| Literature DB >> 27380031 |
Berend van der Wildt1,2, Adriaan A Lammertsma3, Benjamin Drukarch4, Albert D Windhorst3.
Abstract
Transglutaminase type 2 (TG2) is increasingly linked to the pathogenesis of several diseases, such as celiac disease, cancer, and fibrotic and neurodegenerative diseases. In parallel with becoming an attractive target for therapy, interest in the development of compounds for in vivo imaging of TG2 is rising. Such imaging biomarkers might assist in clarifying the role of TG2 in pathology and in monitoring TG2 inhibition in vivo and thus assist in drug development. In this review, the latest results together with various strategies in TG2 PET tracer development are discussed, including radiolabelling of irreversible and reversible active-site inhibitors, as well as allosteric inhibitors, acyl-donor and acyl-acceptor substrates, and anti-TG2 monoclonal antibodies.Entities:
Keywords: Antibodies; Irreversible TG2 inhibitors; PET; Reversible TG2 inhibitors; Substrates; Transglutaminase type 2
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27380031 PMCID: PMC5332496 DOI: 10.1007/s00726-016-2288-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Amino Acids ISSN: 0939-4451 Impact factor: 3.520
Fig. 1Basic principles of PET. A PET nuclide, incorporated in a biologically relevant molecule, decays and emits a positron inside a subjects’ brain. Following annihilation with a nearby electron (depicted as e−), two 511 keV photons are formed, which travel in opposite directions and are detected simultaneously by two opposing (in co-incidence) detector elements within the PET detector ring. Combining co-incidence counts from all detector pairs allows for reconstruction of the quantitative distribution of the radioactive ligand in three-dimensional space
Fig. 2Potential strategies for TG2 PET imaging. a Closed conformation TG2 can be targeted by either radiolabelled antibodies or GTP site binding molecules; b open conformation TG2 can be targeted by radiolabelled irreversible inhibitors, TG2 antibodies, reversible inhibitors, or acyl-donor substrates; c intermediate thioester between acyl-donor substrate and TG2 that can be intercepted by radiolabelled nucleophiles, such as amines
Fig. 3Radiolabelled TG2 inhibitors, substrates, and other compounds that may be suited as lead compounds for the development of TG2 PET imaging agents and as such are discussed in this review. The position of the carbon-11 label in compound [11C]1–[11C]3 is depicted with asterisk
Pro et contra of TG2 PET tracer development strategies as discussed in this review
| Irreversible inhibitors | Reversible inhibitors | GTP-binding site inhibitors | Aryl-acceptor substrates | Acyl-donor substrates | Antibodies |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pro | |||||
| High selectivity | High selectivity | Potential imaging of closed TG2 | Signal magnification | Signal magnification | Low uptake in kidney and liver |
| High-affinity | Potentially BBB permeable | Selective | Long circulation | ||
| Potentially BBB permeable | Only cross-linking active TG2 | Only cross-linking active TG2 | High selectivity | ||
| Only cross-linking active TG2 | Allow for pulse-chase experiments | High-affinity | |||
| Contra | |||||
| High liver and kidney uptake | Potency sub-optimal | Competing with endogenous GDP | Non-selective | Non-BBB permeable | Expression vs activity |
| High liver and kidney uptake | Low potency | Non-BBB permeable | |||
| Independent of cross-linking activity | |||||
| Poor cell penetration | |||||
| Non-selective | |||||