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1.
Bombesin is a tetradecapeptide neurohormone that binds to gastrin-releasing peptide receptors (GRPR). GRPRs have been found in a variety of cancers including invasive breast and prostate tumors. The peptide MP2346 (DOTA-(Pro(1),Tyr(4))-bombesin(1-14)) was designed to bind to these GRP receptors. This study was undertaken to evaluate radiolabeled MP2346 as a positron emission tomography (PET) imaging agent. MP2346 was radiolabeled, in high radiochemical purity, with the positron-emitting nuclides (64)Cu (t(1/2) = 12.7 h, beta+ = 19.3%, E(avg) = 278 keV) and (86)Y (t(1/2) = 14.7 h, beta+ = 33%, E(avg) = 664 keV). (64)Cu-MP2346 and (86)Y-MP2346 were studied in vitro for cellular internalization by GRPR-expressing PC-3 (human prostate adenocarcinoma) cells. Both (64)Cu- and (86)Y-MP2346 were studied in vivo for tissue distribution in nude mice with PC-3 tumors. Biodistribution in PC3 tumor-bearing mice demonstrated higher tumor uptake, but lower liver retention, in animals injected with (86)Y-MP2346 compared to (64)Cu-MP2346. Receptor-mediated uptake was confirmed by a significant reduction in uptake in the PC-3 tumor and other receptor-rich tissues by coinjection of a blockade. Small animal PET/CT imaging was carried out in mice bearing PC-3 tumors and rats bearing AR42J tumors. It was possible to delineate PC-3 tumors in vivo with (64)Cu-MP2346, but superior (86)Y-MP2346-PET images were obtained due to lower uptake in clearance organs and lower background activity. The (86)Y analogue demonstrated excellent PET image quality in models of prostate cancer for the delineation of the GRPR-rich tumors and warrants further investigation.  相似文献   

2.
The gastrin-releasing peptide receptor (GRPR) is overexpressed on a variety of tumor types and has been targeted with radiolabeled peptides for detection and therapy of these cancers. Analogues of the 14 amino acid bombesin (BN) peptide have been radiolabeled with both gamma- and positron-emitting radionuclides for detection of GRPR-expressing tumors. We have previously evaluated BN analogues radiolabeled with the positron-emitter, copper-64 (64Cu), that contained various aliphatic linkers placed between the BN peptide and the 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid (DOTA) chelator. These studies showed that the analogues could be used for positron-emission tomographic (PET) imaging of GRPR-positive tumors in mice but clinical translation would be hindered by significant uptake in background tissues. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine if the use of amino acid linkers placed between the DOTA chelate and the BN peptide would reduce nontarget tissue uptake, while maintaining good prostate tumor uptake. The linkers studied utilized three amino acid combinations of glycine (G), serine (S), or glutamic acid (E). In vitro assays in PC-3 cells showed that the glutamic acid-containing linkers had poor binding and internalization, while the other analogues had IC50 values <100 nM and good internalization. In vivo, these same analogues demonstrated tumor-specific uptake and good imaging characteristics that were comparable to, or better than the previously reported 64Cu-labeled DOTA-BN analogues. Overall, this study shows that BN analogues containing amino acid linkers can be used for the PET imaging of GRPR-expressing prostate cancer and that these linkers lead to lower background tissue uptake.  相似文献   

3.
Multimerization of peptides can improve the binding characteristics of the tracer by increasing local ligand concentration and decreasing dissociation kinetics. In this study, a new bombesin homodimer was developed based on an ε-aminocaproic acid-bombesin(7–14) (Aca-bombesin(7–14)) fragment, which has been studied for targeting the gastrin-releasing peptide receptor (GRPR) in prostate cancer. The bombesin homodimer was conjugated to 6-hydrazinopyridine-3-carboxylic acid (HYNIC) and labeled with 99mTc for SPECT imaging. The in vitro binding affinity to GRPR, cell uptake, internalization and efflux kinetics of the radiolabeled bombesin dimer were investigated in the GRPR-expressing human prostate cancer cell line PC-3. Biodistribution and the GRPR-targeting potential were evaluated in PC-3 tumor-bearing athymic nude mice. When compared with the bombesin monomer, the binding affinity of the bombesin dimer is about ten times lower. However, the 99mTc labeled bombesin dimer showed a three times higher cellular uptake at 4 h after incubation, but similar internalization and efflux characters in vitro. Tumor uptake and in vivo pharmacokinetics in PC-3 tumor-bearing mice were comparable. The tumor was visible on the dynamic images in the first hour and could be clearly distinguished from non-targeted tissues on the static images after 4 h. The GRPR-targeting ability of the 99mTc labeled bombesin dimer was proven in vitro and in vivo. This bombesin homodimer provides a good starting point for further studies on enhancing the tumor targeting activity of bombesin multimers.  相似文献   

4.
The overexpression of neuropeptide receptors observed in many cancers provides an attractive target for tumor imaging and therapy. Bombesin is a peptide exhibiting a high affinity for the gastrin releasing peptide (GRP) receptor, which is overexpressed by a variety of tumors such as breast or prostate cancer. In the present study, we have evaluated if the bombesin analogue [N(alpha)-histidinyl acetate]bombesin(7-14), radiolabeled with the novel [99mTc(OH(2))(3)(CO)(3)]+, has the potential to be used as a diagnostic radiopharmaceutical. Receptor saturation studies, carried out on the GRP receptor-expressing PC-3 human prostate cancer cell line, revealed for [99mTc(CO)(3)-N(alpha)-histidinyl acetate]bombesin(7-14) K(d) values in the subnanomolar range. Competitive binding assays, using the cold rhenium(I)-labeled analogue as a surrogate for the 99mTc-conjugate, also showed high affinity binding. Incubation of the radioconjugate with PC-3 cells resulted in a rapid temperature- and time-dependent specific internalization. At 37 degrees C more than 70% was internalized within the first 15 min and remained constant up to 2 h. Despite the weak proteolytic stability of [99mTc(CO)(3)-N(alpha)-histidinyl acetate]bombesin(7-14) in vitro, biodistribution studies, performed in PC-3 tumor-bearing mice, showed low uptake in the tumor (0.89 +/- 0.27% ID/g 30 min pi) but high uptake into the pancreas (7.11 +/- 3.93% ID/g 30 min pi), a GRP receptor-positive organ. Blockade experiment (coinjection of 300 microg bombesin/mouse with the radioligand) showed specificity of the uptake. Despite the low tumor uptake, tumor-to-blood ratios of 2.0 and 2.7 and tumor-to-muscle ratios of 8.9 and 8.0 were obtained at 30 min and 1.5 h postinjection, respectively. The promising results merit the future in vivo investigation of 99mTc/188Re-tricarbonyl-labeled bombesin analogues.  相似文献   

5.
Yang CT  Kim YS  Wang J  Wang L  Shi J  Li ZB  Chen X  Fan M  Li JJ  Liu S 《Bioconjugate chemistry》2008,19(10):2008-2022
Radiolabeled organic cations, such as triphenylphosphonium (TPP), represents a new class of radiotracers for imaging cancers and the transport function of multidrug resistance P-glycoproteins (particularly MDR1 Pgp) by single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) or positron emission tomography (PET). This report presents the synthesis and biological evaluation of (64)Cu-labeled 2-(diphenylphosphoryl)ethyldiphenylphosphonium (TPEP) cations as novel PET radiotracers for tumor imaging. Biodistribution studies were performed using the athymic nude mice bearing subcutaneous U87MG human glioma xenografts to explore the impact of linkers, bifunctional chelators (BFCs), and chelates on biodistribution characteristics of the (64)Cu-labeled TPEP cations. Metabolism studies were carried out using normal athymic nude mice to determine the metabolic stability of four (64)Cu radiotracers. It was found that most (64)Cu radiotracers described in this study have significant advantages over (99m)Tc-Sestamibi for their high tumor/heart and tumor/muscle ratios. Both BFCs and linkers have significant impact on biological properties of (64)Cu-labeled TPEP cations. For example, (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-TPEP) has much lower liver uptake and better tumor/liver ratios than (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-TPP), suggesting that TPEP is a better mitochondrion-targeting molecule than TPP. Replacing DO3A with DO2A results in (64)Cu(DO2A-xy-TPEP) (+), which has a lower tumor uptake than (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-TPEP). Substitution of DO3A with NOTA-Bn leads to a significant decrease in tumor uptake for (64)Cu(NOTA-Bn-xy-TPEP). The use of DOTA-Bn to replace DO3A has little impact on the tumor uptake, but the tumor/liver ratio of (64)Cu(DOTA-Bn-xy-TPEP) (-) is not as good as that of (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-TPEP), probably due to the aromatic benzene ring in DOTA-Bn. Addition of an extra acetamido group in (64)Cu(DOTA-xy-TPEP) results in a lower liver uptake, but tumor/liver ratios of (64)Cu(DOTA-xy-TPEP) and (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-TPEP) are comparable due to a faster tumor washout of (64)Cu(DOTA-xy-TPEP). Substitution of xylene with the PEG 2 linker also leads to a significant reduction in both tumor and liver uptake. MicroPET imaging studies on (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-TPEP) in athymic nude mice bearing U87MG glioma xenografts showed that the tumor was clearly visualized as early as 1 h postinjection with very high T/B contrast. There was very little metabolite (<2%) detectable in the urine and feces samples for (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-TPEP), (64)Cu(DOTA-Bn-xy-TPEP)(-), and (64)Cu(NOTA-Bn-xy-TPEP). Considering both tumor uptake and T/B ratios (particularly tumor/heart, tumor/liver, and tumor/muscle), it was concluded that (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-TPEP) is a promising PET radiotracer for imaging the MDR-negative tumors.  相似文献   

6.
Bombesin (BBN)-based radiolabeled peptides exhibit promising properties for targeted imaging of gastrin-releasing peptide receptors (GRPR)-positive tumors. The aim of this study was to evaluate with positron emission tomography (PET) the pharmacokinetic and imaging properties of two novel BBN-based radiolabeled peptides, (64)Cu/and (68)Ga/NOTA-PEG-BBN(6-14), for diagnosis of breast and prostate cancers using small animal models. Competitive binding assays on T47D breast and PC3 prostate cancer cells showed that the affinity for GRPR depends on the complexed metal and can vary up to a factor of about 3; (64)Cu/NOTA-PEG-BBN(6-14) was found to have the lowest inhibition constant (1.60 ± 0.59 nM). (64)Cu/and (68)Ga/NOTA-PEG-BBN(6-14) presented similar cell uptake on T47D and PC3 cells and were stable in vivo. Biodistribution studies of radiolabeled peptides carried out in Balb/c and tumor-bearing Balb/c nude mice showed that (64)Cu/NOTA-PEG-BBN(6-14) presented higher GRPR-mediated uptake in pancreas and adrenal glands, but comparable PC3 tumor uptake as (68)Ga/NOTA-PEG-BBN(6-14). Finally, receptor-dependent responses were observed during blocking studies with unlabeled peptide in both biodistribution and small-animal PET imaging studies. Our results confirmed the dependence of the affinity and pharmacokinetics of BBN-based radiopeptides on the complexed radiometal. Interspecies differences between mouse and human GRPR binding properties were also noted in these preclinical studies. Considering their good imaging characteristics, both (64)Cu/NOTA-PEG-BBN(6-14) and (68)Ga/NOTA-PEG-BBN(6-14) are promising candidates for GRPR-targeted PET imaging of breast and prostate cancers.  相似文献   

7.
The gastrin releasing peptide receptor (GRP-R) is overexpressed on a number of tumors and cancer cell lines including pancreas, prostate, breast, gastrointestinal, and small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Radiolabeled bombesin (BBN) analogues have exhibited high binding affinity and specificity to the GRP-R. A bombesin analogue with an antagonist targeting vector at the C-terminus, DOTA-aminohexanoyl-[D-Phe(6), Leu-NHCH 2CH 2CH3(13), des Met(14)] BBN[6-14] (1, "Bomproamide"), has been synthesized and displays high binding affinity (IC50 = 1.36 +/- 0.09 nM) against (125)I-Tyr (4)-BBN in in vitro competitive assays using PC-3 cells. Maximum internalization of (111)In-1 reached 14% in PC-3 cells after 45 min of incubation. Rapid (0.25 h PI) and high (12.21 +/- 3.2%ID/g) pancreatic uptake of (111)In-1 was observed in healthy CF-1 mice, and 90% of the activity was blocked by coinjection of 100 mug of BBN. Rapid (0.25 h PI) and high uptake (6.90 +/- 1.06%ID/g) was observed in PC-3 prostate cancer xenografts in SCID mice, as well as visualized clearly in a SPECT/CT study. These results support the use of a bombesin construct with an antagonist C-terminal vector as a candidate of choice for specific in vivo imaging of tumors overexpressing GRP-receptors.  相似文献   

8.
[(11)C]Choline has been evaluated as a positron emission tomography (PET) biomarker for assessment of established human prostate cancer tumor models. [(11)C]Choline was prepared by the reaction of [(11)C]methyl triflate with 2-dimethylaminoethanol (DMAE) and isolated and purified by solid-phase extraction (SPE) method in 60-85% yield based on [(11)C]CO(2), 15-20 min overall synthesis time from end of bombardment (EOB), 95-99% radiochemical purity and specific activity >0.8 Ci/micromol at end of synthesis (EOS). The biodistribution of [(11)C]choline was determined at 30 min post iv injection in prostate cancer tumor models C4-2, PC-3, CWR22rv, and LNCaP tumor-bearing athymic mice. The results showed the accumulation of [(11)C]choline in these tumors was 1.0% dose/g in C4-2 mouse, 0.4% dose/g in PC-3 mice, 3.2% dose/g in CWR22rv mice, and 1.4% dose/g in LNCaP mice; the ratios of tumor/muscle (T/M) and tumor/blood (T/B) were 2.3 (T/M, C4-2), 1.4 (T/M, PC-3), 2.5 (T/M, CWR22rv), 1.2 (T/M, LNCaP) and 2.6 (T/B, C4-2), 2.6 (T/B, PC-3), 7.8 (T/B, CWR22rv), 3.2 (T/B, LNCaP), respectively. The micro-PET imaging of [(11)C]choline in prostate cancer tumor models was acquired from a C4-2, PC-3, CWR22rv, or LNCaP implanted mouse at 30 min post iv injection of 1 mCi of the tracer using a dedicated high resolution (<3 mm full-width at half-maximum) small FOV (field-of-view) PET imaging system, IndyPET-II scanner, developed in our laboratory, which showed the accumulation of [(11)C]choline in C4-2, PC-3, CWR22rv, or LNCaP tumor implanted in a nude athymic mouse. The initial dynamic micro-PET imaging data indicated the average T/M ratios were approximately 3.0 (C4-2), 2.1 (PC-3), 3.5 (CWR22rv), and 3.3 (LNCaP), respectively, which showed the tumor accumulation of [(11)C]choline in all four tumor models is high. These results suggest that there are significant differences in [(11)C]choline accumulation between these different tumor types, and these differences might offer some useful measure of tumor biological process.  相似文献   

9.
This report presents the synthesis and evaluation of (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-ACR) (DO3A-xy-ACR = 2,6-bis(dimethylamino)-10-(4-((4,7,10-tris(carboxymethyl)-1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecan-1-yl)methyl)benzyl)acridin-10-ium) as a radiotracer for imaging tumors in athymic nude mice bearing U87MG glioma xenografts by PET (positron emission tomography). The biodistribution data suggested that (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-ACR) was excreted mainly through the renal system with >65% of injected radioactivity being recovered from urine samples at 1 h postinjection (p.i.). The tumor uptake of (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-ACR) was 1.07 ± 0.23, 1.58 ± 0.55, 2.71 ± 0.66, 3.47 ± 1.19, and 3.52 ± 1.72%ID/g at 0.5, 1, 2, 4, and 24 h p.i., respectively. (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-ACR) had very high liver uptake (31.90 ± 3.98, 24.95 ± 5.64, 15.20 ± 4.29, 14.09 ± 6.82, and 8.18 ± 1.27%ID/g at 0.5, 1, 2, 4, and 24 h p.i., respectively) with low tumor/liver ratios. MicroPET studies showed that the tumors were clearly visualized as early as 30 min p.i. in the glioma-bearing mouse administered with (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-ACR). The high liver radioactivity accumulation was also seen. (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-ACR) had a relatively high metabolic stability during excretion via both renal and hepatobiliary routes, but it was completely decomposed in the liver homogenate. We explored the localization mechanism of Cu(DO3A-xy-ACR) using both U87MG human glioma and the cultured primary U87MG glioma cells. The results from the cellular staining assays showed that (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-ACR) is able to localize in the mitochondria of living U87MG glioma cells due to the enhanced negative mitochondrial potential as compared to normal cells. Although (64)Cu(DO3A-xy-ACR) is not an ideal PET radiotracer for tumor imaging due to its high liver uptake, the results from this study strongly suggest that (64)Cu-labeled acridinium cations are indeed able to localize in the energized mitochondria of tumor cells.  相似文献   

10.
Bombesin receptors are under intense investigation as molecular targets since they are overexpressed in several prevalent solid tumors. We rationally designed and synthesized a series of modified bombesin (BN) peptide analogs to study the influence of charge and spacers at the N-terminus, as well as amino acid substitutions, on both receptor binding affinity and pharmacokinetics. This enabled development of a novel 64/67Cu-labeled BN peptide for PET imaging and targeted radiotherapy of BN receptor-positive tumors. Our results show that N-terminally positively charged peptide ligands had significantly higher affinity to human gastrin releasing peptide receptor (GRPr) than negatively charged or uncharged ligands (IC50: 3.2±0.5 vs 26.3±3.5 vs 41.5±2.5 nM). The replacement of Nle14 by Met, and deletion of D-Tyr6, further resulted in 8-fold higher affinity. Contrary to significant changes to human GRPr binding, modifications at the N-terminal and at the 6th, 11th, and 14th position of BN induced only slight influences on affinity to mouse GRPr. [CuII]-CPTA-[βAla11] BN(7–14) ([CuII]-BZH7) showed the highest internalization rate into PC-3 cells with relatively slow efflux because of its subnanomolar affinity to GRPr. Interestingly, [64/67Cu]-BZH7 also displayed similar affinities to the other 2 human BN receptor subtypes. In vivo studies showed that [64/67Cu]-BZH7 had a high accumulation in PC-3 xenografts and allowed for clear-cut visualization of the tumor in PET imaging. In addition, a CPTA-glycine derivative, forming a hippurane-type spacer, enhanced kidney clearance of the radiotracer. These data indicate that the species variation of BN receptor plays an important role in screening radiolabeled BN. As well, the positive charge from the metallated complex at the N-terminal significantly increases affinity to human GRPr. Application of these observations enabled the novel ligand [64/67Cu]-BZH7 to clearly visualize PC-3 tumors in vivo. This study provides a strong starting point for optimizing radiopeptides for targeting carcinomas that express any of the BN receptor subtypes.  相似文献   

11.
Ren G  Webster JM  Liu Z  Zhang R  Miao Z  Liu H  Gambhir SS  Syud FA  Cheng Z 《Amino acids》2012,43(1):405-413
Molecular imaging of human epidermal growth factor receptor type 2 (HER2) expression has drawn significant attention because of the unique role of the HER2 gene in diagnosis, therapy and prognosis of human breast cancer. In our previous research, a novel cyclic 2-helix small protein, MUT-DS, was discovered as an anti-HER2 Affibody analog with high affinity through rational protein design and engineering. MUT-DS was then evaluated for positron emission tomography (PET) of HER2-positive tumor by labeling with two radionuclides, 68Ga and 18F, with relatively short half-life (t1/2<2 h). In order to fully study the in vivo behavior of 2-helix small protein and demonstrate that it could be a robust platform for labeling with a variety of radionuclides for different applications, in this study, MUT-DS was further radiolabeled with 64Cu or 111In and evaluated for in vivo targeting of HER2-positive tumor in mice. Design 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid (DOTA) conjugated MUT-DS (DOTA-MUT-DS) was chemically synthesized using solid phase peptide synthesizer and I2 oxidation. DOTA-MUT-DS was then radiolabeled with 64Cu or 111In to prepare the HER2 imaging probe (64Cu/111In-DOTA-MUT-DS). Both biodistribution and microPET imaging of the probe were evaluated in nude mice bearing subcutaneous HER2-positive SKOV3 tumors. DOTA-MUT-DS could be successfully synthesized and radiolabeled with 64Cu or 111In. Biodistribution study showed that tumor uptake value of 64Cu or 111In-labeled DOTA-MUT-DS was 4.66±0.38 or 2.17±0.15%ID/g, respectively, in nude mice bearing SKOV3 xenografts (n=3) at 1 h post-injection (p.i.). Tumor-to-blood and tumor-to-muscle ratios for 64Cu-DOTA-MUT-DS were attained to be 3.05 and 3.48 at 1 h p.i., respectively, while for 111In-DOTA-MUT-DS, they were 2.04 and 3.19, respectively. Co-injection of the cold Affibody molecule ZHER2:342 with 64Cu-DOTA-MUT-DS specifically reduced the SKOV3 tumor uptake of the probe by 48%. 111In-DOTA-MUT-DS displayed lower liver uptake at all the time points investigated and higher tumor to blood ratios at 4 and 20 h p.i., when compared with 64Cu-DOTA-MUT-DS. This study demonstrates that the 2-helix protein based probes, 64Cu/111In DOTA-MUT-DS, are promising molecular probes for imaging HER2-positive tumor. Two-helix small protein scaffold holds great promise as a novel and robust platform for imaging and therapy applications.  相似文献   

12.
Somatostatin receptors (SSTr) are overexpressed in a wide range of neuroendocrine tumors, making them excellent targets for nuclear imaging and therapy, and radiolabeled somatostatin analogues have been investigated for positron emission tomography imaging and radionuclide therapy of SSTr-positive tumors, especially of the subtype-2 (SSTr2). The aim of this study was to develop a somatostatin analogue, Tyr(3)-octreotate (Y3-TATE), conjugated to a novel cross-bridged macrocyclic chelator, 11-carboxymethyl-1,4,8,11-tetraazabicyclo[6.6.2]hexadecane-4-methanephosphonic acid (CB-TE1A1P). Unlike traditional cross-bridged macrocycles, such as 4,11-bis(carboxymethyl)-1,4,8,11-tetraazabicyclo[6.6.2]hexadecane (CB-TE2A), CB-TE1A1P-Y3-TATE was radiolabeled with (64)Cu in high purity and high specific activity using mild conditions. Saturation binding assays revealed that (64)Cu-CB-TE1A1P-Y3-TATE had comparable binding affinity but bound to more binding sites in AR42J rat pancreatic tumor cell membranes than (64)Cu-CB-TE2A-Y3-TATE. Both radiopharmaceuticals showed comparable uptake in SSTr2 positive tissues in AR42J tumor-bearing rats. (64)Cu-CB-TE1A1P-Y3-TATE demonstrated improved blood clearance compared to (64)Cu-CB-TE2A-Y3-TATE, as the tumor/blood ratios of (64)Cu-CB-TE1A1P-Y3-TATE were shown to be significantly higher than those of (64)Cu-CB-TE2A-Y3-TATE at 4 and 24 h postinjection. (64)Cu-CB-TE1A1P-Y3-TATE, in spite of a relatively high kidney uptake, accumulated less in nontarget organs such as liver, lung, and bone. Small animal PET/CT imaging of (64)Cu-CB-TE1A1P-Y3-TATE in AR42J tumor bearing rats validated significant uptake and good contrast in the tumor. This study suggests that CB-TE1A1P is a promising bifunctional chelator for (64)Cu-labeled for Y3-TATE, owing to high binding affinity and target tissue uptake, the ability to radiolabel the agent at lower temperatures, and improved tumor/nontarget organ ratios over (64)Cu-CB-TE2A-Y3-TATE.  相似文献   

13.
Optimal PET imaging of tumors with radiolabeled engineered antibodies requires, among other parameters, matching blood clearance and tumor uptake with the half-life of the engineered antibody. Although diabodies have favorable molecular sizes (50 kDa) for rapid blood clearance (t(1/2) = 30-60 min) and are bivalent, thereby increasing tumor uptake, they exhibit substantial kidney uptake as their major route of clearance, which is especially evident when they are labeled with the PET isotope (64)Cu (t(1/2) = 12 h). To overcome this drawback, diabodies may be conjugated to PEG, a modification that increases the apparent molecular size of the diabody and reduces kidney uptake without adversely affecting tumor uptake or the tumor to blood ratio. We show here that site-specific attachment of monodispersed PEGn of increasing molecular size (n = 12, 24, and 48) can uniformly increase the apparent molecular size of the PEG-diabody conjugate, decrease kidney uptake, and increase tumor uptake, the latter due to the increased residence time of the conjugate in the blood. Since the monodispersed PEGs were preconjugated to the chelator DOTA, the conjugates were able to bind radiometals such as (111)In and (64)Cu that can be used for SPECT and PET imaging, respectively. To allow conjugation of the DOTA-PEG to the diabody, the DOTA-PEG incorporated a terminal cysteine conjugated to a vinyl sulfone moiety. In order to control the conjugation chemistry, we have engineered a surface thiolated diabody that incorporates two cysteines per monomer (four per diabody). The thiolated diabody was expressed and purified from bacterial fermentation and only needs to be reduced prior to conjugation to the DOTA-PEGn-Cys-VS. This novel imaging agent (a diabody with DOTA-PEG48-Cys-VS attached to introduced thiols) gave up to 80%ID/g of tumor uptake with a tumor to blood ratio (T/B) of 8 at 24 h when radiolabeled with (111)In and 37.9% ID/g of tumor uptake (T/B = 8) at 44 h when radiolabeled with (64)Cu in PET imaging in an animal model. Tumor uptake was significantly improved from the 50% ID/g at 24 h observed with diabodies that were pegylated on surface lysine residues. Importantly, there was no loss of immunoreactivity of the site-specific Cys-conjugated diabody to its antigen (TAG-72) compared to the parent, unconjugated diabody. We propose that thiolated diabodies conjugated to DOTAylated monodisperse PEGs have the potential for superior SPECT and PET imaging in a clinical setting.  相似文献   

14.
Solid lipid nanoparticles (SLNs) are submicrometer (1-1000 nm) colloidal carriers developed in the past decade as an alternative system to traditional carriers (emulsions, liposomes, and polymeric nanoparticles) for intravenous applications. Because of their potential as drug carriers, there is much interest in understanding the in vivo biodistribution of SLNs following intravenous (i.v.) injection. Positron emission tomography (PET) is an attractive method for investigating biodistribution but requires a radiolabeled compound. In this work, we describe a method to radiolabel SLN for in vivo PET studies. A copper specific chelator, 6-[p-(bromoacetamido)benzyl]-1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane-N,N',N',N'-tetraacetic acid (BAT), conjugated with a synthetic lipid, was incorporated into the SLN. Following incubation with (64)CuCl(2) for 1 h at 25 °C in 0.1 M NH(4)OAc buffer (pH 5.5), the SLNs (~150 nm) were successfully radiolabeled with (64)Cu (66.5% radiolabeling yield), exhibiting >95% radiolabeled particles following purification. The (64)Cu-SLNs were delivered intravenously to mice and imaged with PET at 0.5, 3, 20, and 48 h post injection. Gamma counting was utilized post imaging to confirm organ distributions. Tissue radioactivity (% injected dose/gram, %ID/g), obtained by quantitative analysis of the images, suggests that the (64)Cu-SLNs are circulating in the bloodstream after 3 h (blood half-life ~1.4 h), but are almost entirely cleared by 48 h. PET and gamma counting demonstrate that approximately 5-7%ID/g (64)Cu-SLNs remain in the liver at 48 h post injection. Stability assays confirm that copper remains associated with the SLN over the 48 h time period and that the biodistribution patterns observed are not from free, dissociated copper. Our results indicate that SLNs can be radiolabeled with (64)Cu, and their biodistribution can be quantitatively evaluated by in vivo PET imaging and ex vivo gamma counting.  相似文献   

15.
Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) has emerged as an important molecular target for the treatment of several oncological diseases. A couple of molecular probes based on Olaparib scaffold have been developed by incorporation of F-18 or fluorophore for positron emission tomography (PET) or optical imaging in several types of tumor. PARP has been reported overexpressed in mesothelioma. We hereby synthesized an analogue of Olaparib containing DOTA moiety and radiolabeled it with Cu-64 to evaluate its utility of PET tracer for mesothelioma. The Cu-64 labeling was conveniently achieved at 90% yield with final compound at >99% radiochemistry purity. The biodistribution and PET imaging were performed at 0.5, 1, 2 and 18 h to confirm the in vivo tumor targeting. The tumor uptake in study group was significant higher than that in control group (3.45 ± 0.47% ID/g vs 2.26 ± 0.30% ID/g) and tumor were clearly detected by PET imaging. These results suggest the feasibility to develop an Olaparib-based theranostic agent for mesothelioma.  相似文献   

16.
Cholecystokinin (CCK) receptors are overexpressed in several human tumor types, such as medullary thyroid carcinomas and small cell lung cancers. Several ligands for the CCK2 receptor (CCK2R) have been developed for radionuclide targeting of these tumors. In this study, we evaluated whether radiolabeled DOTA-sCCK8 and its stabilized derivative, DOTA-sCCK8[Phe(2)(p-CH2SO3H), Nle(3,6)], are suitable for imaging of CCK2R-positive tumors, using DOTA-MG0 as a reference. In vivo targeting of CCK2R-positive tumors with DOTA-sCCK8, DOTA-sCCK8[Phe(2)(p-CH2SO3H), Nle(3,6)], and DOTA-MG0, labeled with (111)In or (68)Ga, was evaluated in BALB/c nude mice with a subcutaneous A431-CCK2R tumor. Biodistribution studies and single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and positron emission tomography (PET) were performed at 1 hour postinjection. All peptides specifically accreted in the CCK2R-expressing tumors. Both (111)In-DOTA-sCCK8 and (111)In-DOTA-sCCK8[Phe(2)(p-CH2SO3H), Nle(3,6)] showed good tumor retention (4.65% ID/g and 5.44% ID/g, respectively, at 4 hours postinjection). On PET/computed tomographic (CT) and SPECT/CT scans, subcutaneous A431-CCK2R tumors were clearly visualized with low uptake of sCCK8 peptides in the intestines. Whereas radiolabeled DOTA-MG0 showed high kidney uptake (70% ID/g), the sCCK8 peptides showed low uptake in the kidneys. Sulfated CCK8 analogues combined high tumor uptake with low retention in the kidney and are therefore promising tracers for imaging of CCK2R-positive tumors.  相似文献   

17.
Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), which is highly expressed in both localized and metastatic prostate cancer (PCa), is an ideal target for imaging and therapy of PCa. We previously reported radiolabeled asymmetric urea derivatives as a PSMA-targeting radiotracer for single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and positron emission tomography (PET) imaging. Here, based on these radiopharmaceutical probes, we designed a novel near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent imaging probe (800CW-SCE) by chemical conjugation between IRDye 800CW-Maleimide and an asymmetric urea compound, known as PSMA inhibitor, for optical imaging. In the in vitro cellular uptake study, 800CW-SCE was internalized into PSMA-positive PCa cells (LNCaP cells) but not into PSMA-negative PCa cells (PC-3 cells). Moreover, in the in vivo imaging study, the probe was highly accumulated in LNCaP tumors but not in PC-3 tumors, and remained in LNCaP tumors until 24 h after intravenous administration. These results suggest that the potent NIR conjugate may contribute to clinical intraoperative optical imaging.  相似文献   

18.
99mTc-labeled bombesin analogues have shown promise for noninvasive detection of many tumors that express bombesin (BN)/gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) receptors. 99mTc-labeled peptides, however, have a tendency to accumulate in the liver and intestines due to hepatobiliary clearance as a result of the lipophilicity of the 99mTc chelates. This makes the imaging of lesions in the abdominal area difficult. In this study, we have synthesized a new high affinity 99mTc-labeled BN analogue, [DTPA1, Lys3(99mTc-Pm-DADT), Tyr4]BN, having a built-in pharmacokinetic modifier, DTPA, and labeled with 99mTc using a hydrophilic diaminedithiol chelator (Pm-DADT) to effect low hepatobiliary clearance. In vitro binding studies using human prostate cancer PC-3 cell membranes showed that the inhibition constant (Ki) for [DTPA1, Lys3(99Tc-Pm-DADT), Tyr4]BN was 4.1 +/- 1.4 nM. Biodistribution studies of [DTPA1, Lys3(99mTc-Pm-DADT), Tyr4]BN in normal mice showed very low accumulation of radioactivity in the liver and intestines (1.32 +/- 0.13 and 4.58 +/- 0.50% ID, 4 h postinjection, respectively). There was significant uptake (7.71 +/- 1.37% ID/g, 1 h postinjection) in the pancreas which expresses BN/GRP receptors. The uptake in the pancreas could be blocked by BN, partially blocked by neuromedin B, but not affected by somatostatin, indicating that the in vivo binding was BN/GRP receptor specific. Scintigraphic images showed specific, high contrast delineation of prostate cancer PC-3 xenografts in SCID mice. Thus, the new peptide has a great potential for imaging BN/GRP receptor-positive cancers located even in the abdomen.  相似文献   

19.
Glucose metabolism of human prostate cancer mouse xenografts   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We hypothesized that the glucose metabolism of prostate cancer is modulated by androgen. We performed in vivo biodistribution and imaging studies of [F-18] fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) accumulation in androgen-sensitive (CWR-22) and androgen-independent (PC-3) human prostate cancer xenografts implanted in castrated and noncastrated male athymic mice. The growth pattern of the CWR-22 tumor was best approximated by an exponential function (tumor size in mm3 = 14.913 e(0.1086 x days), R2 = .96, n = 5). The growth pattern of the PC-3 tumor was best approximated by a quadratic function (tumor size in mm3 = 0.3511 x days2 + 49.418 x day - 753.33, R2 = .96, n = 3). The FDG accumulation in the CWR-22 tumor implanted in the castrated mice was significantly lower, by an average of 55%, in comparison to that implanted in the noncastrated host (1.27 vs. 2.83, respectively, p < .05). The 3-week maximal standardized uptake value (SUVmax) was 0.99 +/- 0.43 (mean +/- SD) for CWR-22 and 1.21 +/- 0.32 for PC-3, respectively. The 5-week SUVmax was 1.22 +/- 0.08 for CWR-22 and 1.35 +/- 0.17 for PC-3, respectively. The background muscle SUVmax was 0.53 +/- 0.11. Glucose metabolism was higher in the PC-3 tumor than in the CWR-22 tumor at both the 3-week (by 18%) and the 5-week (by 9.6%) micro-PET imaging sessions. Our results support the notions that FDG PET may be useful in the imaging evaluation of response to androgen ablation therapy and in the early prediction of hormone refractoriness in men with metastatic prostate cancer.  相似文献   

20.
The alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH) receptor (melanocortin type 1 receptor, or MC1R) plays an important role in the development and growth of melanoma cells. It was found that MC1R was overexpressed on most murine and human melanoma, making it a promising molecular target for melanoma imaging and therapy. Radiolabeled alpha-MSH peptide and its analogs that can specifically bind with MC1R have been extensively explored for developing novel agents for melanoma detection and radionuclide therapy. The goal of this study was to evaluate a 64Cu-labeled alpha-MSH analog, Ac-Nle-Asp-His-D-Phe-Arg-Trp-Gly-Lys(DOTA)-NH2 (DOTA-NAPamide), as a potential molecular probe for microPET imaging of melanoma and MC1R expression in melanoma xenografted mouse models. 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid (DOTA) conjugated NAPamide was synthesized and radiolabeled with 64Cu (t1/2=12 h) in NH4OAc (0.1 M; pH 5.5) buffered solution for 60 min at 50 degrees C. Cell culture studies reveal rapid and high uptake and internalization of 64Cu-DOTA-NAPamide in B16F10 cells. Over 90% of receptor-bound tracer is internalized at 3 h incubation. A cellular retention study demonstrates that the receptor-bound 64Cu-DOTA-NAPamide is slowly released from the B16F10 cells into the medium; 66% of the radioactivity is still associated with the cells even after 3 h incubation. The biodistribution of 64Cu-DOTA-NAPamide was then investigated in C57BL/6 mice bearing subcutaneous murine B16F10 melanoma tumors with high capacity of MC1R and Fox Chase Scid mice bearing human A375M melanoma with a relatively low number of MC1R receptors. Tumor uptake values of 64Cu-DOTA-NAPamide are found to be 4.63 +/- 0.45% and 2.49 +/- 0.31% ID/g in B16F10 and A375M xenografted melanoma at 2 h postinjection (pi), respectively. The B16F10 tumor uptake at 2 h pi is further inhibited to 2.29 +/- 0.24% ID/g, while A375M tumor uptake at 2 h pi remains 2.20 +/- 0.41% ID/g with a coinjection of excess alpha-MSH peptide. MicroPET imaging of 64Cu-DOTA-NAPamide in B16F10 tumor mice clearly shows good tumor localization. However, low A375M tumor uptake and poor tumor to normal tissue contrast were observed. This study demonstrates that 64Cu-DOTA-NAPamide is a promising molecular probe for alpha-MSH receptor positive melanoma PET imaging as well as MC1R expression imaging in living mice.  相似文献   

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