학술논문

A Novel Substrate Radiotracer for Molecular Imaging of SIRT2 Expression and Activity with Positron Emission Tomography.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Molecular Imaging & Biology. Aug2018, Vol. 20 Issue 4, p594-604. 11p.
Subject
*RADIOACTIVE tracers
*POSITRON emission tomography
*EPIGENETICS
*GENETIC regulation
*NUCLEOPHILIC catalysis
*ANIMALS
*BRAIN
*CELL lines
*COMPUTED tomography
*COMPUTER simulation
*DIAGNOSTIC imaging
*DYNAMICS
*GLIOMAS
*LYSINE
*MAGNETIC resonance imaging
*MOLECULAR diagnosis
*RADIOPHARMACEUTICALS
*RATS
*TRANSFERASES
Language
ISSN
1536-1632
Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to develop a SIRT2-specific substrate-type radiotracer for non-invasive PET imaging of epigenetic regulatory processes mediated by SIRT2 in normal and disease tissues.Procedures: A library of compounds containing tert-butyloxycarbonyl-lysine-aminomethylcoumarin backbone was derivatized with fluoroalkyl chains 3-16 carbons in length. SIRT2 most efficiently cleaved the myristoyl, followed by 12-fluorododecanoic and 10-fluorodecanoic groups (Kcat/Km 716.5 ± 72.8, 615.4 ± 50.5, 269.5 ± 52.1/s mol, respectively). Radiosynthesis of 12- [18F]fluorododecanoic aminohexanoicanilide (12-[18F]DDAHA) was achieved by nucleophilic radiofluorination of 12-iododecanoic-AHA precursor.Results: A significantly higher accumulation of 12-[18F]DDAHA was observed in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-435 cells in vitro as compared to U87, MiaPaCa, and MCF10A, which was consistent with levels of SIRT2 expression. Initial in vivo studies using 12-[18F]DDAHA conducted in a 9L glioma-bearing rats were discouraging, due to rapid defluorination of this radiotracer upon intravenous administration, as evidenced by significant accumulation of F-18 radioactivity in the skull and other bones, which confounded the interpretation of images of radiotracer accumulation within the tumor and other regions of the brain.Conclusions: The next generation of SIRT2-specific radiotracers resistant to systemic defluorination should be developed using alternative sites of radiofluorination on the aliphatic chain of DDAHA. A SIRT2-selective radiotracer may provide information about SIRT2 expression and activity in tumors and normal organs and tissues, which may help to better understand the roles of SIRT2 in different diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]