Literature DB >> 17539632

Potentiometric and relaxometric properties of a gadolinium-based MRI contrast agent for sensing tissue pH.

Ferenc K Kalman1, Mark Woods, Peter Caravan, Paul Jurek, Marga Spiller, Gyula Tircsó, Róbert Kiraly, Ernö Brücher, A Dean Sherry.   

Abstract

The pH-sensitive contrast agent, GdDOTA-4AmP (Gd1) has been successfully used to map tissue pH by MRI. Further studies now demonstrate that two distinct chemical forms of the complex can be prepared depending upon the pH at which Gd(3+) is mixed with ligand 1. The desired pH-sensitive form of this complex, referred to here as a Type II complex, is obtained as the exclusive product only when the complexation reaction is performed above pH 8. At lower pH values, a second complex is formed that, by analogy with an intermediate formed during the preparation of GdDOTA, we tentatively assign to a Type I complex where the Gd(3+) is coordinated only by the appended side-chain arms of 1. The proportion of Type I complex formed is largely determined by the pH of the complexation reaction. The magnitude of the pH-dependent change in the relaxivity of Gd1 was found to be less than earlier reported (Zhang, S.; Wu, K.; Sherry, A. D. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 1999, 38, 3192), likely due to contamination of the earlier sample by an unknown amount of Type I complex. Examination of the nuclear magnetic relaxation dispersion and relaxivity temperature profiles, coupled with information from potentiometric titrations, shows that the amphoteric character of the phosphonate side chains enables rapid prototropic exchange between the single bound water of the complex with the bulk water thereby giving Gd1 a unique pH-dependent relaxivity that is quite useful for the pH mapping of tissues by MRI.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17539632      PMCID: PMC2533746          DOI: 10.1021/ic0702926

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Inorg Chem        ISSN: 0020-1669            Impact factor:   5.165


  15 in total

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