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1.
We examined the accumulation of Cy5.5-labeled annexin V in the paws of mice with and without collagen-induced arthritis, with and without methotrexate (MTX) treatment, by near-infrared fluorescence imaging. Fluorescence reflectance imaging (FRI) of paws was performed 48 hr after MTX injection and at 10 min and 3 hr after the injection of Cy5.5-annexin V (1 nmol dye per mouse). With arthritic paws, MTX treatment caused a 7-fold increase in fluorescence intensity compared with the paws of untreated mice and a 4-fold increase compared to nonarthritic paws of MTX-treated mice (p < .001 each). Tissue samples of paws were examined histologically for Cy5.5 fluorescence and by TUNEL staining for apoptosis. Cy5.5-annexin V was seen in the hyperplastic synovia of MTX-treated mice, and TUNEL staining for apoptosis showed apoptotic cells in the hyperplastic synovia. Monitoring the uptake of Cy5.5-annexin V in arthritic paws by FRI provided a method of assessing a response to MTX, a response that was readily quantitated with simple instrumentation and that occurred before conventional measurements of treatment response.  相似文献   

2.
The design of near-infrared fluorescent (NIRF) probes that are activated by specific proteases has, for the first time, allowed enzyme activity to be imaged in vivo. In the current study, we report on a method of imaging enzyme activity using two fluorescent probes that, together, provide improved quantitation of enzymatic activity. The method employs two chemically similar probes that differ in their degradability by cathepsin B. One probe consists of the NIRF dye Cy5.5 attached to a particulate carrier, a crosslinked iron oxide nanoparticle (CLIO), through cathepsin B cleavable L-arginyl peptides. A second probe consists of Cy3.5 attached to a CLIO through proteolytically resistant D-arginyl peptides. Using mixtures of the two probes, we have shown that the ratio of Cy5.5 to Cy3.5 fluorescence can be used to determine levels of cathepsin B in the environment of nanoparticles with macrophages in suspension. After intravenous injection, tissue fluorescence from the nondegradable Cy3.5-D-arginyl probe reflected nanoparticle accumulation, while fluorescence of the Cy5.5-L-arginyl probe was dependent on both accumulation and activation by cathepsin B. Dual wavelength ratio imaging can be used for the quantitative imaging of a variety of enzymes in clinically important settings, while the magnetic properties of the probes allow their detection by MR imaging.  相似文献   

3.
The aim of the study was to visualize chronic experimental arthritis with near-infrared fluorescence imaging (NIRF) in a murine experimental arthritis model of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) (flare-up arthritis). The flare-up arthritis model is a modification of the primary antigen-induced arthritis (AIA) model. NIRF was done for two preparations of the fluorochrome Cy5.5, one native and the other albumin conjugated. Histological features of flare-up arthritis were evaluated.AIA was induced in 16 mice (strain C57/Bl6); flare-up arthritis was induced in a subgroup of eight. On day 7 after induction of flare-up arthritis, four mice received 50 nmol/kg native dye and four mice equimolar concentrations of the dye as albumin-dye conjugate intravenously. NIRF imaging was performed immediately before injection (baseline) and until 72 h thereafter. Arthritis severity was evaluated histologically for primary AIA and flare-up arthritis mice.NIRF imaging revealed higher fluorochrome uptake in all inflamed knees compared to contralateral ones. The signal intensities induced by native Cy5.5 were higher than those generated by albumin-Cy5.5 conjugate. Histological evaluation of arthritic joints showed similar abnormalities in flare-up arthritis and in primary AIA joints.Imaging of flare-up arthritis in the near-infrared range was successful for both fluorochrome preparations, but albumin conjugation prior to injection does not improve the uptake of dye in arthritic joints. Flare-up arthritis is a feasible model of chronic relapse of arthritis in human RA.  相似文献   

4.
A number of different types of agents have been employed to aid in the visualization of lymph nodes, particularly the sentinel lymph node, and to decrease the tissue destruction associated with the diagnosis of nodal metastases. The current study was performed to see if a novel macromolecular near-infrared fluorescent (NIRF) probe could be used to visualize lymph nodes after intravenous administration (pan-node visualization) or subcutaneous administration (sentinel node visualization), and serve as method for guiding dissection with interventional radiologic and surgical procedures. Cy5.5-PGC, the near-infrared dye Cy5.5 coupled to a protected graft copolymer (PGC), was injected (i.v. or s.c.) into nude mice. Twenty-four hours later white light and NIRF images were obtained on (i) the live animal, (ii) a partially dissected animal, and (iii) tissue specimens. With Cy5.5-PGC administered intravenously, axillary nodes were visualized from outside a living mouse. With partial dissection, iliac and aortic nodes were visible as concentrated foci of high-intensity NIRF signals. With subcutaneous injection in the front extremity, axillary and brachial nodes draining the injection site were easily visualized. NIRF imaging provides a nonradioactive method of visualizing lymph nodes through layers of tissue that can be employed with intravenous or subcutaneous injection.  相似文献   

5.
Oleic acid-conjugated chitosan (oleyl-chitosan) is a powerful platform for encapsulating oleic acid-decorated iron oxide nanoparticles (ION), resulting in a good magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) probe. Oleyl-chitosan could self-assemble into core-shell structures in aqueous solution and provide the effective core compartment for loading ION. ION-loaded oleyl-chitosan nanoparticles showed good enhanced MRI sensitivity in a MR scanner. Cy5.5 dye was accessed to the oleyl-chitosan conjugate for near-infrared (NIR) in vivo optical imaging. After intravenous injection of ION-loaded Cy5.5-conjugated oleyl-chitosan (ION-Cy5.5-oleyl-chitosan) nanoparticles in tumor-bearing mice, both NIRF and MR imaging showed the detectable signal intensity and enhancement in tumor tissues via enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect. Tumor accumulation of the nanoparticles was confirmed through ex vivo fluorescence images and Prussian blue staining images in tumor tissues. It is concluded that ION-Cy5.5-oleyl-chitosan nanoparticle is highly an effective imaging probe for detecting tumor in vivo.  相似文献   

6.
Noninvasive near-infrared fluorescence reflectance imaging (FRI) is an in vivo technique to assess physiological and molecular processes in the intact organism. Here we describe a method to assess gastric emptying in mice. TentaGel beads with covalently bound cyanine dye (Cy5.5) conjugates as fluorescent probe were administered by oral gavage. The amount of intragastric beads/label was derived from the fluorescence signal intensity measured in a region of interest corresponding to the mouse stomach. The FRI signal intensity decreased as a function of time reflecting gastric emptying. In control mice, the gastric half-emptying time was in agreement with literature data. Pharmacological modulation of gastric motility allowed the evaluation of the sensitivity of the FRI-based method. Gastric emptying was either stimulated or inhibited by treatment with the 5-HT(4) receptor agonists tegaserod (Zelnorm) and cisapride or the alpha(2)-receptor agonist clonidine, respectively. Tegaserod and cisapride dose-dependently accelerated gastric emptying. In contrast, clonidine dose-dependently delayed gastric emptying. In conclusion, FRI using fluorescently labeled beads allows the reliable determination of gastric emptying as well as the assessment of pharmacological interventions. The technique thus offers the potential to characterize molecular targets and pathways involved in physiological regulation and pharmacological modulation of gastric emptying.  相似文献   

7.
Aiming at the design of highly brilliant NIR emissive optical probes, e.g., for in vivo near-infrared fluorescence imaging (NIRF), we studied the absorption and fluorescence properties of the asymmetric cyanines Dy678, Dy681, Dy682, and Dy676 conjugated to the model antibody IgG. The ultimate goal was here to derive general structure-property relationships for suitable NIR fluorescent labels. These Dy dyes that spectrally match Cy5 and Cy5.5, respectively, were chosen to differ in chromophore structure, i.e., in the substitution pattern of the benzopyrylium end group and in the number of sulfonic acid groups. Spectroscopic studies of the free and IgG-bound fluorophores revealed a dependence of the obtained dye-to-protein ratios on dye hydrophilicity and control of the fluorescence quantum yields (Φ(f)) of the IgG conjugates by the interplay of different fluorescence reduction pathways like dye aggregation and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). Based upon aggregation studies with these dyes, the amount of dye dimers in the IgG conjugates was determined pointing to dye hydrophilicity as major parameter controlling aggregation. To gain further insight into the exact mechanism of dye dimerization at the protein, labeling experiments at different reaction conditions but constant dye-to-protein ratios in the reaction solution were performed. With Dy682 that displays a Φ(f) of 0.20 in PBS and 0.10 for moderate dye-to-protein ratio of 2.5, a low aggregation tendency, and a superior reactivity in IgG labeling, we identified a promising diagnostic tool for the design of NIR fluorescent probes and protein conjugates.  相似文献   

8.
Near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) optical probes have been able to provide a noninvasive assessment of enzyme activity for a number of different enzymes and types of pathology. Here we describe a dual fluorochrome enzyme-activatable probe featuring one NIRF fluorochrome that is activated by protease activity and a second fluorochrome that is protease resistant and serves as an internal standard. The probe was prepared by attaching Cy7 directly to an amino-CLIO, an amine functional cross-linked iron oxide (CLIO) nanoparticle carrier, in a protease resistant manner. Cy5.5 was attached to a protease sensitive polyarginine peptide spacer, also attached to amino-CLIO. In vitro and in vivo the ratio of the Cy5.5 to Cy7 fluorescence was increased by protease, reflecting the increase in Cy5.5 fluorescence by protease in the vicinity of the probe. In vitro and in vivo the absolute values of the Cy5.5 and Cy7 fluorescence reflected lesion size and the distance of lesions from the surface, while the ratio of Cy5.5 to Cy7 fluorescence obtained was constant and independent of lesion size and depth. The dual fluorochrome probe, and related dual wavelength imaging method, represents a novel approach for imaging protease activity in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
A number of quantitative three-dimensional tomographic near-infrared fluorescence imaging techniques have recently been developed and combined with MR imaging to yield highly detailed anatomic and molecular information in living organisms (1, 2). Here we describe magnetic nanoparticle based MR contrast agents that have a near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) that is activated by certain enzymes. The probes are prepared by conjugation of arginyl peptides to cross-linked iron oxide amine (amino-CLIO), either by a disulfide linkage or a thioether linker, followed by the attachment of the indocyanine dye Cy5.5. The NIRF of disulfide-linked conjugate was activated by DTT, while the NIRF of thioether-linked conjugate was activated by trypsin. Fluorescent quenching of the attached fluorochrome occurs in part due to the interaction with iron oxide, as evident by the activation of fluorescence with DTT when nanoparticles that have less than one dye attached per particle. With a SC injection of the probe, axillary and brachial lymph nodes were darkened on MR images and easily delineated by NIRF imaging. The probes may provide the basis for a new class of so-called smart nanoparticles, capable of pinpointing their position through their magnetic properties, while providing information on their environment by optical imaging techniques.  相似文献   

10.
We report the synthesis of PEG-coated, core-cross-linked polymeric micelles (CCPMs) derived from an amine-terminated amphiphilic block copolymer, poly(PEG-methacrylate)-b-poly(triethoxysilyl propylmethacrylate). The block copolymer self-assembled to form micellar nanoparticles, and a Cy-7-like near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) dye was entrapped in the core bearing reactive ethoxysilane functional groups through a subsequent sol-gel process. The fluorescent signal of CCPMs on the molar basis was 16-fold brighter than that of Cy7. With an average diameter of 24 +/- 8.9 nm, CCPMs exhibited a prolonged blood half-life (t1/2,alpha = 1.25 h; t1/2,beta = 46.18 h) and moderate uptake by the mononuclear phagocytic system. Significant accumulation of CCPMs in human breast tumor xenografts allowed noninvasive monitoring of the uptake kinetics with both NIRF optical and gamma imaging techniques. Our data suggest that Cy7-entrapped CCPM nanoparticles are suitable for NIRF imaging of solid tumors and have potential applications in the imaging of tumor-associated molecular markers.  相似文献   

11.
Pathological angiogenesis is crucial in tumor growth, invasion and metastasis. Previous studies demonstrated that the vascular endothelial growth inhibitor (VEGI), a member of the tumor necrosis factor superfamily, can be used as a potent endogenous inhibitor of tumor angiogenesis. Molecular probes containing the asparagine–glycine–arginine (NGR) sequence can specifically bind to CD13 receptor which is overexpressed on neovasculature and several tumor cells. Near-infrared fluorescence (NIRF) optical imaging for targeting tumor vasculature offers a noninvasive method for early detection of tumor angiogenesis and efficient monitoring of response to anti-tumor vasculature therapy. The aim of this study was to develop a new NIRF imaging probe on the basis of an NGR–VEGI protein for the visualization of tumor vasculature. The NGR–VEGI fusion protein was prepared from prokaryotic expression, and its function was characterized in vitro. The NGR–VEGI protein was then labeled with a Cy5.5 fluorophore to afford Cy5.5-NGR–VEGI probe. Using the NIRF imaging technique, we visualized and quantified the specific delivery of Cy5.5-NGR–VEGI protein to subcutaneous HT-1080 fibrosarcoma tumors in mouse xenografts. The Cy5.5-NGR–VEGI probe exhibited rapid HT-1080 tumor targeting, and highest tumor-to-background contrast at 8 h post-injection (pi). Tumor specificity of Cy5.5-NGR–VEGI was confirmed by effective blocking of tumor uptake in the presence of unlabeled NGR–VEGI (20 mg/kg). Ex vivo NIRF imaging further confirmed in vivo imaging findings, demonstrating that Cy5.5-NGR–VEGI displayed an excellent tumor-to-muscle ratio (18.93 ± 2.88) at 8 h pi for the non-blocking group and significantly reduced ratio (4.92 ± 0.75) for the blocking group. In conclusion, Cy5.5-NGR–VEGI provided highly sensitive, target-specific, and longitudinal imaging of HT-1080 tumors. As a novel theranostic protein, Cy5.5-NGR–VEGI has the potential to improve cancer treatment by targeting tumor vasculature.  相似文献   

12.
Fluorescence imaging is increasingly used to probe protein function and gene expression in live animals. This technology could enhance the study of pathogenesis, drug development, and therapeutic intervention. In this article, we focus on three-dimensional fluorescence observations using fluorescence-mediated molecular tomography (FMT), a novel imaging technique that can resolve molecular function in deep tissues by reconstructing fluorescent probe distributions in vivo. We have compared FMT findings with conventional fluorescence reflectance imaging (FRI) to study protease function in nude mice with subsurface implanted tumors. This validation of FMT with FRI demonstrated the spatial congruence of fluorochrome activation as determined by the two techniques.  相似文献   

13.
Labeling of RGD peptides with near-infrared fluorophores yields optical probes for noninvasive imaging of tumors overexpressing ανβ3 integrins. An important prerequisite for optimum detection sensitivity in vivo is strongly absorbing and highly emissive probes with a known fluorescence lifetime. The RGD-Cy5.5 optical probe was derived by coupling Cy5.5 to a cyclic arginine-glycine-aspartic acid-d-phenylalanine-lysine (RGDfK) peptide via an aminohexanoic acid spacer. Spectroscopic properties of the probe were studied in different matrices in comparison to Cy5.5. For in vivo imaging, human glioblastoma cells were subcutaneously implanted into nude mice, and in vivo fluorescence intensity and lifetime were measured. The fluorescence quantum yield and lifetime of Cy5.5 were found to be barely affected on RGD conjugation but dramatically changed in the presence of proteins. By time domain fluorescence imaging, we demonstrated specific binding of RGD-Cy5.5 to glioblastoma xenografts in nude mice. Discrimination of unspecific fluorescence by lifetime-gated analysis further enhanced the detection sensitivity of RGD-Cy5.5-derived signals. We characterized RGD-Cy5.5 as a strongly emissive and stable probe adequate for selective targeting of ανβ3 integrins. The specificity and thus the overall detection sensitivity in vivo were optimized with lifetime gating, based on the previous determination of the probes fluorescence lifetime under application-relevant conditions.  相似文献   

14.
2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoro-D-glucose ([18F]FDG) has extensively been used for clinical diagnosis, staging, and therapy monitoring of cancer and other diseases. Nonradioactive glucose analogues enabling the screening of the glucose metabolic rate of tumors are of particular interest for anticancer drug development. A nonradioactive fluorescent deoxyglucose analogue may have many applications for both imaging of tumors and monitoring therapeutic efficacy of drugs in living animals and may eventually translate to clinical applications. We found that a fluorescent 2-deoxyglucose analogue, 2-[N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl)amino]-2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-NBDG), can be delivered in several tumor cells via the glucose transporters (GLUTs). We therefore conjugated D-glucosamine with a near-infrared (NIR) fluorphor Cy5.5 and tested the feasibility of the Cy5.5-D-glucosamine (Cy5.5-2DG) conjugate for NIR fluorescence imaging of tumors in a preclinical xenograft animal model. Cy5.5-2DG was prepared by conjugating Cy5.5 monofunctional N-hydroxysuccinimide ester (Cy5.5-NHS) and D-glucosamine followed by high-performance liquid chromatography purification. The accumulation of Cy5.5-2DG and Cy5.5-NHS in different tumor cell lines at 37 and 4 degrees C were imaged using a fluorescence microscope. Tumor targeting and retention of Cy5.5-2DG and Cy5.5-NHS in a subcutaneous U87MG glioma and A375M melanoma tumor model were evaluated and quantified by a Xenogen IVIS 200 optical cooled charged-coupled device system. Fluorescence microscopy imaging shows that Cy5.5-2DG and Cy5.5-NHS are taken up and trapped by a variety of tumor cell lines at 37 degrees C incubation, while they exhibit marginal uptake at 4 degrees C. The tumor cell uptake of Cy5.5-2DG cannot be blocked by the 50 mM D-glucose, suggesting that Cy5.5-2DG may not be delivered in tumor cells by GLUTs. U87MG and A375M tumor localization was clearly visualized in living mice with both NIR fluorescent probes. Tumor/muscle contrast was clearly visible as early as 30 min postinjection (pi), and the highest U87MG tumor/muscle ratios of 2.81 +/- 0.10 and 3.34 +/- 0.23 were achieved 24 h pi for Cy5.5-2DG and Cy5.5-NHS, respectively. While as a comparison, the micropositron emission tomography imaging study shows that [18F]FDG preferentially localizes to the U87MG tumor, with resulting tumor/muscle ratios ranging from 3.89 to 4.08 after 30 min to 2 h postadministration of the probe. In conclusion, the NIR fluorescent glucose analogues, Cy5.5-2DG and Cy5.5-NHS, both demonstrate tumor-targeting abilities in cell culture and living mice. More studies are warranted to further explore their application for optical tumor imaging. To develop NIR glucose analogues with the ability to target GLUTs/hexokinase, it is highly important to select NIR dyes with a reasonable molecular size.  相似文献   

15.
A useful property of optical imaging is the potential to modulate the detectable signal to improve target/nontarget ratios. When administered as a dimer of a fluorophore- and a quencher-conjugated duplex arranged to inhibit fluorescence but designed to dissociate only in the presence of its target, the fluorescence signal should in principle appear only in the target. This laboratory has demonstrated the feasibility of this approach by using a duplex consisting of a linear oligomer conjugated with Cy5.5 (emitter) hybridized to another linear oligomer conjugated with Iowa Black (quencher) in a pretargeting optical study. Now eight duplexes consisting of combinations of 18 mer linear phosphodiester (PO) and phosphorothioate (PS) DNAs and phosphorodiamidate morpholinos (MORFs) conjugated with Cy5.5 (emitter) and Iowa Black (quencher) were variously screened for in vitro duplex stability. The MORF/PO duplex was selected for further study based on evidence of stability in 37 degrees C serum. Simultaneously, the kinetics of quenching were investigated in vitro and in vivo in mice. Thereafter, mice were implanted in one thigh with MORF/PO Cy 5.5 microspheres and the complementary PS Iowa Black administered iv to measure the extent and kinetics of duplex formation in the target. While all duplexes were stable in buffer, only the MORF/PO duplexes and possibly all PS containing duplexes were stable in 37 degrees C serum for at least 4 h. The kinetics of quenching were found to be rapid in vitro, with a 80-90% decrease in Cy5.5 fluorescence immediately following formation of a PS/PS homoduplex, and in vivo, with a 27 to 38% decrease in target thigh/nontarget ratio within 1 h following administration of the complementary PS Iowa Black complementary DNA but not the random control DNA to mice implanted with MORF/PO Cy5.5 microspheres. This investigation has provided additional evidence that Cy5.5 may be efficiently and rapidly quenched by Iowa Black when both are conjugated to complementary oligomers and that the resulting inhibition of fluorescence is sufficiently persistent for imaging.  相似文献   

16.
We demonstrated that arthritis could be visualized noninvasively using hydrophobically modified glycol chitosan nanoparticles labeled with Cy5.5 (HGC-Cy5.5) and an optical imaging system. Activated macrophages expressing Mac-1 molecules effectively phagocytosed HGC-Cy5.5, which formed spherical nanoparticles under physiologic conditions. We estimated the applicability of HGC-Cy5.5 to quantitative analysis of arthritis development and progression. Near-infrared fluorescence images, captured after HGC-Cy5.5 injection in mice with collagen-induced arthritis, showed stronger fluorescence intensity in the active arthritis group than in the nonarthritis group. According to the progression of arthritis in both collagen-induced arthritis and collagen antibody-induced arthritis models, total photon counts (TPCs) increased in parallel with the clinical arthritis index. Quantitative analysis of fluorescence after treatment with methotrexate showed a significant decrease in TPC in a dose-dependent manner. Histologic evaluation confirmed that the mechanism underlying selective accumulation of HGC-Cy5.5 within synovitis tissues included enhanced phagocytosis of the probe by Mac-1-expressing macrophages as well as enhanced permeability through leaky vessels. These results suggest that optical imaging of arthritis using HGC-Cy5.5 can provide an objective measurement of disease activity and, at the same time, therapeutic responses in rheumatoid arthritis.  相似文献   

17.
Near-infrared fluorescence optical imaging is a powerful technique for studying diseases at the molecular level in preclinical models. We recently reported that monomeric RGD peptide c(RGDyK) conjugated to the NIR fluorescent dye specifically targets integrin receptor both in cell culture and in living subjects. In this report, Cy5.5-conjugated mono-, di-, and tetrameric RGD peptides were evaluated in a subcutaneous U87MG glioblastoma xenograft model in order to investigate the effect of multimerization of RGD peptide on integrin avidity and tumor targeting efficacy. The binding affinities of Cy5.5-conjugated RGD monomer, dimer, and tetramer for alpha(v)beta(3) integrin expressed on U87MG cell surface were determined to be 42.9 +/- 1.2, 27.5 +/- 1.2, and 12.1 +/- 1.3 nmol/L, respectively. All three peptide-dye conjugates had integrin specific uptake both in vitro and in vivo. The subcutaneous U87MG tumor can be clearly visualized with each of these three fluorescent probes. Among them, tetramer displayed highest tumor uptake and tumor-to-normal tissue ratio from 0.5 to 4 h postinjection. Tumor-to-normal tissue ratio for Cy5.5-conjugated RGD monomer, dimer, and tetramer were found to be 3.18 +/- 0.16, 2.98 +/- 0.05, and 3.63 +/- 0.09, respectively, at 4 h postinjection. These results suggest that Cy5.5-conjugated monomeric, dimeric, and tetrameric RGD peptides are all suitable for integrin expression imaging. The multmerization of RGD peptide results in moderate improvement of imaging characteristics of the tetramer, compared to that of the monomer and dimeric counterparts.  相似文献   

18.
Multimodal proteins, or proteins labeled with both fluorescent and magnetic reporter groups, can be used in a wide range of applications including FACS or fluorescence microscopy, MRI and or near-infrared based optical imaging, or to fractionate cells by magnetic cell sorting. A problem with multimodal proteins, however, is the need to maximize bioactivity, often achieved by minimizing the number of modification points of the protein, while attaching fluorescent and magnetic labels. Here we describe the synthesis of a magneto/optical form of annexin V, achieved by reacting the amino-CLIO nanoparticle with Cy5.5 and SPDP, to produce a fluorescent, sulfhydryl reactive nanoparticle. A single reactive sulfhydryl group was added to annexin V by reaction with SATA that preserved the protein's ability to bind apoptotic Jurkat T cells. Reacting SATAylated annexin V with an SPDP activated nanoparticle yielded Anx-CLIO-Cy5.5, a magneto/optical form of annexin V. The binding of Anx-CLIO-Cy5.5 was specific for apoptotic Jurkat T cells and had an EC(50) of 3.66 nM. This was comparable to the strength of the interaction of unmodified annexin V with apoptotic cells, measured as the displacement of FITC-annexin by annexin V (2.4 nM). Our conjugation strategy preserves the strength of the interaction between annexin V and apoptotic cells, while yielding a probe, Anx-CLIO-Cy5.5, that is readily detectable by standard MR imaging or NIRF optical methods.  相似文献   

19.
In vivo optical imaging is potentially useful for evaluating the presence of tumor markers that are targets of molecular medicine. Here we report the synthesis and characterization of integrin alphavbeta3-targeted peptide cyclo(Lys-Arg-Gly-Asp-Phe) [c(KRGDf )] labeled with fluorescence dyes with wavelength spanning from the visible/near infrared (Cy5.5) to the true near infrared (IRDye800) for optical imaging. In vitro, the peptide-dye conjugates bound specifically to tumor cells expressing alphavbeta3. When administered intravenously into mice at a dose of 6 nmol /mouse, the conjugates accumulated in tumors expressing alphavbeta3. The tumor-to-background ratios for human KS1767 Kaposi's sarcoma in mice injected with Cy5.5-c(KRGDf ) and Cy5.5 were 5.5 and 1.5, respectively. Preinjection of c(KRGDf ) blocked the uptake of Cy5.5-c(KRGDf ) in tumors by 89%. In alphavbeta3-positive M21 and alphavbeta3-negative M21-L human melanoma, fluorescence intensity in the tumor of mice injected with IRDye800 - c(KRGDf ) was 2.3 and 1.3 times that in normal tissue, respectively. Dynamic imaging revealed that Cy5.5- c(KRGDf ) was rapidly taken up by KS1767 tumor immediately after bolus injection. The rate of its uptake in the tumor was reduced by preinjection of c(KRGDf ) in an interval time-dependent manner. Our data suggest that near-infrared fluorescence imaging may be applied to the detection of tumors expressing integrin alphavbeta3 and to the assessment of the optimal biological dose and schedule of targeted therapies.  相似文献   

20.
Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) remains an active target for imaging and therapeutic applications for prostate cancer. Although radionuclide-based imaging is generally more sensitive and also has been deeply explored, near-infrared fluorescence imaging agents are simple to prepare and compatible with long-term storage conditions. In the present study, a near-infrared fluorescent imaging probe (Cy5.5-CTT-54.2) has been developed by chemical conjugation of Cy5.5N-hydroxysuccinimide ester (Cy5.5-NHS) with a potent PSMA inhibitor CTT-54.2 (IC(50)=144 nM). The probe displays a highly potency (IC(50)=0.55 nM) against PSMA and has demonstrated successful application for specifically labeling PSMA-positive prostate cancer cells in both two and three-dimensional cell culture conditions. These results suggest that the potent, near-infrared Cy5.5-PSMA inhibitor conjugate may be useful for the detection of prostate tumor cells by optical in vivo imaging.  相似文献   

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