| Literature DB >> 27805057 |
G S M Sundaram1,2, Dhruva D Dhavale3,4, Julie L Prior1,2, Ping Yan3,4, John Cirrito3,4,5, Nigam P Rath6, Richard Laforest2, Nigel J Cairns5,7, Jin-Moo Lee2,3,4,8, Paul T Kotzbauer3,4, Vijay Sharma1,2,3,8.
Abstract
Fluselenamyl (5), a novel planarEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27805057 PMCID: PMC5090206 DOI: 10.1038/srep35636
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Chemical synthesis of Fluselenamyl 5 and [18F]-9 (PET tracer).
Figure 2The projection view of 5 showing crystallographic numbering scheme.
Atoms are represented by thermal ellipsoids corresponding to 30% probability.
Figure 3Staining of brain hippocampus tissue sections from APP+/−/PS1+/− 10 months old mice using 5 (100 nM) or immunostained with mouse monoclonal antibody (mHJ3.4) conjugated to Alexa 568 (positive control).
Arrows indicate labeling of Aβ plaques (arrows, extracellular Aβ; arrow head, Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy (CAA). The slides were analyzed Nikon Eclipse E800 epifluorescence microscope. Magnification: 10X; Top Inset; 20X.
Figure 4Binding of anti-Aβ antibody (10D5, Eli Lilly, (A)), 5 (B), and thioflavin S (C) to Aβ plaques in AD brain near/adjacent tissue sections. Amyloid in postmortem frontal lobe of a 90-year-old male. Magnification: 200X. (A): diffuse Aβ plaques and an arteriole with Aβ deposits (cerebral amyloid angiopathy); 10D5 immunohistochemistry. (B): section stained with 5 containing the same arteriole as in (A). There are numerous diffuse Aβ plaques (arrows) and compact plaques (arrow head) and the vessel is also stained. (C): Thioflavin S reveals amyloid in blood vessels and compact plaques (arrow head). The same blood vessel (asterisk) is labeled in (A–C). Similar results were obtained with more than three independent experiments.
Figure 5Binding of [18F]-9 with AD homogenates (A,C) and Aβ1-42 fibrils (B,D). Aβfibrils and AD homogenates were incubated with increasing concentrations of [18F]-9. Representative plots of specific binding versus [18F]-9 concentration are shown for AD homogenates in (A) and Aβ fibrils in (B). Data points represent mean +/− standard deviations (n = 3). The data was analyzed by curve fitting to a one-site binding model using a nonlinear regression. Scatchard plots of binding are shown for AD homogenates (C) and Aβ1-42 fibrils (D) and are consistent with one-site binding model. Similar results were obtained in two independent experiments. Fluorescence binding assays of 5 with Aβ1-42 fibrils also indicated a saturable specific binding with a Kd = 1.58 ± 0.05 nM (SI, Fig. 2).
Figure 6Autoradiography images of [18F]-9 binding in an AD frontal cortex section following incubation with either [18F]-9 (2 nM) alone (A) or in the presence of 5 (1 μM, C). Fluorescent immunostaining of sections (A) and (C) with an anti-Aβ antibody conjugate is shown in (B) and (D), respectively. The autoradiography images demonstrate laminar distribution of [18F]-9 binding in cortex, which correlates with the distribution of Aβ plaques detected by fluorescent immunostaining, and binding of [18F]-9 is inhibited by excess cold ligand 5 (1 μM, C).
Figure 7Ex vivo autoradiography images of 24-mo APP/PS1 Tg and WT control mouse after injection with [18F]-9.
(A) Coronal autoradiography image obtained at 30 min post-injection of [18F]-9 in the 24 months APP/PS1 Tg mouse. (B) Immunofluorescence staining of the same section with monoclonal anti-Aβ antibody to assess plaque density. (C,D) Count intensities were determined in three target ROIs (red boxes) for APP/PS1 Tg (C) and WT control (D), based on high Aβ plaque density in the immunostained APP/PS1 Tg section. Solid red boxes represent the locations of target ROIs in cortex, while dashed red boxes represent the locations of target ROIs in amygdala. Count intensities were also measured in a reference ROI (hypothalamus) with low plaque density, represented by green boxes. (E) Levels of tracer activity were analyzed by comparing the target/reference count intensity ratios for APP/PS1 Tg and WT control mice (mean + SD, n = 3).
Figure 8Real time multiphoton imaging of 5 in brains of APP +/−/PS1+/− transgenic mice: Following demarcation of blood vessels with dextran-Texas Red, 5 (2 mg/kg) was intravenously injected. A z-stack image series was acquired using an LSM 510META NLO microscope (Carl-Zeiss Inc). While arrowhead indicates vascular Aβ, the arrow shows parenchymal plaques.
Figure 9MicroPET/CT Imaging.
APP/PS1 and WT mice (15 months old; n = 3; closely age-matched) were injected intravenously with HPLC-purified [18F]-9 (5.032 MBq). Representative PET static images of brain (Coronal, Axial, and Sagittal View) were obtained from 15–30 min post intravenous injection, and co-registered with CT for an anatomical reference. The scale shows a range (Min-Max) of 0–2.046 × 105 Bq/mL. Bottom: APP/PS1 mouse, Top. WT mouse. While arrow indicates cortex, the arrowhead depicts cerebellum; Note higher retention of [18F]-9 in the brains of APP/PS1 (bottom) compared with WT counterpart (top).
Figure 10Dynamic PET scans were performed for 60 min following injection of [18F]-9 (5.032 MBq), and TAC (time activity curve) represent whole brain radioactivity post-intravenous injection of [18F]-9 in age-matched APP/PS1 and BL6 mice.
The data were normalized to average count between 30 sec and 3 min time points.