| Literature DB >> 28387722 |
Anne-Claire Dupont1,2, Bérenger Largeau3, Maria Joao Santiago Ribeiro4,5, Denis Guilloteau6,7, Claire Tronel8, Nicolas Arlicot9,10.
Abstract
In vivo exploration of activated microglia in neurodegenerative diseases is achievable by Positron Emission Tomography (PET) imaging, using dedicated radiopharmaceuticals targeting the translocator protein-18 kDa (TSPO). In this review, we emphasized the major advances made over the last 20 years, thanks to TSPO PET imaging, to define the pathophysiological implication of microglia activation and neuroinflammation in neurodegenerative diseases, including Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease, dementia, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, multiple sclerosis, and also in psychiatric disorders. The extent and upregulation of TSPO as a molecular biomarker of activated microglia in the human brain is now widely documented in these pathologies, but its significance, and especially its protective or deleterious action regarding the disease's stage, remains under debate. Thus, we exposed new and plausible suggestions to enhance the contribution of TSPO PET imaging for biomedical research by exploring microglia's role and interactions with other cells in brain parenchyma. Multiplex approaches, associating TSPO PET radiopharmaceuticals with other biomarkers (PET imaging of cellular metabolism, neurotransmission or abnormal protein aggregates, but also other imaging modalities, and peripheral cytokine levels measurement and/or metabolomics analysis) was considered. Finally, the actual clinical impact of TSPO PET imaging as a routine biomarker of neuroinflammation was put into perspective regarding the current development of diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for neurodegenerative diseases.Entities:
Keywords: PET; TSPO; microglial activation; neurodegenerative diseases; neuroinflammation; psychiatric disorders; radiopharmaceutical
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28387722 PMCID: PMC5412369 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18040785
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
A summary of the different generation of TSPO radiotracers from Vivash and O’Brien [43].
| Chemical Class | Radioligand | Advantage | Limitation | Generation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Isoquinoline carboxamide | 11C-PK11195 | rs6971-insensitive | First | |
| Indole acetamides | 11C-SSR180575 | rs6971-sensitive | Second (11C) | |
| Vinca alkaloids | 11C-vinpocetine | |||
| Phenoxyarylacetamides | 11C-PBR28 | Cerebellum validated as a reference region | ||
| 11C-DAA1106 | ||||
| Imidazopyridine acetamides | 11C-DPA713 | |||
| Imidazopyridines | 11C-CLINME | |||
| Dihydro-9 | 11C-DAC | |||
| 11C-AC-5216 | ||||
| Phenoxyarylacetamides | 18F-FEDAA1106 | Longer half-time than 11C | rs6971-sensitive | Second (18F) |
| 18F-PBR06 | ||||
| 18F-FEPPA | ||||
| Imidazopyridine acetamides | 18F-PBR111 | |||
| Pyrazolopyrimidines | 18F-DPA-714 | |||
| Isoquinoline carboxamide | 11C-ER176 | “rs6971—less sensitive in vivo than 2G” | Third | |
| Tetrahydrocarbazole | 18F-GE180 | rs6971-insensitive |
PB, protein binding.
PET imaging studies assessing TSPO tracers in parkinsonian disorders.
| Disorder | Population | Radioligand | Main Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 early-stage drug-naive PD patients vs. 10 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Midbrain tracer BPND in PD group greater than in the healthy volunteers | Ouchi et al. (2005) [ | |
|
18 PD patients with a wide range of disease severity vs. 11 HC 8 PD patients with a longitudinal follow-up (PET after 18–28 months) | 11C-PK11195 |
Significantly increased tracer BPND in basal ganglia, cortex and brainstem in PD group Nigral and striatal levels of 11C-PK11195 binding remain unchanged | Gerhard et al. (2006) [ | |
| 14 PD patients vs. 8 HC | 11C-PK11195 | PD patients showed higher putamen and midbrain tracer BPND than controls | Bartels et al. (2010) [ | |
| 6 early-stage drug-naive PD patients vs. 11 HC | 11C-PK11195 | PD patients showed increased putamen and substantia nigra tracer BPND than healthy subjects | Iannaccone et al. (2013) [ | |
| 9 PD patients vs. HC | 11C-PK11195 | Pons tracer BPND in PD group greater than in the control group | Kobylecki et al. (2013) [ | |
| 8 PD patients without dementia vs. 10 HC | 11C-PK11195 | BPND significant increase in temporal, parietal and occipital cortical regions | Edison et al. (2013) [ | |
| 19 PD patients vs. 17 HC | 18F-FEPPA | No significant difference in striatal VT values between PD patients and controls | Koshimori et al. (2015) [ | |
|
11 PD patients without dementia vs. 12 HC 11 PD patients were rescanned after 1 year | 11C-DPA713 |
Significantly increases 11C-DPA713 BPND in brainstem, basal ganglia and occipital, temporal plus parietal cortex in PD group In ROI analysis, extrastriatal 11C-DPA713 BPND remains stable | Terada et al. (2016) [ | |
| 24 PD patients: 18 with AZD3241 vs. 6 with placebo | 11C-PBR28 | Compared to baseline, significantly reduced VT in nigrostriatal pathway, cortical regions, thalamus and cerebellum after 4 and 8 weeks of treatment | Jucaite et al. (2015) [ | |
| 5 MSA patients vs. 6 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Increased tracer binding in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, putamen, pallidum, pons and substantia nigra | Gerhard et al. (2003) [ | |
| 8 MSA-P patients: 3 with minocycline vs. 5 in placebo arm | 11C-PK11195 | Compared to baseline, tracer BPND decreased in caudate nucleus, thalamus, midbrain and cerebellum for 2/3 treated patients after 24 weeks of minocycline | Dodel et al. (2010) [ | |
|
4 PSP patients vs. 7 HC 2 PSP patients with a longitudinal follow-up (PET after 6–10 months) | 11C-PK11195 |
Basal ganglia, thalamus, midbrain, substantia nigra, pons, cerebellum and frontal lobe tracer BPND in PSP group higher than in the healthy controls No significant change in 11C-PK11195 binding | Gerhard et al. (2006) [ | |
| 7 MSA and 4 PSP patients vs. 7 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Increased tracer binding in putamen, thalamus, midbrain, frontal and deep white matter | Kobylecki et al. (2013) [ | |
| 4 CBD patients vs. HC | 11C-PK11195 | Significantly increased tracer BPND in striatum, substantia nigra, pons and cortical regions | Gerhard et al. (2004) [ | |
| 1 patient with 3 year-history of CBD | 11C-PK11195 | Marked retention of tracer in posterior putamen, thalamus; moderately in pallidum, substantia nigra and caudal pons | Henkel et al. (2004) [ |
BPND, binding potential; CBD, corticobasal degeneration; MSA, multiple system atrophy; MSA-P, multiple system atrophy Parkinson-type; HC, healthy control; PD, Parkinson’s disease; PSP, progressive supranuclear palsy; RCT, randomized controlled trial; ROI, region of interest; VT, total distribution volume.
PET imaging studies assessing TSPO tracers in Huntington’s disease.
| 11 manifest HD patients vs. 10 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Significantly increased tracer BPND in striatum, pallidum, frontal and parietal cortical areas in HD group | Pavese et al. (2006) [ |
| 11 premanifest HD patients vs. 10 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Striatal and cortical (frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital) tracer BPND greater in HD patients than in healthy subjects | Tai et al. (2007) [ |
| 10 premanifest HD patients, 9 manifest HD patients and 10 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Tracer uptake is significantly higher in hypothalamus and striatum in premanifest and manifest HD than in healthy volunteers | Politis et al. (2008) [ |
| 8 premanifest HD patients, 8 manifest HD patients and 16 HC | 11C-PK11195 | In premanifest patients, significantly increased BPND radioligand in cognitive regions compared to normal controls | Politis et al. (2011) [ |
| 12 premanifest HD patients vs. 12 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Significant increases in BPND radioligand in striatum, pallidum, thalamus and precentral gyrus in premanifest HD patients versus healthy controls | Politis et al. (2015) [ |
BPND, binding potential; HD, Huntington’s disease; HC, healthy control.
PET imaging studies assessing TSPO tracers in dementias.
| Disorder | Population | Radioligand | Main Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 FTLD vs. 8 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Significantly increased radioligand binding in cortical frontal, medial temporal and subcortical areas in FTLD group | Cagnin et al. (2004) [ | |
| 3 presymptomatic MAPT gene carriers vs. 4 HC | 11C-DAA1106 | 11C-DAA1106 BPND greater in the medial frontal, occipital and in the posterior cingulate cortex of pre-symptomatic gene carriers than in healthy volunteers | Miyoshi et al. (2010) [ | |
| 11 early-stage drug-naive DLB patients vs. 11 HC | 11C-PK11195 | DLB patients showed increased subcortical (basal ganglia, substantia nigra) and cortical (cerebellum) tracer BPND | Iannaccone et al. (2013) [ | |
| 11 PDD patients vs. 10 HC | 11C-PK11195 | BPND significant increase in frontal, temporal, parietal and occipital cortical regions | Edison et al. (2013) [ | |
| 10 AD, 10 MCI, 11 PDD patients and 16 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Significantly increased tracer BPND in cortical and subcortical regions of AD, PDD and MCI patients compared with controls | Fan et al. (2015) [ | |
| 9 PDD, 8 AD and 8 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Tracer was significantly increased in cortical regions of AD and PDD patients, compared to controls | Femminella et al. (2016) [ | |
| 8 AD patients vs. 15 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Significantly increased radioligand binding in the entorhinal, temporoparietal and cingulate cortex | Cagnin et al. (2001) [ | |
| 13 AD patients vs. 10 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Significantly increased tracer BPND in the cortical and subcortical regions in AD patients | Edison et al. (2008) [ | |
| 10 AD patients vs. 10 HC | 11C-DAA1106 | Significantly increased 11C-DAA1106 BPND in the cerebellum, cortical regions (prefrontal, lateral temporal, parietal and occipital cortex) and striatum in AD patients, compared to age-matched control subjects | Yasuno et al. (2008) [ | |
| 13 MCI patients vs. 10 HC | 11C-PK11195 | 5/13 patients showed higher cortical tracer BPND than in controls | Okello et al. (2009) [ | |
| 6 mild-moderate AD patients, 6 MCI patients and 5 HC | 11C-PK11195 | TSPO PET images showed no significant difference between the three groups | Wiley et al. (2009) [ | |
| 11 drug-naïve AD patients vs. 10 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Significantly increased 11C-PK11195 BPND in the medial frontal, parietal and left temporal cortex in the AD group | Yokokura et al. (2011) [ | |
| 6 AD patients vs. 12 HC | 11C-vinpocetine | No significant difference between AD patients and age-matched control subjects in SUV of all brain regions | Gulyas et al. (2011) [ | |
| 10 AD, 7 MCI patients and 10 HC | 11C-DAA1106 | Mean BP values of MCI and AD patients higher than those of controls in prefrontal, parietal, temporal, occipital and cingulate cortex, striatum, cerebellum and thalamus | Yasuno et al. (2012) [ | |
| 19 AD, 10 MCI patients and 13 HC | 11C-PBR28 | Significantly increased tracer binding in inferior parietal lobule, middle plus inferior temporal cortex and precuneus in AD patients, compared to MCI patients and HC | Kreisl et al. (2013) [ | |
| 19 probable AD, 10 MCI patients and 21 HC | 11C-PK11195 | ROI based analyses showed no differences between diagnostic groups, with large overlap between subject groups | Schuitemaker et al. (2013) [ | |
| 9 AD patients vs. 7 HC | 18F-FEDAA1106 | No significant change in 18F-FEDAA1106 binding between AD and HC | Varrone et al. (2013) [ | |
|
8 AD patients vs. 8 HC AD patients were followed-up for 16 months | 11C-PK11195 |
AD patients showed a mean increase of 30% radioligand BPND in frontal, temporal, parietal, occipital cortical regions, hippocampus and striatum In parallel to cognitive deterioration, microglial activation was increased longitudinally in 6/8 AD patients | Fan et al. (2015) [ | |
| 25 AD patients, 11 MCI and 21 HC | 11C-PBR28 | AD patients showed greater radioligand VT/fP values than MCI patients and HC in combined middle, inferior temporal and entorhinal cortices | Lyoo et al. (2015) [ | |
| 10 AD patients vs. 7 HC | 18F-FEMPA | Significantly higher radioligand VT in the medial temporal cortex in AD patients than in controls | Varrone et al. (2015) [ | |
| 18 AD patients in moderate stage vs. 21 HC | 18F-FEPPA | Compared to HC, AD patients showed a significant increase in 18F-FEPPA binding in both, gray matter (hippocampus, temporal, prefrontal, parietal and occipital cortex) and white matter (cingulum bundle, posterior limb of the internal capsule) | Suridjan et al. (2015) [ | |
| 10 AD patients vs. 6 HC | 18F-DPA-714 | No significant difference in tracer BPND and VT in whole brain gray matter between AD patients and HC | Golla et al. (2015) [ | |
|
14 AD patients vs. 8 HC Follow-up of 2.5 years in AD patients | 11C-PBR28 | Tracer binding (SUVr) significantly greater among patients than controls in inferior parietal lobule, precuneus, occipital cortex, hippocampus, entorhinal cortex and combined middle and inferior temporal cortex TSPO binding in temporoparietal areas increased from 3.9% to 6.3% per annum in patients, compared with only −0.5–1% per annum in controls | Kreisl et al. (2016) [ | |
|
58 AD patients (34 MCI and 24 dementia) vs. 32 controls (24 HC and 8 amyloidosis-controls) 30 AD patients were followed-up over 2 years | 18F-DPA-714 | In MAB + HAB group, tracer-GCI significantly higher in amyloidosis controls than in HC, especially in the cingulum and the precuneus GCI-DPA-714 SUVr greater in the slow decliners than in the fast decliners group | Hamelin et al. (2016) [ |
AD, Alzheimer’s disease; BPND, non-displaceable binding potential; CDR-SB, clinical dementia rating scale-sum of boxes; DLB, dementia with Lewy bodies; EOAD, early-onset AD; FTDP-17, frontotemporal dementia with parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17; FTLD, frontotemporal lobar degeneration; fP, plasma-free fraction of radioligand; GCI, global cortical index; HAB, TSPO high affinity binders; HC, healthy control; LOAD, late-onset AD; MAB, TSPO mixed affinity binders, MCI, mild cognitive impairment; MMSE, mini-mental state examination; ROI, region of interest, SUVr, standard uptake value ratio; PPD, Parkinson’s disease dementia; VT, total distribution volume.
PET imaging studies assessing TSPO tracers in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
| Population | Radioligand | Main Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 ALS patients without dementia (2 bulbar-onset and 8 limb-onset) – mean disease duration = 25 months | 11C-PK11195 | The difference in tracer binding between ALS and controls reached significance in motor cortex, pons, frontal lobe region and thalamus | Turner et al. (2004) [ |
| 10 riluzole-naive ALS patients without dementia (6 bulbar-onset and 4 limb-onset) vs. 8 HC | 18F-DPA-714 | Primary motor, supplementary motor and temporal regions 18F-DPA-714 DVr values were greater in ALS patients than in age-matched healthy volunteers | Corcia et al. (2012) [ |
| 10 ALS patients (3 bulbar-onset and 7 limb-onset) vs. 10 HC | 11C-PBR28 | Significantly increased tracer binding in the primary motor cortex and upper region of the corticospinal tract in ALS patients | Zürcher et al. (2015) [ |
ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; ALSFRS-R, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis functional rating scale revised; BPND, binding potential; DVr, distribution volume ratio; HC, healthy control, SUVr, standard uptake value ratio; UMNB, upper motor neuron burden scale.
PET imaging studies assessing TSPO tracers in psychiatric disorders.
| Disorder | Population | Radioligand | Main Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BD | 14 patients with BD-I vs. 11 HC | 11C-PK11195 | No significant difference in the whole-brain gray matter BP in patients with bipolar I disorder versus healthy subjects | Haarman et al. (2014, 2016) [ |
| MDE | 10 patients with mild to moderate depression vs. 10 HC | 11C-PBR28 | No statistically significant difference in 11C-PBR28 VT between individuals with depression and healthy volunteers | Hannestad et al. (2013) [ |
| 20 MDE drug-free patients vs. 20 HC | 18F-FEPPA | In MDE patients, significant elevation of TSPO VT in the prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex and insula, of 26%, 32% and 33%, respectively, compared to normal controls | Setiawan et al. (2015) [ | |
| SCZ | 10 patients with recent-onset SCZ vs. 10 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Significantly greater total gray matter tracer BP in SCZ patients than in healthy volunteers | Van Berckel et al. (2008) [ |
| 7 SCZ patients vs. 8 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Significantly higher radioligand BP was observed in the hippocampus of SCZ patients than in HC | Doorduin et al. (2009) [ | |
| 14 SCZ patients vs. 14 HC | 11C-DAA1106 | No clear difference in either regional or total cortical radioligand BPND values between the two groups | Takano et al. (2010) [ | |
| 16 SCZ patients vs. 27 HC | 18F-FEPPA | No significant effect of clinical group (SCZ vs. HC) detected on tracer VT in hippocampus, medial prefrontal cortex, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, temporal cortex and striatum or in white matter tracts | Kenk et al. (2015) [ | |
| 14 UHRP subjects (APT-naive), 14 SCZ patients and 28 HC | 11C-PBR28 | Significantly increased tracer DVr in total gray matter and frontal and temporal lobes in UHRP subjects and SCZ patients, compared to age-matched controls | Bloomfield et al. (2016) [ | |
| 12 recent onset SCZ patients vs. 14 HC | 11C-DPA713 | Significantly increased 11C-DPA713 VT in amygdala and cingulate cortex in SCZ patients compared healthy volunteers | Coughlin et al. (2016) [ | |
| 12 recent onset SCZ patients vs. 14 HC | 11C-DPA713 | Relative to HC, there was a strong trend towards reduce 11C-DPA713 VT in the middle frontal gyrus of patients with recent onset SCZ | Notter et al. (2017) [ |
AES, Apathy Evaluation Scale; APT, antipsychotic therapy; BD, bipolar disorder; BP, binding potential; BPND, binding potential; CAARMS, comprehensive assessment of the at-risk mental states; CDS, calgary depression scale; DVr, distribution volume ratio; IDC-C30, inventory of depressive symptoms—clinician version; HDRS, Hamilton depression rating scale; HC, healthy control; MDE, major depressive episodes; PANSS, positive and negative syndrome scale; RBANS, repeatable battery for the assessment of neuropsychological status; SCZ, schizophrenia; UHRP, ultra-high risk of psychosis; VT, total distribution volume.
PET imaging studies assessing TSPO tracers in multiple sclerosis.
| Population | Radioligand | Main Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 RR patients | 11C-PK11195 | Increased 11C-PK11195 BPND in MRI-defined active MS lesions, not in chronic lesions | Vowinckel et al. (1997) [ |
| 12 MS patients (8 RR, 1 SP and 3 PP), 8 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Increased global and in MRI-defined (T1/T2) active lesions radioligand BPND in MS patients | Banati et al. (2000) [ |
| 22 MS patients (13 RR, 7 SP and 2 PP), 7 HC | 11C-PK11195 | No statistical difference in NAWM and GM tracer BPND was found between MS patients and healthy volunteers | Debruyne et al. (2003) [ |
| 22 MS patients (13 RR, 7 SP and 2 PP), 8 HC | 11C-PK11195 | NAWM tracer BPND was positively correlated with amount of brain atrophy | Versijpt et al. (2005) [ |
| 11 MS (mostly RR) patients vs. 7 HC | 11C-PBR28 | No statistical difference in neither WM fraction or GM fraction VT tracer between MS and healthy volunteers | Oh et al. (2011) [ |
| 18 MS patients (10 RR and 8 SP), 8 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Proportion of abnormal high total cortical GM 11C-PK11195 BPND was greater in SP than in RR patients | Politis et al. (2012) [ |
| 9 RR untreated patients | 11C-PK11195 | The patient with the more active RR had the highest 11C-PK11195 BPND on the baseline TSPO PET scan | Ratchford et al. (2012) [ |
| 9 RR in acute relapse (6 without treatment and 3 interferon-β treated) vs. 5 HC | 18F-FEDAA1106 | Similar radioligand BPND and VT between normal controls and MS patients | Takano et al. (2013) [ |
| 11 RR vs. 11 HC | 18F-PBR111 | Increased tracer uptake in WM lesions and perilesional WM relative to HC | Colasanti et al. (2014) [ |
| 19 MS patients (10 RR, 8 SP and 1 PP) | 11C-PK11195 | Black holes tracer BPND was greater in progressive patients than in RR patients | Giannetti et al. (2014) [ |
| 10 SP patients vs. 8 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Relative to controls, significantly increased tracer DVR was found in periventricular NAWM and thalamus of SP patients | Rissanen et al. (2014) [ |
| 18 CIS patients vs. 8 HC | 11C-PK11195 | Compared to controls, significantly increased tracer BPND was found in NAWM of CIS patients, while no difference was observed in GM | Giannetti et al. (2015) [ |
| 5 RR patients (4 stable and 1 drug naive with active RR) vs. 4 HC | 11C-PBR28 | VT was similar between stable MS and healthy volunteers across whole brain and GM/WM/NAWM regional areas (frontal, parietal, temporal and occipital) | Park et al. (2015) [ |
| 9 RR patients vs. 8 HC | 18F-GE180 | Whole WM uptake (SUVRGM) slightly higher in RR patients than in HC | Trigg et al. (2015) [ |
| 11 RR patients (6 with MDE) vs. 22 HC | 18F-PBR111 | 18F-PBR111 DVR higher in the hippocampus of MS patients relative to normal subjects, while no difference was observed in thalamus | Colasanti et al. (2016) [ |
| 23 MS patients (16 RR and 7 SP) | 11C-PBR28 | No significant correlation between 11C-PBR28 DVR and EDSS in either WM lesions, NAWN or GM | Datta et al. (2016) [ |
| 27 MS patients (12 RR and 15 SP), 14 HC | 11C-PBR28 | Compared to controls, significantly increased tracer DVR across the brain was found in MS cases; the greatest increases being in cortex and cortical lesions, thalamus, hippocampus and NAWM | Herranz et al. (2016) [ |
BPND, binding potential; BDI, beck depression inventory; CIS, clinically isolated syndrome; DVR, distribution volume ratio; EDSS, expanded disability status scale; GA, glatiramer acetate; GM, gray matter; HC, healthy control; MDE, major depressive disorder; MS, multiple sclerosis; NAGM, normal-appearing gray matter; NAWM, normal-appearing white matter; PP, primary progressive multiple sclerosis; RR, relapse-remitting multiple sclerosis; SP, secondary progressive multiple sclerosis; SUVR, standardized uptake value ratio; VT, total volume of distribution; WM, white matter.