| Literature DB >> 22214590 |
Abstract
The classical attitude of Nuclear Medicine practitioners on matters of peptide-receptor interactions has maintained an intrinsic monogamic character since many years. New advances in the field of biochemistry and even in clinical Nuclear Medicine have challenged this type of thinking, which prompted me to work on this review. The central issue of this paper will be the use of somatostatin analogs, i.e., octreotide, in clinical imaging procedures as well as in relation to neuroendocirne tumors. Newly described characteristics of G-protein coupled receptors such as the formation of receptor mosaics will be discussed. A small section will enumerate the regulatory processes found in the cell membrane. Possible new interpretations, other than tumor detection, based on imaging procedures with somatostatin analogs will be presented. The readers will be taken to situations such as inflammation, nociception, mechanosensing, chemosensing, fibrosis, taste, and vascularity where somatostatin is involved. Thyroid-associated orbitopathy will be used as a model for the development of multi-agent therapeutics. The final graphical summary depicts the multifactorial properties of ligand binding.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22214590 PMCID: PMC3251005 DOI: 10.1186/2191-219X-1-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJNMMI Res Impact factor: 3.138
Figure 199mTc.
Figure 2PET/CT Ga. The image was taken from a 56-year-old female patient with a NET.
Figure 3A 61-year-old male patient presenting intense uptake in muscular structures and in fatty tissues. Low levels of Se were documented in this case.
Figure 4A 46-year-old female patient with axial mis-alignment, the mid-line is shifted to the left. The uptake intensity is greater as in the previous case. Axial mis-alignment could influence mechanotension of the muscular structures and produce enhanced SSTR expression.
Figure 5Graphical summary of this review. This graphical summary of this review presents several real-time players that make up the total environment behind octreotide scintigraphy. (1) Nutrition: sufficient macro- and micronutrients of good quality are the starting point. Intestinal function will have an influence on absorption. (2) Endogenous ligands: somatostatin, corticostatin, urotensin, neuronostatin. (3) Pharmacological agents: octreotide, DOTA-chelators in tracers, lanreotide, omeprazole, lipid modifiers. (4) Ability to cope with oxidative status and inflammatory conditions. (5) Characteristics of the GPCR system: homo- and heterodimers, truncated receptors, RAMPS, arrestins, etc. (6) Morphostats, and cell regulators in malignancy.