Development and In Vivo Preclinical Imaging of Fluorine-18-Labeled Synaptic Vesicle Protein 2A (SV2A) PET Tracers
Autor: | Ming-Qiang Zheng, Vincent M. Carroll, Cedric Tresse, John Seibyl, Laetitia Mistico, Cristian Constantinescu, Olivier Barret, David Alagille, Alexandra Gouasmat, Christine M. Sandiego, Kenneth Marek, Gilles Tamagnan, Caroline Papin |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Fluorine Radioisotopes
Cancer Research Nerve Tissue Proteins Synaptic vesicle 030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging 03 medical and health sciences fluids and secretions 0302 clinical medicine Nuclear magnetic resonance In vivo Centrum semiovale medicine Animals Tissue Distribution Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Pet tracer Radiometry SV2A medicine.diagnostic_test Chemistry Brain Macaca mulatta Macaca fascicularis Oncology Positron emission tomography Positron-Emission Tomography Absorbed dose embryonic structures Synaptic Vesicles Radiopharmaceuticals Preclinical imaging |
Zdroj: | Molecular Imaging and Biology. 21:509-518 |
ISSN: | 1860-2002 1536-1632 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11307-018-1260-5 |
Popis: | Synaptic vesicle protein 2A (SV2A) serves as a biomarker of synaptic density and positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of SV2A could provide a tool to assess progression of neurodegenerative diseases. Two tracers have primarily been reported and characterized in vivo: [11C]UCB-J and [18F]UCB-H. In early human studies, [11C]UCB-J showed promising results, while its F-18-labeled analogue [18F]UCB-H showed suboptimal specific signal in comparison to [11C]UCB-J. Considering the limited use of [11C]UCB-J to facilities with a cyclotron, having a F-18 variant would facilitate large, multicenter imaging trials. We have screened several F-18 derivatives of UCB-J in non-human primates and identified a promising F-18 PET candidate, [18F]MNI-1126, with additional investigations of the racemate [18F]MNI-1038, affording a signal comparable to [11C]UCB-J. F-18 derivatives of UCB-J and UCB-H were synthesized and administered to non-human primates for microPET imaging. Following screenings, [18F]MNI-1038 (racemate) and [18F]MNI-1126 (R-enantiomer) were identified with the highest signal and favorable kinetics and were selected for further imaging. Kinetic modeling with one- and two-tissue compartmental models, and linear methods were applied to PET data using metabolite-corrected arterial input function. Pre-block scans with levetiracetam (LEV, 10, 30 mg/kg, iv) were performed to determine the tracers’ in vivo specificity for SV2A. Two whole-body PET studies were performed with [18F]MNI-1038 in one male and one female rhesus, and radiation absorbed dose estimates and effective dose (ED, ICRP-103) were estimated with OLINDA/EXM 2.0. All compounds screened displayed very good brain penetration, with a plasma-free fraction of ~ 40 %. [18F]MNI-1126 and [18F]MNI-1038 showed uptake and distribution the most consistent with UCB-J, while the other derivatives showed suboptimal results, with similar or lower uptake than [18F]UCB-H. VT of [18F]MNI-1126 and [18F]MNI-1038 was high in all gray matter regions (within animal averages ~ 30 ml/cm3) and highly correlated with [11C]UCB-J (r > 0.99). Pre-blocking of [18F]MNI-1126 or [18F]MNI-1038 with LEV showed robust occupancy across all gray matter regions, similar to that reported with [11C]UCB-J (~ 85 % at 30 mg/kg, ~ 65 % at 10 mg/kg). Using the centrum semiovale as a reference region, BPND of [18F]MNI-1126 reached values of up to ~ 30 to 40 % higher than those reported for [11C]UCB-J. From whole-body imaging average ED of [18F]MNI-1038 was estimated to be 22.3 μSv/MBq, with tracer being eliminated via both urinary and hepatobiliary pathways. We have identified a F-18-labeled tracer ([18F]MNI-1126) that exhibits comparable in vivo characteristics and specificity for SV2A to [11C]UCB-J in non-human primates, which makes [18F]MNI-1126 a promising PET radiotracer for imaging SV2A in human trials. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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