Nobuhiko Iki1, Eszter Boros2, Mami Nakamura1, Ryo Baba1, Peter Caravan2. 1. Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Tohoku University , 6-6-07 Aramaki-Aoba, Aoba-ku, Sendai 980-8579, Japan. 2. A. A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School , 149 13th Street, Suite 2301, Charlestown, Massachusetts 02129, United States.
Abstract
In aqueous solution, Gd(3+) and thiacalix[4]arene-p-tetrasulfonate (TCAS) form the complex [Gd3TCAS2](7-), in which a trinuclear Gd(3+) core is sandwiched by two TCAS ligands. Acid-catalyzed dissociation reactions, as well as transmetalation and ligand exchange with physiological concentrations of Zn(2+) and phosphate, showed [Gd3TCAS2](7-) to be extremely inert compared to other Gd complexes. Luminescence lifetime measurements of the Tb analogue Tb3TCAS2 allowed estimation of the mean hydration number q to be 2.4 per Tb ion. The longitudinal relaxivity of [Gd3TCAS2](7-) (per Gd(3+)) was r1 = 5.83 mM(-1) s(-1) at 20 Hz (37 °C, pH 7.4); however, this relaxivity was limited by an extremely slow water exchange rate that was 5 orders of magnitude slower than the Gd(3+) aqua ion. Binding to serum albumin resulted in no relaxivity increase owing to the extremely slow water exchange kinetics. The slow dissociation and water exchange kinetics of [Gd3TCAS2](7-) can be attributed to the very rigid coordination geometry.
In aqueous solution, Gd(3+) and thiacalix[4]arene-p-tetrasulfonate (TCAS) form the complex [Gd3TCAS2](7-), in which a trinuclear Gd(3+) core is sandwiched by two TCAS ligands. Acid-catalyzed dissociation reactions, as well as transmetalation and ligand exchange with physiological concentrations of Zn(2+) and phosphate, showed [Gd3TCAS2](7-) to be extremely inert compared to other Gd complexes. Luminescence lifetime measurements of the Tb analogue Tb3TCAS2 allowed estimation of the mean hydration number q to be 2.4 per Tb ion. The longitudinal relaxivity of [Gd3TCAS2](7-) (per Gd(3+)) was r1 = 5.83 mM(-1) s(-1) at 20 Hz (37 °C, pH 7.4); however, this relaxivity was limited by an extremely slow water exchange rate that was 5 orders of magnitude slower than the Gd(3+) aqua ion. Binding to serum albumin resulted in no relaxivity increase owing to the extremely slow water exchange kinetics. The slow dissociation and water exchange kinetics of [Gd3TCAS2](7-) can be attributed to the very rigid coordination geometry.
The aqueous coordination
chemistry of the trivalent lanthanides is characterized by high coordination
numbers and, classically, kinetically labile complexes. For instance
the aqua ion Gd3+(aq) has the fastest water
exchange rate of any trivalent metal ion (1 × 109 s–1 at 25 °C) and is at the extreme for water exchange
among all metal ions in solution.[1] The
application of Gd(III) complexes as contrast agents in magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) led to a rich development in aqueous lanthanide coordination
chemistry.[2] Clinically approved contrast
agents use octadentate polyaminocarboxylate ligands based on 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic
acid (DOTA) or diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid (DTPA) to provide
Gd(III) complexes safe for human use.[3,4] These complexes
also have one water coligand. The presence of the multidentate chelating
ligand also affects the water exchange rate, and among these types
of complexes, water exchange kinetics can be tuned over 5 orders of
magnitude by judicious choice of the donor atoms on the multidentate
ligand.[5,6]For T1 relaxation agents
like Gd3+ complexes, the optimal water exchange rate is
in the 1 × 107 to 1 × 108 s–1 range.[7] When the water exchange rate
becomes too slow, the relaxivity of the complex is limited because
the relaxed water molecule cannot exchange fast enough to diminish
the relaxation time of bulk water. However, very slow water exchange
can be exploited by using a non-Gd paramagnetic lanthanide ion that
induces a large pseudocontact chemical shift. If the water exchange
rate (1/τ) is slow enough to meet the slow exchange condition
(ωτ > 1), then the coordinated water ligand can be
observed as a highly shifted 1H NMR resonance. Saturation
of this resonance results in transfer of saturation to the bulk water
resonance resulting in MRI signal loss. This is the basis of paramagnetic
chemical exchange saturation transfer (PARACEST) effect.[8,9] For PARACEST applications the exchange rate should be from 1 ×
103 to 1 × 104 s–1. For
water exchange rates in the 1 × 105 to 1 × 106 s–1 range, there is another contrast generating
effect called T2-exchange.[10] This is essentially exchange broadening but by a highly shifted
water ligand resonance. By judicious choice of lanthanide and coligand,
different MRI contrast enhancing properties (T1, T2-exchange, saturation transfer) can be exploited. Thus, water
exchange is a critical parameter to understand and control in lanthanide
chemistry.Structures of TCAS and the 1:1 and 3:2 lanthanide(III) complexes.Almost all the ligand design in
MR contrast agents has focused on DOTA and DTPA analogues because
of their ability to form stable, inert complexes with Ln3+. Chelators of lower denticity fail to provide sufficient inertness
for in vivo applications. Previously, we found that thiacalix[4]arene-p-tetrasulfonate (TCAS, Figure ) is capable of binding Ln3+ ions
in different binding modes depending on the reaction conditions and
the species of countercation.[11,12] For Ln
= Nd and Yb, we showed that it self-assembled to form a sandwich-type
complex, [Ln3TCAS2]7–, formed
in which two cone-shaped TCAS ligands sandwich a trinuclear Ln3+ core.[13] The ligand binds to the
metal ions at the periphery, which we refer to as an exo-binding mode.
The Yb(III) complex exhibited remarkable kinetic inertness for dissociation
in strong acid (half-life t1/2 = 1.53
h at pH 1.16, 25 °C), which was unexpected from the exo-binding
mode. The mean hydration number per Yb(III) ion was q = 2.5 in [Yb3TCAS2]7–.[13] Given high kinetic inertness, the large hydration
number, and the presence of three Ln3+ ions in a compact
structure, we hypothesized that the corresponding Gd3+ analogue,
[Gd3TCAS2]7–, could be a promising
candidate for development of high relaxivity Gd-based contrast agents.
Instead we observed a remarkable inertness of water exchange that
ultimately muted relaxivity.
Figure 1
Structures of TCAS and the 1:1 and 3:2 lanthanide(III) complexes.
Results and Discussion
Preparation of Gd3TCAS2
Previously, we formed [Ln3TCAS2]7– (Ln3+ = Nd3+,
Yb3+) in 24 h by self-assembly of the components at pH
7.4.[13] We sought optimum conditions to
scale up the reaction while avoiding the formation of unwanted impurities
such as Gd2TCAS2 and Gd4TCAS2. We were able to obtain 1.31 g of a solid powder containing
Na7[Gd3TCAS2] (2.0 × 10–4 mol) and CAPS (2.5 mmol), the latter of which was
used to buffer the pH to 11.2 for the initial complex formation. To
confirm that other species GdTCAS2 (n = 2, 4) were not formed, we analyzed
the reaction mixture and the resultant powder by capillary electrophoresis
(CE). CE is able to separate LnTCAS2 species (n = 2–4) with high resolution
based on the charge-to-size ratio. The only obtained and detected
species was [Gd3TCAS2]7– (Figure S1; see also Figure S2 for Nd, Tb, and Yb analogues).
Kinetic Inertness
A prerequisite for in vivo use is high kinetic inertness under physiological
conditions. We determined the solvolytic dissociation rate constant
(kd) of [Gd3TCAS2]7– under acid-catalyzed conditions ([H+] = 0.03–0.23 M) at 25 °C. The dissociation of the [Gd3TCAS2]7– sandwich cluster was
followed in the presence of excess acid to guarantee the pseudo-first-order
condition. The reaction was monitored by HPLC to selectively detect
the signal from the remaining [Gd3TCAS2]7– in the reaction mixture (Figure A). The time dependence of the peak height
clearly showed a single exponential decay to give the observed dissociation
rate constants (kobs; Figure B). This reaction was studied
at different acid concentrations while keeping the ionic strength
constant (I = 0.5 M) to afford first-order dependence
of kobs on [H+] (Figure C, eq ).
Figure 2
(A)
Typical chromatograms of a reaction mixture of [Gd3TCAS2]7– under acid-catalyzed dissociation conditions,
(B) time dependence of peak height (H) of [Gd3TCAS2]7–, and (C) dependence
of the observed dissociation rate constant, kobs, on proton concentration, [H+] at 25 °C
(I = 0.5 M). Sample: [Gd] = 6.0 × 10–5 M, [TCAS] = 4.0 × 10–5 M, [HCl] = 0.15 M,
pH 0.89, I = 0.50 M, 25 °C. (A) Eluent: [HEPES]
= 0.01 mol/kg (pH 7.4), [TBABr] = 30 mmol/kg in 50 wt % CH3CN. Flow rate: 2 mL/min, injection volume: 5 μL, detection
wavelength: 320 nm. (B) The decay of H was fitted
with an equation: H = A exp(−1.27
× 10–3t) with R2 = 0.997.
This
suggests that there are two paths of dissociation: solvolytic dissociation
and proton-assisted. In the latter, a protonated species, [Gd3H1TCAS2]6–, dissociates
with a second-order rate constant kH.
The protonation likely occurs on one of the phenolic oxygens of TCAS,
which in turn should decrease the donating ability to Gd3+ and increase dissociation of the Gd3+ ion. By fitting
with eq , both of the
rate constants were estimated: kd = (2.73
± 2.67) × 10–5 s–1 and kH = (8.10 ± 0.19) × 10–3 M–1 s–1. The large uncertainty
associated with kd stems from the fact
the dominant path of dissociation is the proton-assisted path via
[Gd3H1TCAS2]6– under
the conditions studied. [Gd3TCAS2]7– exhibits a remarkable kinetic inertness with a t1/2 = 2.4 h at pH 2. The dissociation kinetics of [Gd3TCAS2]7– can be compared to approved
contrast agents where its inertness appears intermediate between acyclic
contrast agents and macrocyclic agents. The proton-assisted dissociation
rate constant kH is 3 times larger than
for [Gd(HP-DO3A)] (2.9 × 10–4 M–1 s–1),[14] but 2 orders
of magnitude smaller than for [Gd(DTPA)]2– (0.58
M–1 s–1).[15](A)
Typical chromatograms of a reaction mixture of [Gd3TCAS2]7– under acid-catalyzed dissociation conditions,
(B) time dependence of peak height (H) of [Gd3TCAS2]7–, and (C) dependence
of the observed dissociation rate constant, kobs, on proton concentration, [H+] at 25 °C
(I = 0.5 M). Sample: [Gd] = 6.0 × 10–5 M, [TCAS] = 4.0 × 10–5 M, [HCl] = 0.15 M,
pH 0.89, I = 0.50 M, 25 °C. (A) Eluent: [HEPES]
= 0.01 mol/kg (pH 7.4), [TBABr] = 30 mmol/kg in 50 wt % CH3CN. Flow rate: 2 mL/min, injection volume: 5 μL, detection
wavelength: 320 nm. (B) The decay of H was fitted
with an equation: H = A exp(−1.27
× 10–3t) with R2 = 0.997.We also assessed kinetic inertness under more physiological
conditions. In the body, endogenous ions such as Zn2+ and
phosphate can catalyze transchelation of the Gd3+ complex
(GdL), leading to dissociation via transmetalation (to ZnL) and ligand
substitution (to GdPO4). We used a standard assay[16] to monitor changes in the longitudinal nuclear
relaxation rate R1 (= 1/T1) of solvent water for [Gd3TCAS2]7– in the presence of 1.0 M phosphate and 0.1
mM Zn2+. GdPO4 precipitates out of the solution
upon formation resulting in a decrease in R1. In the absence of Zn2+, the R1 value showed a 5% decrease in the first 3 h, a plateau until 44
h, then a 23% decrease at 100 h (Figure A◦). The initial rapid decrease in R1 may be attributed to an initial ternary phosphate
complex while the slower decrease in R1 is caused by the dissociation of [Gd3TCAS2]7– to form GdPO4. Notably, even after
100 h 77% of [Gd3TCAS2]7– remained
intact (for estimation, see Supporting Information). This clearly indicates that [Gd3TCAS2]7– is substantially inert at neutral pH. In the presence
of Zn2+, the behavior of R1 over time (Figure A■) was comparable to R1 measured
in the absence of Zn2+, suggesting that any dissociation
proceeds not by transmetalation, but rather by ligand substitution
with phosphate. This is evident when R1 with Zn2+ is standardized by R1 without Zn2+. [Gd3TCAS2]7– did not show a significant change until 45 h and only a slight decrease
after 100 h, suggesting [Gd3TCAS2]7– is not sensitive to transmetalation by Zn2+ (Figure ).
Figure 3
Time dependence of the
longitudinal relaxation rate R1 of solutions
containing (A) [Gd3TCAS2]7– and (B) MS-325 in the presence or absence of ZnII ion.
Reaction conditions: [Gd]total = 0.1 mM, [Zn(OTf)2] = 0 (◦) or 0.1 mM (■), [phosphate] = 1.0 M, pH 7.0,
25 °C. Relaxivity measurement: 37 °C, 60 MHz.
Figure 4
Time dependence
of the longitudinal relaxation rate R1(Zn) of solutions containing (●) [Gd3TCAS2]7– and (◆) MS-325 in the presence of ZnII ion standardized to the relaxation rate measured in the
absence of ZnII, R1(no Zn).
Reaction conditions: [Gd3+]total = 0.1 mM, [Zn(OTf)2] = 0 or 0.1 mM, [phosphate] = 1.0 M, pH 7, 25 °C. Relaxivity
measurement: 37 °C, 60 MHz.
Time dependence of the
longitudinal relaxation rate R1 of solutions
containing (A) [Gd3TCAS2]7– and (B) MS-325 in the presence or absence of ZnII ion.
Reaction conditions: [Gd]total = 0.1 mM, [Zn(OTf)2] = 0 (◦) or 0.1 mM (■), [phosphate] = 1.0 M, pH 7.0,
25 °C. Relaxivity measurement: 37 °C, 60 MHz.For comparison, we also measured the time course
of R1 for the Food and Drug Administration
approved contrast agent MS-325 (gadofosveset, Ablavar) in the same
fashion.[17,18] Of the approved linear contrast agents (Gd-DTPA,
etc), MS-325 was the most inert in this assay.[19] In the absence of Zn2+, little change of R1 value was observed even at t = 100 h (Figure B◦), suggesting that MS-325 is very inert to ligand substitution
by phosphate. However, in the presence of Zn2+, the R1 value gradually decreased (Figure B■) indicating a more
facile transmetalation than observed for [Gd3TCAS2]7– (Figure A■). This is further seen in Figure when R1 with
Zn2+ is standardized by R1 without
Zn2+ and indicates that MS-325 dissociation proceeds by
exchange of Gd3+ with Zn2+. [Gd3TCAS2]7– is very inert under both highly forcing,
acidic conditions as well as under excess Zn2+ and phosphate
challenge, suggesting sufficient kinetic inertness for in vivo applications.Time dependence
of the longitudinal relaxation rate R1(Zn) of solutions containing (●) [Gd3TCAS2]7– and (◆) MS-325 in the presence of ZnII ion standardized to the relaxation rate measured in the
absence of ZnII, R1(no Zn).
Reaction conditions: [Gd3+]total = 0.1 mM, [Zn(OTf)2] = 0 or 0.1 mM, [phosphate] = 1.0 M, pH 7, 25 °C. Relaxivity
measurement: 37 °C, 60 MHz.
Determination of Hydration Number of [Tb3TCAS2]7–
As a surrogate for [Gd3TCAS2]7–, we used the luminescent [Tb3TCAS2]7– complex, which we anticipate
is isostructural based on the similar ionic radii of Gd3+ and Tb3+. Here the Tb3+-centered luminescence
lifetime was measured in H2O and D2O (τH and τD, respectively), and q was estimated using Horrocks’ equation.[20,21] We estimate an average q value of 2.4 per ion (Table
S2 Supporting Information). This could
indicate two Tb(III) ions with two water ligands and the third ion
with three water ligands, and it strongly suggests that each Gd in
[Gd3TCAS2]7– is q ≥ 2.
Water Exchange Kinetics
We evaluated
the mean water exchange kinetics at each Gd3+ center of
[Gd3TCAS2]7– by measuring
the 17O NMR transverse relaxation rate (R2) of solvent water as a function of temperature in the
presence (R2) and absence (R2d) of [Gd3TCAS2]7–. Normalizing the difference in these rates to the mole fraction
of water that is coordinated to the Gd ion (we assumed q = 2) gives the so-called reduced relaxation rate R2r. Figure shows the temperature dependence of ln(R2r) versus reciprocal temperature for [Gd3TCAS2]7–. For most Gd3+ complexes, R2r increases with increasing temperature, reaches
a maximum and then decreases. However, for [Gd3TCAS2]7– we see R2r first decrease, reach a minimum at ∼25 °C,
and then increase as temperature is increased. This
behavior is indicative of extremely slow water exchange.
Figure 5
Temperature
dependence of reduced 17O transverse relaxation rate for
[Gd3TCAS2]7– at 11.7 T. Samples:
[Gd3TCAS2]7– = 7.03 mM, [HEPES]
= 50 mM, pH = 7.4. Temp: 3–94 °C.
For
Gd3+ where the paramagnetic induced chemical shift is small
compared to the T2 of the coordinated
water ligand (T2m), R2r depends on T2m and the
water residency time (τm, reciprocal of water exchange
rate, kex) as described by eq :[22]The term R2OS refers to paramagnetic
relaxation of water outside the first coordination sphere, and for
most Gd(III) complexes this term makes a negligible contribution to R2r. In the slow exchange regime (τm ≫ T2m), the reduced relaxation
rate simplifies to eq .This is the
behavior that we observe for [Gd3TCAS2]7–. As the temperature is lowered, the τm increases with respect to R2OS and eventually
results in R2r = R2OS. Generally, for Gd3+ the R2OS term is much smaller than the contribution from inner-sphere
water and can be ignored,[23] but for [Gd3TCAS2]7–, τm is so long at low temperatures that this outer-sphere phenomenon
becomes observable. A similar outer-sphere effect on R2r has been reported for the solvent exchange of the complex
[Ti(DMF)6]3+.[24]Temperature
dependence of reduced 17O transverse relaxation rate for
[Gd3TCAS2]7– at 11.7 T. Samples:
[Gd3TCAS2]7– = 7.03 mM, [HEPES]
= 50 mM, pH = 7.4. Temp: 3–94 °C.We calculated the τm of the coordinated
waters to be 116 μs at 25 °C (or 20.8 μs at 37 °C,
see Supporting Information). As a comparison,
τm of the aqua ion [Gd(H2O)9]3+ is 5 orders of magnitude shorter (0.9 ns at 25 °C).[25] Only the Gd3+ complex of the tetra(methylphosphonate)amide
derivative of DOTA, [Gd(DOTA-4AMP)(H2O)]5–, has a longer reported τm.[26] The extremely slow water exchange rate suggests that the proton
relaxivity will be very low.An alternative model is that there
are two classes of coordinated water ligands. There is obviously a
very slow exchangeable water, but the magnitude of the R2OS term is compatible with an extremely fast exchangeable
water; for example, R2OS observed here
is comparable to R2r for [Gd(H2O)8]3+ at the same temperature.[27] Using this physical model, we assumed that for
the [Gd3TCAS2]7– cluster that
there were two slow exchangeable water molecules per Gd and one fast
exchangeable water per cluster (since the Tb luminescence gave q = 7 per cluster). This model will also fit the data in Figure equally well since
essentially we are replacing the R2OS term
in eq with a 1/T2mfast term (the T2 of the coordinated rapidly exchanging water). In that
model, the residency time of the fast exchanging water is 0.6 ns at
37 °C. We have no way of knowing the relative population of very
fast and very slow exchangeable water molecules, but if we arbitrarily
take a different model with five slow exchanging waters and two fast
exchanging waters, then the residence time of the slow exchanging
waters decreases from 17 to 14 μs at 37 °C, and the fast
exchanging water residency times change from 0.6 to 0.3 ns. Regardless,
there would exist two classes of exchangeable water molecules separated
by over 4 orders of magnitude.
Proton Relaxivity
Relaxivity, r1, per Gd was determined
in 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperazine-1-ethanesulfonic acid (HEPES) buffer
and in excess human serum albumin (HSA) at 0.47 and 1.41 T, Table . We independently
measured the affinity of [Tb3TCAS2]7– for HSA (Kb = (1.71 ± 0.31) ×
106 M–1, 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 25 °C,
see Supporting Information, section 5),
and a hydration number of q = 1.7 for the HSA-bound
complex. Because of its high affinity for HSA, [Gd3TCAS2]7– is effectively completely bound to albumin
for these measurements. The measured relaxivity values in Table are in line with
the very slow water exchange kinetics. Equation relates the contribution to relaxivity due
to the inner-sphere water ligands.From
the Solomon–Bloembergen–Morgan equation, one can estimate T1m for [Gd3TCAS2]7– in the absence and presence of HSA, assuming rotational
correlation times of 250 ps and 10 ns,[6,28] respectively
(Table ). Relaxivity
in both cases is almost exclusively determined by τm even at 37 °C. The contribution to relaxivity from the 2.5
water ligands is only 1.9 mM–1 s–1 at 37 °C and less as temperature is decreased. In HSA solution
the inner-sphere water ligands only contribute 2.1 mM–1 s–1 to the observed relaxivity. This slight decrease
in relaxivity compared to the unbound state is at odds with other
HSA-bound complexes[29] but consistent with
the extremely slow water exchange rate and the reduced hydration number
from 2.5 to 1.7 upon HSA binding. Interestingly, if the water exchange
rate was 1000-fold faster (typical of many Gd complexes), then the
relaxivity would be in excess of 150 mM–1 s–1 at 0.47 T and >50 mM–1 s–1 at 1.4 T. The extremely slow water exchange rate
has effectively quenched the relaxivity. We also made measurements
at lower temperatures, and the relaxivity increased slightly to 7.9
mM–1 s–1 at 13 °C (see Supporting Information); cooling will further
decrease r1IS but will increase
the second/outer-sphere relaxivity.
Table 1
Per Gd Relaxivity
and Estimated T1m Valuesa (at 1.4 T) for [Gd3TCAS2]7–
r1 (0.47 T) [mM–1 s–1]
r1 (1.41 T) [mM–1 s–1]
T1m [μs]
[Gd3TCAS2]7–
5.8
7.0
2.3
[Gd3TCAS2]7– in HSA
5.5
6.1
0.8
In presence and absence of HSA at 37 °C measured
at [Gd] < 0.15 mM. τm from 17O NMR
is 21 μs at 37 °C, and thus τm ≫ T1m.
In presence and absence of HSA at 37 °C measured
at [Gd] < 0.15 mM. τm from 17O NMR
is 21 μs at 37 °C, and thus τm ≫ T1m.We also studied the effect of concentration on relaxivity. For a
single species in solution, a plot of the longitudinal relaxation
rate, R1 (= 1/T1) as a function of [Gd] (= 3[Gd3TCAS2]7–) should give a straight line with the slope giving
the relaxivity. However, for [Gd3TCAS2]7– we observed nonlinear behavior with the slope decreasing
at concentrations above [Gd] = 0.4 mM. This concentration-dependent
behavior suggested the aggregation of [Gd3TCAS2]7– at higher concentrations. We were able to confirm
the presence of aggregation by dynamic light scattering (DLS) measurements
of different concentrations of [Gd3TCAS2]7– ([Gd] = 0.1–2.0 mM). DLS showed an increase
in mean diameter from 0.7 to 10 nm at [Gd] = 0.4 mM (Figure ), implying the formation of
an aggregate above this concentration. Hence, the data in the low
concentration range (0–0.15 mM), showing good linearity (Figure S7B), was used for determination of r1 reported in Table . The reduction in relaxivity at higher concentrations
suggests a reduction of water access (reduced q)
in the aggregate as was seen in the HSA-bound species. The Tb luminescence
measurements were performed at low micromolar concentration, and the
hydration state reflects the monomeric [Gd3TCAS2]7– species.Dependence of number mean diameter on
the concentration of Gd. Sample: [Gd] (= 3[Gd3TCAS2]7–) = 0.1–2 mM, [HEPES] = 50 mM,
pH = 7.4 at 25 °C.Only very few Gd complexes can be found in literature that
show similarity to [Gd3TCAS2]7–. Among the few is the structurally similar [Gd3(H3taci)2(H2O)6]3+ complex, which was reported to have a much shorter mean water residency
time, with 91 ns at 25 °C.[30] This
complex however was reported to be quite kinetically labile. The opposite
is true for [Gd3TCAS2]7–;
the rigidity of the [Gd3TCAS2]7– system may make the nine-coordinated Gd3+ transition
state energetically unfavorable. This results in slow water exchange,
but it also rationalizes the kinetic inertness of [Gd3TCAS2]7– to solvolysis. Thus, the rigid structure
of [Gd3TCAS2]7– has brought
both preferable and negative consequences to its ability to act as
a contrast agent: very high kinetic inertness yet extremely slow water
exchange rate, limiting relaxivity.In conclusion, we found
that the unusual sandwich-cluster complex [Gd3TCAS2]7– has high kinetic inertness, high hydration
number (q ≥ 2 per Gd) as well as a high affinity
to HSA: all prerequisites for MRI contrast agents. The relaxivity
of the complex however was found to be much lower than expected both
in the presence and absence of HSA, and this was due to an exceedingly
slow water exchange rate. Indeed the extreme inertness of [Gd3TCAS2]7– with respect to dissociation
and water exchange is akin to that seen with the Ln(III) complexes
of DOTA-tetraamides. The slow water exchange kinetics of LnDOTA-tetraamide
complexes (where Ln ≠ Gd) have been exploited for PARACEST
applications.88,[31] Future investigations
of the Ln3TCAS2 system will aim to exploit this
slow water exchange rate for PARACEST applications.
Experimental Section
Equipment
A capillary electrophoresis
measuring system CAPI-3300 of Otsuka Electronics Co, Ltd. (Osaka)
with a fused silica capillary (50 μm id) purchased from GL Sciences
Inc. (Tokyo) was used to assess the purity of the prepared [Gd3TCAS2]7–. The luminescent spectra
in the visible region and the luminescence lifetimes were measured
using a Hitachi F-4500 fluorescent spectrometer. An HPLC consisting
of a Shimadzu LC-10AD pump and a JASCO UV 2075 Plus spectrophotometric
detector equipped with a Mightysil ODS RP-18 GP II column (150 ×
4.6 mm, 5 μm, Kanto Chemical Co, Inc.) was used. The chromatograms
were recorded with a JASCO 807-IT integrator. Longitudinal relaxation
times, T1, were measured by using the
inversion recovery method on Bruker Minispecs mq20 (20 MHz) and mq60
(60 MHz). Relaxivity was determined from the slope of a plot of 1/T1 versus concentration for GdIII.
The GdIII concentrations of the measured samples were determined
by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry on an Agilent 7500a
system. Dynamic light scattering equipment Zetasizer Nano ZetasizerSP
(Malvern Instruments Ltd, U.K) was used to estimate the size of aggregate
of [Gd3TCAS2]7– observed at
high concentration. 17O NMR measurements of solutions were
performed at 11.7 T on 150 μL samples contained in 2 mm Shigemi
tubes inside a 5 mm standard NMR tube on a Varian spectrometer. The
pH was recorded using a TOA HM-25R pH meter with a combined glass
electrode.The TCAS was synthesized as previously reported[i] and stocked as an aqueous solution of 0.01 M. The stock
solution of 0.01 M LnIII was prepared by dissolving nitrate
hexahydrate (99.5% purity each) purchased from Wako Pure Chemical
Industries, Ltd. (Osaka) into 0.01 M HNO3 solution. A stock
solution of 0.01 M AgI was prepared by dissolving AgNO3 (99.8%, Kanto Chemical Company, Inc, Tokyo) in 0.01 M HNO3. The concentration of the metal ion in the stock solutions
was determined using accepted chelatometry.[ii] pH buffers
HEPES and N-cyclohexyl-3-aminopropane-sulfonic acid
(CAPS) were purchased from Dojindo Laboratories, Kumamoto. All other
chemicals used were of guaranteed ultrapure grade. Deionized water
was used throughout the study.
Preparation of [Gd3TCAS2]7–
To a 100 mL
beaker, 0.5 M CAPS buffer (pH 11.2, 5 mL), 24.6 mM TCAS solution (16.3
mL), water (ca. 3 mL), and 9.64 mM Gd(NO3)3 (62.2
mL) were added. The pH of the mixture was adjusted to 11.2 by stepwise
addition of 2 M NaOH in small portions. Then the solution was diluted
to 100 mL with water ([Gd] = 3.0 × 10–4 M,
[TCAS] = 2.0 × 10–4 M, [CAPS] = 2.0 ×
10–2 M, pH 11.2). The reaction mixture stirred gently
at 60 °C for 64.5 h. Finally, the solution was evaporated to
dryness at 45 °C, dried in vacuo at 45 °C for 10 h, and
additionally dried in vacuo for 44 h over P2O5 to give 1.31 g of white powder of a mixture of sodium salts of [Gd3TCAS2]7– (2.0 × 10–4 mol) and CAPS (2.5 mmol). The reaction mixture after 1.0 h and the
resulting solid powder were assayed with capillary electrophoresis
(CE, Figure S1) to display essentially
a single peak assigned to [Gd3TCAS2]7– that excluded formation of Gd-TCAS complexes of other stoichiometry.
Authors: Peter Caravan; Normand J Cloutier; Matthew T Greenfield; Sarah A McDermid; Stephen U Dunham; Jeff W M Bulte; John C Amedio; Richard J Looby; Ronald M Supkowski; William DeW Horrocks; Thomas J McMurry; Randall B Lauffer Journal: J Am Chem Soc Date: 2002-03-27 Impact factor: 15.419
Authors: Stéphane Dumas; Vincent Jacques; Wei-Chuan Sun; Jeffrey S Troughton; Joel T Welch; Jaclyn M Chasse; Heribert Schmitt-Willich; Peter Caravan Journal: Invest Radiol Date: 2010-10 Impact factor: 6.016
Authors: E Gianolio; C Cabella; S Colombo Serra; G Valbusa; F Arena; A Maiocchi; L Miragoli; F Tedoldi; F Uggeri; M Visigalli; P Bardini; S Aime Journal: J Biol Inorg Chem Date: 2014-02-08 Impact factor: 3.358