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Dive into the research topics where Joris Tchouala Nofiele is active.

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Featured researches published by Joris Tchouala Nofiele.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Complementary Strategies for Developing Gd-Free High-Field T1 MRI Contrast Agents Based on MnIII Porphyrins

Weiran Cheng; Inga E. Haedicke; Joris Tchouala Nofiele; Francisco Martinez; Kiran Beera; Timothy J. Scholl; Hai-Ling Margaret Cheng; Xiao-an Zhang

Mn(III) porphyrin (MnP) holds the promise of addressing the emerging challenges associated with Gd-based clinical MRI contrast agents (CAs), namely, Gd-related adverse effect and decreasing sensitivity at high clinical magnetic fields. Two complementary strategies for developing new MnPs as Gd-free CAs with optimized biocompatibility were established to improve relaxivity or clearance rate. MnPs with distinct and tunable pharmacokinetic properties can consequently be constructed for different in vivo applications at clinical field of 3 T.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2014

Gadolinium-free T1 contrast agents for MRI: Tunable pharmacokinetics of a new class of manganese porphyrins

Hai-Ling Margaret Cheng; Inga E. Haedicke; Weiran Cheng; Joris Tchouala Nofiele; Xiao-an Zhang

To evaluate a new class of manganese porphyrins with tunable pharmacokinetics as potential gadolinium (Gd)‐free T1 agents for contrast‐enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).


PLOS ONE | 2013

Ultrashort echo time for improved positive-contrast manganese-enhanced MRI of cancer.

Joris Tchouala Nofiele; Hai-Ling Margaret Cheng

Objective Manganese (Mn) is a positive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent that has been used to obtain physiological, biochemical, and molecular biological information. There is great interest to broaden its applications, but a major challenge is to increase detection sensitivity. Another challenge is distinguishing regions of Mn-related signal enhancement from background tissue with inherently similar contrast. To overcome these limitations, this study investigates the use of ultrashort echo time (UTE) and subtraction UTE (SubUTE) imaging for more sensitive and specific determination of Mn accumulation. Materials and Methods Simulations were performed to investigate the feasibility of UTE and SubUTE for Mn-enhanced MRI and to optimize imaging parameters. Phantoms containing aqueous Mn solutions were imaged on a MRI scanner to validate simulations predictions. Breast cancer cells that are very aggressive (MDA-MB-231 and a more aggressive variant LM2) and a less aggressive cell line (MCF7) were labeled with Mn and imaged on MRI. All imaging was performed on a 3 Tesla scanner and compared UTE and SubUTE against conventional T 1-weighted spoiled gradient echo (SPGR) imaging. Results Simulations and phantom imaging demonstrated that UTE and SubUTE provided sustained and linearly increasing positive contrast over a wide range of Mn concentrations, whereas conventional SPGR displayed signal plateau and eventual decrease. Higher flip angles are optimal for imaging higher Mn concentrations. Breast cancer cell imaging demonstrated that UTE and SubUTE provided high sensitivity, with SubUTE providing background suppression for improved specificity and eliminating the need for a pre-contrast baseline image. The SubUTE sequence allowed the best distinction of aggressive breast cancer cells. Conclusions UTE and SubUTE allow more sensitive and specific positive-contrast detection of Mn enhancement. This imaging capability can potentially open many new doors for Mn-enhanced MRI in vascular, cellular, and molecular imaging.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Dll4-notch signalling blockade synergizes combined ultrasound-stimulated microbubble and radiation therapy in human colon cancer xenografts.

Ahmed El Kaffas; Joris Tchouala Nofiele; Anoja Giles; Song Cho; Stanley K. Liu; Gregory J. Czarnota

Tumour vasculature acts as an essential lifeline for tumour progression and facilitates metastatic spread. Novel vascular targeting strategies aiming to sustain vascular shutdown could potentially induce substantial damage, resulting in a significant tumour growth delay. We investigated the combination of two novel complementary vascular targeting agents with radiation therapy in a strategy aiming to sustain vascular disruption. Experiments were carried out with delta-like ligand 4 (Dll4) blockade (angiogenesis deregulator) treatment administered in combination with a radiation-based vascular destruction treatment in a highly aggressive well-perfused colon cancer tumour line implanted in female athymic nude mice. Tumours were treated with permutations of radiation, ultrasound-stimulated microbubbles (USMB) and Dll4 monoclonal antibody (mAb). Tumour vascular response was assessed with three-dimensional power Doppler ultrasound to measure active flow and immunohistochemistry. Tumour response was assessed with histochemical assays and longitudinal measurements of tumour volume. Our results suggest a significant tumour response in animals treated with USMB combined with radiation, and Dll4 mAb, leading to a synergistic tumour growth delay of up to 24 days. This is likely linked to rapid cell death within the tumour and a sustained tumour vascular shutdown. We conclude that the triple combination treatments cause a vascular shutdown followed by a sustained inhibition of angiogenesis and tumour cell death, leading to a rapid tumour vascular-based ‘collapse’ and a significant tumour growth delay.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2015

Gadolinium‐free extracellular MR contrast agent for tumor imaging

Joris Tchouala Nofiele; Inga E. Haedicke; Yong Le K. Zhu; Xiao-an Zhang; Hai-Ling Margaret Cheng

To evaluate a new formulation of manganese porphyrin as a potential gadolinium (Gd)‐free extracellular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent for dynamic contrast‐enhanced (DCE) MRI of tumors.


Molecular Imaging | 2014

Noninvasive manganese-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging for early detection of breast cancer metastatic potential

Joris Tchouala Nofiele; Gregory J. Czarnota; Hai-Ling Margaret Cheng

Cancer cells with a high metastatic potential will more likely escape and form distant tumors. Once the cancer has spread, a cure is rarely possible. Unfortunately, metastasis often proceeds unnoticed until a secondary tumor has formed. The culprit is that current imaging-based cancer screening and diagnosis are limited to assessing gross physical changes, not the earliest cellular changes that drive cancer progression. The purpose of this study is to develop a novel noninvasive magnetic resonance (MR) cellular imaging capability for characterizing the metastatic potential of breast cancer and enable early cancer detection. This MR method relies on imaging cell uptake of manganese, an endogenous calcium analogue and an MR contrast agent, to detect aggressive cancer cells. Studies on normal breast epithelial cells and three breast cancer cell lines, from nonmetastatic to highly metastatic, demonstrated that aggressive cancer cells appeared significantly brighter on MR as a result of altered cell uptake of manganese. In vivo results in nude rats showed that aggressive tumors that are otherwise unseen on conventional gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging are detected after manganese injection. This cellular MR imaging technology brings a critically needed, unique dimension to cancer imaging by enabling us to identify and characterize metastatic cancer cells at their earliest appearance.Cancer cells with a high metastatic potential will more likely escape and form distant tumors. Once the cancer has spread, a cure is rarely possible. Unfortunately, metastasis often proceeds unnoticed until a secondary tumor has formed. The culprit is that current imaging-based cancer screening and diagnosis are limited to assessing gross physical changes, not the earliest cellular changes that drive cancer progression. The purpose of this study is to develop a novel noninvasive magnetic resonance (MR) cellular imaging capability for characterizing the metastatic potential of breast cancer and enable early cancer detection. This MR method relies on imaging cell uptake of manganese, an endogenous calcium analogue and an MR contrast agent, to detect aggressive cancer cells. Studies on normal breast epithelial cells and three breast cancer cell lines, from nonmetastatic to highly metastatic, demonstrated that aggressive cancer cells appeared significantly brighter on MR as a result of altered cell uptake of manganese. In vivo results in nude rats showed that aggressive tumors that are otherwise unseen on conventional gadolinium-enhanced MR imaging are detected after manganese injection. This cellular MR imaging technology brings a critically needed, unique dimension to cancer imaging by enabling us to identify and characterize metastatic cancer cells at their earliest appearance.


Molecular Imaging | 2014

Manganese-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging for early detection and characterization of breast cancers.

Mosa Alhamami; Reza Bayat Mokhtari; Tameshwar Ganesh; Joris Tchouala Nofiele; Herman Yeger; Hai-Ling Margaret Cheng

Very early cancer detection is the key to improving cure. Our objective was to investigate manganese (Mn)-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for very early detection and characterization of breast cancers. Eighteen NOD scid gamma mice were inoculated with MCF7, MDA, and LM2 breast cancer cells and imaged periodically on a 3 T scanner beginning on day 6. T1-weighted imaging and T1 measurements were performed before and 24 hours after administering MnCl2. At the last imaging session, Gd-DTPA was administered and tumors were excised for histology (hematoxylin-eosin and CD34 staining). All mice, except for two inoculated with MCF7 cells, developed tumors. Tumors enhanced uniformly on Mn and showed clear borders. Early small tumors (# 5 mm3) demonstrated the greatest enhancement with a relative R1 (1/T1) change of 1.57 ± 0.13. R1 increases correlated with tumor size (r = −.34, p − .04). Differences in R1 increases among the three tumor subtypes were most evident in early tumors. Histology confirmed uniform cancer cell distribution within tumor masses and vasculature in the periphery, which was consistent with rim-like enhancement on Gd-DTPA. Mn-enhanced MRI is a promising approach for detecting very small breast cancers in vivo and may be valuable for very early cancer detection.Very early cancer detection is the key to improving cure. Our objective was to investigate manganese (Mn)-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for very early detection and characterization of breast cancers. Eighteen NOD scid gamma mice were inoculated with MCF7, MDA, and LM2 breast cancer cells and imaged periodically on a 3 T scanner beginning on day 6. T1-weighted imaging and T1 measurements were performed before and 24 hours after administering MnCl2. At the last imaging session, Gd-DTPA was administered and tumors were excised for histology (hematoxylin-eosin and CD34 staining). All mice, except for two inoculated with MCF7 cells, developed tumors. Tumors enhanced uniformly on Mn and showed clear borders. Early small tumors (# 5 mm3) demonstrated the greatest enhancement with a relative R1 (1/T1) change of 1.57 ± 0.13. R1 increases correlated with tumor size ( r = -.34, p - .04). Differences in R1 increases among the three tumor subtypes were most evident in early tumors. Histology confirmed uniform cancer cell distribution within tumor masses and vasculature in the periphery, which was consistent with rim-like enhancement on Gd-DTPA. Mn-enhanced MRI is a promising approach for detecting very small breast cancers in vivo and may be valuable for very early cancer detection.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Establishment of a Lung Metastatic Breast Tumor Xenograft Model in Nude Rats

Joris Tchouala Nofiele; Hai-Ling Margaret Cheng

Objective Larger animal models provide relevant tumor burden in the development of advanced clinical imaging methods for non-invasive cancer detection and diagnosis, and are especially valuable for studying metastatic disease. Most available experimental models, however, are based on immune-compromised mice. To lay the foundation for studying spontaneous metastasis using non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), this study aims to establish a highly metastatic breast cancer xenograft model in nude rats. Materials and Methods A highly metastatic variant of human adenocarcinoma MDA-MB-231 known as LM2 was inoculated into nude rats. Orthotopic and subcutaneous (flank) sites were compared, with half of the orthotopic injections guided by ultrasound imaging. MRI with gadolinium contrast administration was performed weekly beginning on Day 6 and ending on Day 104. Excised tumors were assessed on histology using hematoxylin and eosin and CD34. Fishers exact test was used to compare successful tumor induction amongst different inoculation methods. Results Primary LM2 tumors were established orthotopically in all cases under ultrasound-guided injection, and none otherwise (p = 0.0028). Contrast-enhanced MRI revealed rapidly progressing tumors that reached critical size (15 mm diameter) in 2 to 3 weeks after inoculation. MRI and histology findings were consistent: LM2 tumors were characterized by low vascularity confined to the tumor rim and large necrotic cores with increasing interstitial fluid pressure. Conclusions The metastatic LM2 breast tumor model was successfully established in the mammary fat pads of nude rats, using ultrasound needle guidance as a non-invasive alternative to surgery. This platform lays the foundation for future development and application of MRI to study spontaneous metastasis and different stages throughout the metastatic cascade.


Molecular Imaging | 2014

Ultrashort Echo Time Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Lung Using a High-Relaxivity T1 Blood-Pool Contrast Agent

Joris Tchouala Nofiele; Weiran Cheng; Inga E. Haedicke; Tameshwar Ganesh; Xiao-an Zhang; Hai-Ling Margaret Cheng

The lung remains one of the most challenging organs to image using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) due to intrinsic rapid signal decay. However, unlike conventional modalities such as computed tomography, MRI does not involve radiation and can provide functional and morphologic information on a regional basis. Here we demonstrate proof of concept for a new MRI approach to achieve substantial gains in a signal to noise ratio (SNR) in the lung parenchyma: contrast-enhanced ultrashort echo time (UTE) imaging following intravenous injection of a high-relaxivity blood-pool manganese porphyrin T1 contrast agent. The new contrast agent increased relative enhancement of the lung parenchyma by over 10-fold compared to gadolinium diethylene triamine pentaacetic acid (Gd-DTPA), and the use of UTE boosted the SNR by a factor of 4 over conventional T1-weighted gradient echo acquisitions. The new agent also maintains steady enhancement over at least 60 minutes, thus providing a long time window for obtaining high-resolution, high-quality images and the ability to measure a number of physiologic parameters.The lung remains one of the most challenging organs to image using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) due to intrinsic rapid signal decay. However, unlike conventional modalities such as computed tomography, MRI does not involve radiation and can provide functional and morphologic information on a regional basis. Here we demonstrate proof of concept for a new MRI approach to achieve substantial gains in a signal to noise ratio (SNR) in the lung parenchyma: contrast-enhanced ultrashort echo time (UTE) imaging following intravenous injection of a high-relaxivity blood-pool manganese porphyrin T1 contrast agent. The new contrast agent increased relative enhancement of the lung parenchyma by over 10-fold compared to gadolinium diethylene triamine pentaacetic acid (Gd-DTPA), and the use of UTE boosted the SNR by a factor of 4 over conventional T1-weighted gradient echo acquisitions. The new agent also maintains steady enhancement over at least 60 minutes, thus providing a long time window for obtaining high-resolution, high-quality images and the ability to measure a number of physiologic parameters.


Cancer Research | 2014

Abstract 1220: Investigation of the biological properties of human breast cancer in a nude rat model

Reza Bayat Mokhtari; Joris Tchouala Nofiele; Syed S. Islam; Herman Yeger; Hai-Ling Margaret Cheng

Proceedings: AACR Annual Meeting 2014; April 5-9, 2014; San Diego, CA Developing imaging technology for cancer diagnosis and treatment monitoring is best performed on larger pre-clinical animal models recapitulating tumor growth and metastasis more similar to that found in humans. Such models are amenable to morphological and functional imaging techniques at spatial resolutions appropriate for animal imaging and, translatable to human imaging. In comparison to mouse xenografts, rat models offer the advantages of clinical imaging capabilities, development of xenograft and metastatic models, in orthotopic sites. Human breast cancer cell lines MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 show a variable take rate in mice, ∼ 68% incurring considerable cost and time. Having a more reproducible method is needed for breast cancer studies. Here we present evidence for development of a novel method in the immune-compromised nude rats. Spheroids grown under stem cell conditions were derived from human breast adenocarcinoma estrogen dependent (MCF-7, ZR-75-1) and independent (MDA-MB-231) lines, and xenografted in both subcutaneous and orthotopic (fat pad) sites in the nude rat. To verify that rat tumors could be studied in detail at spatial resolutions achievable on a clinical 3 Tesla scanner, high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging was performed to identify vascular, viable, and necrotic tumor regions. The breast cancer phenotype and was confirmed by immunohistochemistry for ER and HER2. Tumors were characterized with proliferation marker Ki67, vascularization by CD34 and VEGF, and presence of hypoxic regions by HIF1α. Our results indicated that spheroids from all three lines readily generated tumors independent of exogenous estrogen. MRI is an effective and sensitive method for investigating the biological behavior and vascularization of breast cancer. These findings offer a potential novel method for pre-clinical study and investigation of human breast cancer. Citation Format: Reza Bayat Mokhtari, Joris Tchouala Nofiele, Syed S. Islam, Herman Yeger, Hai-Ling Margaret Cheng. Investigation of the biological properties of human breast cancer in a nude rat model. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 105th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2014 Apr 5-9; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2014;74(19 Suppl):Abstract nr 1220. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2014-1220

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Francisco Martinez

University of Western Ontario

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Gregory J. Czarnota

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

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Timothy J. Scholl

University of Western Ontario

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