21 research outputs found

    Positron emission tomographic imaging of Copper 64- and Gallium 68-labeled chelator conjugates of the somatostatin agonist Tyr3-octreotate

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    The bifunctional chelator and radiometal have been shown to have a direct effect on the pharmacokinetics of somatostatin receptor (SSTR)-targeted imaging agents. We evaluated three Y3-TATE analogues conjugated to NOTA-based chelators for radiolabeling with 64 Cu and 68 Ga for small-animal positron emission tomographic/computed tomograhic (PET/CT) imaging. Two commercially available NOTA analogues, p-SCN-Bn-NOTA and NODAGA, were evaluated. The p-SCN-Bn-NOTA analogues were conjugated to Y3- TATE through β-Ala and PEG 8 linkages. The NODAGA chelator was directly conjugated to Y3-TATE. The analogues labeled with 64 Cu or 68 Ga were analyzed in vitro for binding affinity and internalization and in vivo by PET/CT imaging, biodistribution, and Cerenkov imaging ( 68 Ga analogues). We evaluated the effects of the radiometals, chelators, and linkers on the performance of the SSTR subtype 2–targeted imaging agents and also compared them to a previously reported agent, 64 Cu-CB-TE2A-Y3-TATE. We found that the method of conjugation, particularly the length of the linkage between the chelator and the peptide, significantly impacted tumor and nontarget tissue uptake and clearance. Among the 64 Cu- and 68 Ga-labeled NOTA analogues, NODAGA-Y3-TATE had the most optimal in vivo behavior and was comparable to 64 Cu-CB-TE2A-Y3-TATE. An advantage of NODAGA-Y3-TATE is that it allows labeling with 64 Cu and 68 Ga, providing a versatile PET probe for imaging SSTr subtype 2-positive tumors

    Noninvasive assessment of the lung inflammation-fibrosis axis by targeted imaging of CMKLR1

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    Precision management of fibrotic lung diseases is challenging due to their diverse clinical trajectories and lack of reliable biomarkers for risk stratification and therapeutic monitoring. Here, we validated the accuracy of CMKLR1 as an imaging biomarker of the lung inflammation-fibrosis axis. By analyzing single-cell RNA sequencing datasets, we demonstrate

    Spacer length effects on in vitro imaging and surface accessibility of fluorescent inhibitors of prostate specific membrane antigen

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    A series of spacer-varied imaging probes were synthesized and evaluated, which exhibited spacer length-dependent effects on inhibitory potency, mode of inhibition, and fluorescence imaging of prostate cancer cells. Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), a type II transmembrane protein, has been becoming an active target for imaging and therapeutic applications for prostate cancer. Recently, the development of its various chemical inhibitor scaffolds has been explored to serve as carriers for therapeutic or diagnostic payloads targeted to PSMA-positive tumor cells. However, there have been few efforts to definitively determine the optimal length of linker between PSMA inhibitor cores and their payload molecules with regard to the affinity to PSMA and in vitro performance. In our present model study, three spacer-length varied fluorescent inhibitors (FAM-CTT-54, FAM- X-CTT-54 and FAM- PEG 8-CTT-54) were synthesized, and further enzymatic inhibition studies displayed linker length-dependent changes in: inhibitory potency (IC 50 = 0.41 nM, 0.35 nM, 1.93 nM), modes of binding (reversible, slowly reversible, irreversible), respectively. Furthermore, cell-labeling imaging revealed the spacer length-related change of fluorescence intensity (FAM-X-CTT-54 > FAM-PEG 8-CTT-54 > FAM-CTT-54). These results suggest that selection of linkers and their lengths will be important considerations in the development of next-generation prostate tumor-targeted imaging probes and therapeutic agents that specifically home to PSMA on tumor cells

    Evaluation of <sup>68</sup>Ga- and <sup>177</sup>Lu-DOTA-PEG<sub>4</sub>‑LLP2A for VLA-4-Targeted PET Imaging and Treatment of Metastatic Melanoma

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    Malignant melanoma is a highly aggressive cancer, and the incidence of this disease is increasing worldwide at an alarming rate. Despite advances in the treatment of melanoma, patients with metastatic disease still have a poor prognosis and low survival rate. New strategies, including targeted radiotherapy, would provide options for patients who become resistant to therapies such as BRAF inhibitors. Very late antigen-4 (VLA-4) is expressed on melanoma tumor cells in higher levels in more aggressive and metastatic disease and may provide an ideal target for drug delivery and targeted radiotherapy. In this study, we evaluated <sup>177</sup>Lu- and <sup>68</sup>Ga-labeled DOTA-PEG<sub>4</sub>-LLP2A as a VLA-4-targeted radiotherapeutic with a companion PET agent for diagnosis and monitoring metastatic melanoma treatment. DOTA-PEG<sub>4</sub>-LLP2A was synthesized by solid-phase synthesis. The affinity of <sup>177</sup>Lu- and <sup>68</sup>Ga-labeled DOTA-PEG<sub>4</sub>-LLP2A to VLA-4 was determined in B16F10 melanoma cells by saturation binding and competitive binding assays, respectively. Biodistribution of the LLP2A conjugates was determined in C57BL/6 mice bearing B16F10 subcutaneous tumors, while PET/CT imaging was performed in subcutaneous and metastatic models. <sup>177</sup>Lu-DOTA-PEG<sub>4</sub>-LLP2A showed high affinity to VLA-4 with a <i>K</i><sub>d</sub> of 4.1 ± 1.5 nM and demonstrated significant accumulation in the B16F10 melanoma tumor after 4 h (31.5 ± 7.8%ID/g). The tumor/blood ratio of <sup>177</sup>Lu-DOTA-PEG<sub>4</sub>-LLP2A was highest at 24 h (185 ± 26). PET imaging of metastatic melanoma with <sup>68</sup>Ga-DOTA-PEG<sub>4</sub>-LLP2A showed high uptake in sites of metastases and correlated with bioluminescence imaging of the tumors. These data demonstrate that <sup>177</sup>Lu-DOTA-PEG<sub>4</sub>-LLP2A has potential as a targeted therapeutic for treating melanoma as well as other VLA-4-expressing tumors. In addition, <sup>68</sup>Ga-DOTA-PEG<sub>4</sub>-LLP2A is a readily translatable companion PET tracer for imaging of metastatic melanoma

    Targeting prostate cancer cells with PSMA inhibitor-guided gold nanoparticles

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    Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is a notable biomarker for diagnostic and therapeutic applications in prostate cancer. Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) provide an attractive nanomaterial platform for combining a variety of targeting, imaging, and cytotoxic agents into a unified device for biomedical research. In this study, we present the generation and evaluation of the first AuNP system functionalized with a small molecule phosphoramidate peptidomimetic inhibitor for the targeted delivery to PSMA-expressing prostate cancer cells. The general approach involved the conjugation of streptavidin-coated AuNPs with a biotin-linked PSMA inhibitor (CTT54) to generate PSMA-targeted AuNPs. In vitro evaluations of these targeted AuNPs were conducted to determine PSMA-mediated and time-dependent binding to PSMA-positive LNCaP cells. The PSMA-targeted AuNPs exhibited significantly higher and selective binding to LNCaP cells compared to control non-targeted AuNPs, thus demonstrating the feasibility of this approach

    Positron Emission Tomographic Imaging of Copper 64– and Gallium 68–Labeled Chelator Conjugates of the Somatostatin Agonist Tyr-Octreotate

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    The bifunctional chelator and radiometal have been shown to have a direct effect on the pharmacokinetics of somatostatin receptor (SSTR)-targeted imaging agents. We evaluated three Y3-TATE analogues conjugated to NOTA-based chelators for radiolabeling with 64 Cu and 68 Ga for small-animal positron emission tomographic/computed tomograhic (PET/CT) imaging. Two commercially available NOTA analogues, p-SCN-Bn-NOTA and NODAGA, were evaluated. The p-SCN-Bn-NOTA analogues were conjugated to Y3- TATE through β-Ala and PEG 8 linkages. The NODAGA chelator was directly conjugated to Y3-TATE. The analogues labeled with 64 Cu or 68 Ga were analyzed in vitro for binding affinity and internalization and in vivo by PET/CT imaging, biodistribution, and Cerenkov imaging ( 68 Ga analogues). We evaluated the effects of the radiometals, chelators, and linkers on the performance of the SSTR subtype 2–targeted imaging agents and also compared them to a previously reported agent, 64 Cu-CB-TE2A-Y3-TATE. We found that the method of conjugation, particularly the length of the linkage between the chelator and the peptide, significantly impacted tumor and nontarget tissue uptake and clearance. Among the 64 Cu- and 68 Ga-labeled NOTA analogues, NODAGA-Y3-TATE had the most optimal in vivo behavior and was comparable to 64 Cu-CB-TE2A-Y3-TATE. An advantage of NODAGA-Y3-TATE is that it allows labeling with 64 Cu and 68 Ga, providing a versatile PET probe for imaging SSTr subtype 2-positive tumors

    Targeting prostate cancer cells with a multivalent PSMA inhibitor-guided streptavidin conjugate

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    A series of spacer-varied biotinylated PSMA inhibitors were synthesized and evaluated, which exhibited spacer length-dependent effects on inhibitory potency, mode of inhibition. Moreover, only one of them can be used to form a complex with Cy5-streptavidin for fluorescence imaging of prostate cancer cells. Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), a type II membrane glycoprotein, its high expression is associated with prostate cancer progression, and has been becoming an active target for imaging or therapeutic applications for prostate cancer. On the other hand, streptavidin–biotin system has been successfully employed in pretargeting therapy towards multiple cancers. Herein, we describe the synthesis of bifunctional ligands (biotin-CTT54, biotin-PEG4-CTT54, and biotin-PEG12-CTT54) possessing two functional motifs separated by a length-varied polyethylene glycol (PEG) spacer: one (CTT54) binds tumor-marker PSMA and the other (biotin) binds streptavidin or avidin. All three compounds exhibited high potencies (IC50 values: 1.21, 2.53, and 10nM, respectively) and irreversibility; but only biotin-PEG12-CTT54 demonstrated specifically labeling PSMA-positive prostate cancer cells in a two-step pretargeting procedure. Additionally, the pre-formulated complex between biotin-PEG12-CTT54 and Cy5-streptavidin displayed the improved inhibitory potency (IC50=1.86nM) and irreversibility against PSMA and rapid uptake of streptavidin conjugate into PSMA-positive prostate cancer cells through PSMA-associated internalization. Together, all these results supported a proof-concept that combination of streptavidin and PSMA’s biotinylated inhibitor may lead to development of a novel strategy of tumor-targeting imaging or drug delivery towards prostate cancer
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