| Literature DB >> 26384292 |
Bin Shen1, Michelle L James1,2, Lauren Andrews1, Christopher Lau1, Stephanie Chen1, Mikael Palner1, Zheng Miao1, Natasha C Arksey1, Adam J Shuhendler1, Shawn Scatliffe1, Kota Kaneshige3, Stanley M Parsons3, Christopher R McCurdy4, Ahmad Salehi2,5, Sanjiv S Gambhir1, Frederick T Chin6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study aims to further evaluate the specificity and selectivity of [(18)F]FTC-146 and obtain additional data to support its clinical translation.Entities:
Keywords: Dosimetry; Sigma-1 receptor; Sigma-1 receptor knockout mice; Small animal PET; Toxicology; Vesicular acetylcholine transporter; [18F]FTC-146
Year: 2015 PMID: 26384292 PMCID: PMC4573970 DOI: 10.1186/s13550-015-0122-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJNMMI Res Impact factor: 3.138
Comparison of sigma-1 receptor ligand binding affinities to S1R, S2R, and VAChT
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| FTC-146 | (−)-Vesamicol | SN-56 | SA4503 | FPS | Fluspidine | |
| S1R | 0.0025 | 74 [ | 0.56 | 4.6 | 4.3 [ | 0.59 [ |
| S2R | 364 | 364 [ | >1000 | 63 | 142 [ | 708 [ |
| VAChT | 450 | 20 | 140 | 50 | N/A | 1400 [ |
Fig. 1a Representative coronal PET/MR brain images of baseline WT/S1R-KO and blocking WT groups (n = 4 per group; blocking with BD1047 at 1 mg/kg). ctx = cortex; cp = caudate putamen; hc = hippocampus; cer = cerebellum. b Time activity curves depicting accumulation of [18F]FTC-146 in whole brain over time. We observed significantly higher brain uptake in baseline WT mice compared to S1R-KO mice at all time points during 60 min PET scan (P < 0.05). The kinetics of [18F]FTC-146 in WT blocking, S1R-KO baseline, and S1R-KO blocking studies all exhibited similar kinetics: i.e., the tracer quickly entered and cleared from the brain within 10 min post-injection
Fig. 2Time activity curves depicting accumulation of [18F]FTC-146 in a cortex, b caudate putamen, c hippocampus, and d cerebellum for baseline and blocking studies in WT and S1R-KO mice (n = 4 per group; blocked with BD1047 at 1 mg/kg)
Fig. 3Ex vivo biodistribution of [18F]FTC-146 in mice 25 min after injection of radioligand (n = 5, p < 0.05)
Fig. 4Ex vivo autoradiography of S1R-KO and WT mice (25 min P.I.). a Top row contains representative autoradiography images of [18F]FTC-146 from coronal sections throughout the brain of WT & S1R-KO (KO) mice. Second row shows Nissl staining of same sections used for autoradiography (for anatomical comparison). b Mean signal intensity for specific brain regions normalized to muscle for WT and KO mice. We observed three- to fourfold higher uptake of [18F]FTC-146 in all analyzed brain regions for WT mice compared to KO mice (n = 3 WT; n = 4 S1R-KO)
Fig. 5a Representative coronal S1R-stained WT and S1R-KO mouse brain sections. Images were all acquired using a nanozoomer with the same settings and are all shown on the same scale (40× magnified). b Staining differences between WT and S1R-KO brain sections were calculated by comparing pixel intensities of regions of interest after normalizing the sections to their background reading. (n = 3 WT; n = 4 S1R-KO)
Fig. 6Correlation between autoradiography signal and S1R immunostaining for the cerebellum, cortex, caudate putamen, and hippocampus of S1R-KO (−/−), heterozygous (+/−), and WT mice (n = 3 WT; n = 1 heterozygous; n = 4 S1R-KO)