In vivo imaging of intraprostatic-specific gene transcription by PET.

Autor: Pouliot F; Institute of Urologic Oncology, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095, USA., Karanikolas BD, Johnson M, Sato M, Priceman SJ, Stout D, Sohn J, Satyamurthy N, deKernion JB, Wu L
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine [J Nucl Med] 2011 May; Vol. 52 (5), pp. 784-91. Date of Electronic Publication: 2011 Apr 15.
DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.110.084582
Abstrakt: Unlabelled: Better intraprostatic cancer imaging techniques are needed to guide clinicians in prostate cancer treatment decisions. Because many genes are specifically overexpressed in cancer cells, one strategy to improve prostate cancer detection is to image intraprostatic cancer-specific transcriptional activity. Because of the obstacles of weak cancer- or tissue-specific promoter activity and bladder clearance of many PET tracers, intraprostatic PET of gene transcriptional activity has not been previously reported.
Methods: The two-step transcriptional amplification (TSTA) system that amplifies the prostate-specific antigen promoter activity was used for PET imaging of the reporter gene herpes simplex virus type-1 sr39 thymidine kinase (HSV1-sr39tk). The TSTA-sr39tk system was injected directly into prostates or prostatic tumors as a replication-incompetent adenovirus (AdTSTA-sr39tk) and imaged using PET.
Results: AdTSTA-sr39tk was able to image prostate-specific antigen promoter transcriptional activity by 9-(4-(18)F-fluoro-3-[hydroxymethyl]butyl)guanine PET, in both mouse and canine prostates in vivo. Ex vivo small-animal PET images, scintigraphic counts, and sr39tk expression analysis confirmed the specificity of the observed signal.
Conclusion: Here, by combining the TSTA-amplified signal with a protocol for tracer administration, we show that in vivo PET detection of transcriptional activity is possible in both mouse and immunocompetent canine prostates. These results suggest that imaging applications using transcription-based tumor-specific promoters should be pursued to better visualize cancer foci that escape detection by conventional biopsies.
Databáze: MEDLINE