INTRODUCTION: A new (18)F ligand, 2-(2'-((dimethylamino)methyl)-4'-(3-[(18)F]fluoropropoxy)-phenylthio)benzenamine ([(18)F]1), for positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of serotonin transporters (SERT) was evaluated. METHODS: Binding affinity was determined through in vitro binding assays with LLC-PK1 cells overexpressing SERT, NET or DAT (LLC-SERT, LLC-NET and LLC-DAT) and with rat cortical homogenates. Localization and selectivity of [(18)F]1 binding in vivo were evaluated by biodistribution, autoradiography and A-PET imaging studies in rats. RESULTS: This compound displayed excellent binding affinity for SERT in vitro with K(i)=0.33 and 0.24 nM in LLC-SERT and rat cortical homogenates, respectively. Biodistribution studies with [(18)F]1 showed good brain uptake (1.61% dose/g at 2 min postinjection), high uptake into the hypothalamus (1.22% dose/g at 30 min) and a high target-to-nontarget (hypothalamus to cerebellum) ratio of 9.66 at 180 min postinjection. Pretreatment with a SERT selective inhibitor considerably inhibited [(18)F]1 binding in biodistribution studies. Ex vivo autoradiography reveals [(18)F]1 localization to brain regions with high SERT density, and this binding was blocked by pretreatment with SERT selective inhibitors. Small animal PET (A-PET) imaging in rats provided clear images of tracer localization in the thalamus, midbrain and striatum. In A-PET chasing experiments, injecting a SERT selective inhibitor 75 min post-tracer injection causes a dramatic reduction in regional radioactivity and the target-to-nontarget ratio. CONCLUSION: The results of the biological studies and the ease of radiosynthesis with moderately good radiochemical yield (RCY=10-35%) make [(18)F]1 an excellent candidate for SERT PET imaging.
INTRODUCTION: A new (18)F ligand, 2-(2'-((dimethylamino)methyl)-4'-(3-[(18)F]fluoropropoxy)-phenylthio)benzenamine ([(18)F]1), for positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of serotonin transporters (SERT) was evaluated. METHODS: Binding affinity was determined through in vitro binding assays with LLC-PK1 cells overexpressing SERT, NET or DAT (LLC-SERT, LLC-NET and LLC-DAT) and with rat cortical homogenates. Localization and selectivity of [(18)F]1 binding in vivo were evaluated by biodistribution, autoradiography and A-PET imaging studies in rats. RESULTS: This compound displayed excellent binding affinity for SERT in vitro with K(i)=0.33 and 0.24 nM in LLC-SERT and rat cortical homogenates, respectively. Biodistribution studies with [(18)F]1 showed good brain uptake (1.61% dose/g at 2 min postinjection), high uptake into the hypothalamus (1.22% dose/g at 30 min) and a high target-to-nontarget (hypothalamus to cerebellum) ratio of 9.66 at 180 min postinjection. Pretreatment with a SERT selective inhibitor considerably inhibited [(18)F]1 binding in biodistribution studies. Ex vivo autoradiography reveals [(18)F]1 localization to brain regions with high SERT density, and this binding was blocked by pretreatment with SERT selective inhibitors. Small animal PET (A-PET) imaging in rats provided clear images of tracer localization in the thalamus, midbrain and striatum. In A-PET chasing experiments, injecting a SERT selective inhibitor 75 min post-tracer injection causes a dramatic reduction in regional radioactivity and the target-to-nontarget ratio. CONCLUSION: The results of the biological studies and the ease of radiosynthesis with moderately good radiochemical yield (RCY=10-35%) make [(18)F]1 an excellent candidate for SERT PET imaging.
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