33 research outputs found

    Data Collection for the Kiosk: WOz vs Prototype System

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    The MASK consortium is developing a prototype multimodal multimedia service kiosk for train travel information and reservation, exploiting state-of-the-art speech technology. In this paper we report on our efforts aimed at evaluating alternative user interface designs and at obtaining acoustic and language modeling data for the spoken languagecomponent of the overall system. Simulation methods with increasing degrees of complexity have been used to test the interface design, and to experiment with alternate operating modes. The majority of the speech data has been collected using successive versions of the spoken language system, whose capabilities are incrementally expanded after analysis of the most frequent problems encountered by users of the preceding version. The different data requirements of user interface design and speech corpus acquisition are discussed in light of the experience of the MASK project. 1. INTRODUCTION The aim of the Multimodal-Multimedia Automated Service Ki..

    Two binding sites for [3H]PBR28 in human brain: implications for TSPO PET imaging of neuroinflammation

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    [11C]PBR28, a radioligand targeting the translocator protein (TSPO), does not produce a specific binding signal in approximately 14% of healthy volunteers. This phenomenon has not been reported for [11C]PK11195, another TSPO radioligand. We measured the specific binding signals with [3H]PK11195 and [3H]PBR28 in brain tissue from 22 donors. Overall, 23% of the samples did not generate a visually detectable specific autoradiographic signal with [3H]PBR28, although all samples showed [3H]PK11195 binding. There was a marked reduction in the affinity of [3H]PBR28 for TSPO in samples with no visible [3H]PBR28 autoradiographic signal (Ki=188±15.6 nmol/L), relative to those showing normal signal (Ki=3.4±0.5 nmol/L, P<0.001). Of this latter group, [3H]PBR28 bound with a two-site fit in 40% of cases, with affinities (Ki) of 4.0±2.4 nmol/L (high-affinity site) and 313±77 nmol/L (low-affinity site). There was no difference in Kd or Bmax for [3H]PK11195 in samples showing no [3H]PBR28 autoradiographic signal relative to those showing normal [3H]PBR28 autoradiographic signal. [3H]PK11195 bound with a single site for all samples. The existence of three different binding patterns with PBR28 (high-affinity binding (46%), low-affinity binding (23%), and two-site binding (31%)) suggests that a reduction in [11C]PBR28 binding may not be interpreted simply as a reduction in TSPO density. The functional significance of differences in binding characteristics warrants further investigation

    cGMP production of the radiopharmaceutical [F-18]MK-6240 for PET imaging of human neurofibrillary tangles

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    Fluorine-18-labelled 6-(fluoro)-3-(1H-pyrrolo[2,3-c]pyridin-1-yl)isoquinolin-5-amine ([18 F]MK-6240) is a novel potent and selective positron emission tomography (PET) radiopharmaceutical for detecting human neurofibrillary tangles, which are made up of aggregated tau protein. Herein, we report the fully automated 2-step radiosynthesis of [18 F]MK-6240 using a commercially available radiosynthesis module, GE Healthcare TRACERlab FXFN . Nucleophilic fluorination of the 5-diBoc-6-nitro precursor with potassium cryptand [18 F]fluoride (K[18 F]/K222 ) was performed by conventional heating, followed by acid deprotection and semipreparative high-performance liquid chromatography under isocratic conditions. The isolated product was diluted with formulation solution and sterile filtered under Current Good Manufacturing Practices, and quality control procedures were established to validate this radiopharmaceutical for human use. At the end of synthesis, 6.3 to 9.3 GBq (170-250 mCi) of [18 F]MK-6240 was formulated and ready for injection, in an uncorrected radiochemical yield of 7.5% ± 1.9% (relative to starting [18 F]fluoride) with a specific activity of 222 ± 67 GBq/μmol (6.0 ± 1.8 Ci/μmol) at the end of synthesis (90 minutes; n = 3). [18 F]MK-6240 was successfully validated for human PET studies meeting all Food and Drug Administration and United States Pharmacopeia requirements for a PET radiopharmaceutical. The present method can be easily adopted for use with other radiofluorination modules for widespread clinical research use.status: publishe

    Mixed-affinity binding in humans with 18-kDa translocator protein ligands

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    (11)C-PBR28 PET can detect the 18-kDa translocator protein (TSPO) expressed within macrophages. However, quantitative evaluation of the signal in brain tissue from donors with multiple sclerosis (MS) shows that PBR28 binds the TSPO with high affinity (binding affinity [K(i)], ~4 nM), low affinity (K(i), ~200 nM), or mixed affinity (2 sites with K(i), ~4 nM and ~300 nM). Our study tested whether similar binding behavior could be detected in brain tissue from donors with no history of neurologic disease, with TSPO-binding PET ligands other than (11)C-PBR28, for TSPO present in peripheral blood, and with human brain PET data acquired in vivo with (11)C-PBR28. METHODS: The affinity of TSPO ligands was measured in the human brain post-mortem from donors with a history of MS (n = 13), donors without any history of neurologic disease (n = 20), and in platelets from healthy volunteers (n = 13). Binding potential estimates from thirty-five (11)C-PBR28 PET scans from an independent sample of healthy volunteers were analyzed using a gaussian mixture model. RESULTS: Three binding affinity patterns were found in brains from subjects without neurologic disease in similar proportions to those reported previously from studies of MS brains. TSPO ligands showed substantial differences in affinity between subjects classified as high-affinity binders (HABs) and low-affinity binders (LABs). Differences in affinity between HABs and LABs are approximately 50-fold with PBR28, approximately 17-fold with PBR06, and approximately 4-fold with DAA1106, DPA713, and PBR111. Where differences in affinity between HABs and LABs were low (~4-fold), distinct affinities were not resolvable in binding curves for mixed-affinity binders (MABs), which appeared to express 1 class of sites with an affinity approximately equal to the mean of those for HABs and LABs. Mixed-affinity binding was detected in platelets from an independent sample (HAB, 69%; MAB, 31%), although LABs were not detected. Analysis of (11)C-PBR28 PET data was not inconsistent with the existence of distinct subpopulations of HABs, MABs, and LABs. CONCLUSION: With the exception of (11)C-PK11195, all TSPO PET ligands in current clinical application recognize HABs, LABs, and MABs in brain tissue in vitro. Knowledge of subjects’ binding patterns will be required to accurately quantify TSPO expression in vivo using PET
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