| Literature DB >> 24058680 |
Subhash Chandra1, Rolf F Barth, Syed A Haider, Weilian Yang, Tianyao Huo, Aarif L Shaikh, George W Kabalka.
Abstract
The development of new boron-delivery agents is a high priority for improving the effectiveness of boron neutron capture therapy. In the present study, 1-amino-3-borono-cyclopentanecarboxylic acid (cis-ABCPC) as a mixture of its L- and D-enantiomers was evaluated in vivo using the B16 melanoma model for the human tumor and the F98 rat glioma as a model for human gliomas. A secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) based imaging instrument, CAMECA IMS 3F SIMS Ion Microscope, was used for quantitative imaging of boron at 500 nm spatial resolution. Both in vivo and in vitro studies in melanoma models demonstrated that boron was localized in the cytoplasm and nuclei with some cell-to-cell variability. Uptake of cis-ABCPC in B16 cells was time dependent with a 7.5:1 partitioning ratio of boron between cell nuclei and the nutrient medium after 4 hrs. incubation. Furthermore, cis-ABCPC delivered boron to cells in all phases of the cell cycle, including S-phase. In vivo SIMS studies using the F98 rat glioma model revealed an 8:1 boron partitioning ratio between the main tumor mass and normal brain tissue with a 5:1 ratio between infiltrating tumor cells and contiguous normal brain. Since cis-ABCPC is water soluble and can cross the blood-brain-barrier via the L-type amino acid transporters (LAT), it may accumulate preferentially in infiltrating tumor cells in normal brain due to up-regulation of LAT in high grade gliomas. Once trapped inside the tumor cell, cis-ABCPC cannot be metabolized and remains either in a free pool or bound to cell matrix components. The significant improvement in boron uptake by both the main tumor mass and infiltrating tumor cells compared to those reported in animal and clinical studies of p-boronophenylalanine strongly suggest that cis-ABCPC has the potential to become a novel new boron delivery agent for neutron capture therapy of gliomas and melanomas.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24058680 PMCID: PMC3776788 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0075377
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Chemical Structures of L- and D- enantiomers of cis-1-amino-3-borono-cyclopentanecarboxylic acid (cis-ABCPC).
Figure 2SIMS imaging analysis of 39K and 11B distributions in B16 melanoma.
The B16 melanoma bearing mouse was euthanized 1 hr after i.p. administration of cis-ABCPC. The photomicrograph is an H&E stained 4µ cryosection of the B16 melanoma. SIMS images were recorded from the adjacent 4µm thick cryosections. The SIMS 39K+ image was integrated on the CCD camera for 0.2 sec and 11B+ image for 2 min.
Quantitative SIMS imaging analysis of boron concentrations in tumor cells from B16 melanoma bearing mice.
| Treatment time (hr) | Boron conc. (µg/g wet weight) | SIMS imaging fields |
| 1.0 | 28±7c | 5 |
| 2.5 | 14±5d | 7 |
| 4.0 | 17±6d | 7 |
Four mice in each treatment received 24 mg boron/kg b.w. cis-ABCPC via injection. After 1, 2.5, and 4 hr. post injection, the mice were euthanized and samples of tumor i.p. were frozen for SIMS studies. The boron concentrations from SIMS images, as shown in Fig. 2, are expressed in µg/g wet wt. (mean ± SD).
In the 1 hr treatment group, observations represent 31 regions of interest (ROIs) in 5 SIMS imaging fields. A region of interest within a SIMS imaging field is defined as a clump of 10-15 individual cells taken together for quantification of SIMS images and, therefore, representing a large sampling of the imaging data. In 2.5 hr treatment, observations represent 47 ROIs in 7 SIMS imaging fields. In 4 hr treatment, observations represent 51 ROIs in 7 SIMS imaging fields. The superscript “c” denotes the significant difference (P<0.05) in boron concentrations from treatments designated with superscript “d”.
Figure 3SIMS imaging of boron in B16 cells exposed in vitro to cis-ABCPC.
The cells were treated with 30 ppm boron equivalent of cis-ABCPC for 2.5 hr (A-C) and for 1 hr in presence of 50 µM bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) for the detection of DNA-synthesizing S-phase cells among the asynchronous population by imaging of 81Br− signals with SIMS (D-F). The positive secondary ion SIMS images of 39K, 40Ca, and 11B represent the subcellular distributions of potassium, calcium, and boron, respectively, in individual B16 cells (A-C). The 23Na image also was recorded (not shown) and it revealed the K/Na ratio of ∼10∶1 in these cells. D-F represent SIMS analyses in cis-ABCPC and BrdU treatment. For the imaging of S-phase cells, the SIMS instrument was first operated in the negative secondary detection mode for imaging of 81Br− signals and then the mode of detection was changed to the positive secondaries in the same field of analysis. The 39K images were integrated on the CCD camera for 0.2 sec. each. The 40Ca, 11B, and 81Br− images were integrated for 2 min. each.
Boron concentration in wet weight in nuclei and cytoplasm of B16 melanoma cells in vitro determined by SIMS imaging analysis.
| Treatment – 30 ppm Boron equivalent of | Boron concentration in Nucleus (µg/g mean ± SD) | Boron concentration in Cytoplasm (µg/g mean ± SD) | Nucleus to Nutrient Medium Boron Ratio |
| 1.0 hr | 83±18 | 94±23 | 2.8 |
| 2.5 hr | 149±43 | 162±39 | 5.0 |
| 4.0 hr | 225±29 | 230±50 | 7.5 |
| 4.0 hr followed by 30 min. in Nutrient Medium | 102±36 | 114±30 |
In each treatment, more than 30 cells were analyzed in 5–7 SIMS imaging fields for quantitative analysis.
Figure 4SIMS analyses of brain from F98 glioma bearing rats.
Rats received cis-ABCPC by i.p. at a dose of 250 mg/kg b.w. and were euthanized 2.5 hr. later. The morphology of F98 glioma is shown in H & E stained cryosections (A-B). The main tumor mass (TM), normal brain tissue (BT), clusters of tumor satellite cells (TS) and individual infiltrating tumor cells (TC) are discernible in normal brain tissue (A). The optical image (B) shows a vessel (V) which is surrounded by TC and BT. SIMS analyses were made in adjacent cryosections. SIMS imaging analyses of boron from two different tissue regions are shown in C-D and E-F, respectively. In C-D, a subtle gradient of 39K+ in the SIMS image identified the boundary of the TM from the BT which contains a TS and TC’s in panel C. The respective boron microdistribution from cis-ABCPC is shown in the 11B+ boron SIMS image in panel D: the higher concentrations of boron in TM, TS, and TC’s are revealed in comparison to the BT. In a second example of the SIMS imaging of another tissue region (E-F), a gradient of 24Mg+ is used for the identification of TS and infiltrating TC’s in the normal brain tissue which also contains a vessel (V) surrounded by TC’s (E). The respective 11B+ SIMS image from this region, shown in F, revealed higher concentrations of boron in TS as well as the infiltrating TC’s in the normal brain tissue surrounding the vessel (V). The image integration times on the CCD camera for SIMS images of 39K+ and 11B+ in C and D were 0.2 sec and 2 min, respectively. The image integration times on the CCD camera for SIMS images of 24Mg+ and 11B+ in E and F were 1 min and 2 min, respectively.
Quantitative SIMS imaging analysis of boron concentrationsa from cis-ABCPC in F98 rat glioma brain tissue regions.
| Compound | TM | TS & TC | BT | TM/BT | TS and TC/BT |
| Cis-ABCPC | 64±11b | 41±9c | 8±3d | 8.0 | 5.0 |
Boron concentrations are expressed in µg/g wet weight (mean ± SD) in the main tumor mass (TM) and infiltrating clusters of tumor satellite cells (TS) and individual tumor cells (TC) in the normal brain tissue (BT) of F98 glioma bearing rats. The rats were treated with cis-ABCPC, as a mixture of its L- and D- enantiomers, with boron equivalent of 250 mg/kg b.w. i.p. for 2.5 hr. The observations represent the sampling of brain tissues from 3 rats and SIMS analysis in 6 imaging fields, as shown in Fig. 4.
denote boron concentrations significantly (p<0.05) different from each other.