatory arthritis detection

Janggun Jo; Chao Tian; Guan Xu; Jeffrey Sarazin; Elena Schiopu; Girish Gandikota; Xueding Wang

With the capability of assessing high resolution optical contrast in soft tissues, photoacoustic imaging (PAI) can offer valuable structural and functional information of human joints, and hold potential for diagnosis and treatment monitoring of inflammatory arthritis. Recent studies have demonstrated that PAI can map 2D and 3D morphology of the cartilage, synovium, vascularity, and bone tissue in human peripheral joints. Initial trials with patients affected by inflammatory arthritis have also suggested that PAI can detect the hemodynamic properties in articular tissues as well as their changes due to active inflammation. This review focuses on the recent progress in technical development of PAI for human musculoskeletal imaging and inflammation detection. PAI can provide non-invasive and non-ionizing serial measurements for monitoring of therapeutic interventions with the potential for higher sensitivity than existing imaging modalities such as ultrasound. However, further investigation is needed to validate the value of PAI in rheumatology clinical settings.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Photoacoustic imaging of inflammatory arthritis in human joints

Janggun Jo; Guan Xu; April Marquardt; Sheeja Francis; Jie Yuan; Dhanuj Girish; Gandikota Girish; Xueding Wang

The ducal imaging with photoacoustic imaging (PAI) that is an emerging technology and clinical ultrasound imaging that is an established modality is developed for the imaging of early inflammatory arthritis. PAI is sensitive to blood volume, not limited by flow like ultrasound, holding great promise for the earliest detection of increase in blood volume and angiogenesis - a key early finding inflammation PAI has the capability of assessing inflammation in superficial human soft tissues, offering potential benefits in diagnosis, treatment and monitoring of inflammatory arthritis. PAI combined with ultrasonography (US), is a real time dual-modality system developed and tested to identify active synovitis in metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joints of 10 arthritis patients and 10 normal volunteers. Photoacoustic images of the joints were acquired at 580-nm laser wavelength, which provided the desired balance between the optical contrast of hemoglobin over bone cortex and the imaging depth. Confirmed by US Doppler imaging, the results from ten patients and ten normal volunteers demonstrated satisfactory sensitivity of PAI in assessing enhanced blood flow due to active synovitis. This preliminary study suggests that photoacoustic imaging, by identifying early increase in blood volume, related to increased vascularity, a hallmark of joint inflammation, could be a valuable supplement to musculoskeletal US.


Photons Plus Ultrasound: Imaging and Sensing 2018 | 2018

LED based photoacoustic imaging of human inflammatory arthritis (Conference Presentation)

Janggun Jo; Guan Xu; Yunhao Zhu; Gandikota Girish; Elena Schiopu; Xueding Wang

Presenting highly sensitive functional information in subsurface tissue with spatial resolution comparable to ultrasound imaging, the emerging photoacoustic (PA) imaging may shed new lights to early diagnosis and treatment monitoring of human inflammatory arthritis. This paper will introduce our recent development of LED-based PA imaging and its application to human inflammatory arthritis. Facilitated by the high pulse repetition rate of the LED arrays, extensive averaging of PA signal can be performed, which boosts the signal-to-noise ratio of the LED-based PA imaging system to levels comparable to laser-based PA imaging systems. In the experiments on arthritis patients and normal volunteers, each target finger joint is scanned using the LED-based PA imaging system which is integrated with a B-scan ultrasound (US) facilitating dual imaging modalities simultaneously. 2D PA and US of a sagittal section in the joint can be acquired in a real-time fashion with a frame rate up to 30 Hz; while a series of 2D images acquired along the cross sections of the joint can be reconstructed into a 3D image for analyzing the volumetric biomarkers of joint inflammation. In this initial study on human subjects, we have confirmed the feasibility of LED-based PA imaging in detecting and characterizing arthritic joints by evaluating the hemodynamic changes associated with soft-tissue inflammation. PA imaging findings are compared to the results from Doppler US acquired using a commercial US unit. This study demonstrates that the LED-based PA imaging can be developed into a point-of-care diagnostic tool for rheumatology and radiology clinics.


internaltional ultrasonics symposium | 2017

Chemical imaging of tumor microenvironment by using multi-spectral photoacoustic imaging powered by functional nanosensors

Janggun Jo; Chang Lee; Raoul Kopelman; Xueding Wang

Tumor acidosis, as a consequence of increased fermentative metabolism and poor perfusion, plays an important role in almost all steps of invasive growth and metastasis. Successful measurements of the extracellular pH of the tumor microenvironment can contribute to clinical management of cancer and basic science research. We herein report on an in vivo tumor pH mapping nanotechnology that includes the development of a pH sensing nanoprobe and multi-wavelength photoacoustic imaging (PAI) integrated with ultrasound imaging.

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Guan Xu

University of Michigan

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