As other commenters have said, if it exists to aid searchability, it should be in the main text. If I'm searching for "MCVE", and I see that in the search results, I could still be none the wiser as to what it means. The title does not make it particularly obvious - "Minimal, Complete and Verifiable example" would give you either "MCAVE" or "MCV", and the term is never mentioned in the text.
Why not reword to something that introduces the term; e.g. old:
When asking a question about a problem caused by your code, you will get much better answers if you provide code people can use to reproduce the problem. That code should be…
New:
When asking a question about a problem caused by your code, you will get much better answers if you provide code people can use to reproduce the problem. We call this a "Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable Example", or "MCVE"; that means code that is...
That doesn't cover the typo version, but perhaps a new last sentence, in proper font size, could be added with a few synonyms:
Note that this particular terminology is how we normally refer to these principles on Stack Overflow; you may come upon other terms or acronyms, like "MVCE" or "SSCCE" ("Short, Self Contained, Correct (Compilable), Example"), which are basically all names for the same idea.
That way, rather than trying to game the search engine, we're actually doing what it was intended to do - give people content that matches what they're searching for.