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Development of an optimized activatable MMP-14 targeted SPECT imaging probe
Authors:Gregory A Watkins  Ella Fung Jones  M Scott Shell  Henry F VanBrocklin  Mei-Hsiu Pan  Stephen M Hanrahan  Jin Jin Feng  Jiang He  Nor Eddine Sounni  Ken A Dill  Christopher H Contag  Lisa M Coussens  Benjamin L Franc
Institution:1. Center for Molecular and Functional Imaging, Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University of California, San Francisco, 185 Berry Street, Suite 350, Box 0946, San Francisco, CA 94107, United States;2. Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143, United States;3. Department of Functional Imaging, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, United States;4. Department of Pathology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94115, United States;5. Departments of Pediatrics, Radiology, and Microbiology & Immunology, Molecular Imaging Program Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, United States
Abstract:Matrix metalloproteinase-14 (MT1-MMP or MMP-14) is a membrane-associated protease implicated in a variety of tissue remodeling processes and a molecular hallmark of select metastatic cancers. The ability to detect MMP-14 in vivo would be useful in studying its role in pathologic processes and may potentially serve as a guide for the development of targeted molecular therapies. Four MMP-14 specific probes containing a positively charged cell penetrating peptide (CPP) d-arginine octamer (r8) linked with a MMP-14 peptide substrate and attenuating sequences with glutamate (8e, 4e) or glutamate-glycine (4eg and 4egg) repeating units were modeled using an AMBER force field method. The probe with 4egg attenuating sequence exhibited the highest CPP/attenuator interaction, predicting minimized cellular uptake until cleaved. The in vitro MMP-14-mediated cleavage studies using the human recombinant MMP-14 catalytic domain revealed an enhanced cleavage rate that directly correlated with the linearity of the embedded peptide substrate sequence. Successful cleavage and uptake of a technetium-99m labeled version of the optimal probe was demonstrated in MMP-14 transfected human breast cancer cells. Two-fold reduction of cellular uptake was found in the presence of a broad spectrum MMP inhibitor. The combination of computational chemistry, parallel synthesis and biochemical screening, therefore, shows promise as a set of tools for developing new radiolabeled probes that are sensitive to protease activity.
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