| Literature DB >> 29050469 |
Matthias Schoenberger1,2, Frederick A Schroeder1, Michael S Placzek1,3,4, Randall L Carter5, Bruce R Rosen1,6, Jacob M Hooker1,4, Christin Y Sander1,4.
Abstract
As one of the major excitatory ion channels in the brain, NMDA receptors have been a leading research target for neuroscientists, physicians, medicinal chemists, and pharmaceutical companies for decades. Molecular imaging of NMDA receptors by means of positron emission tomography (PET) with [18F]GE-179 quickly progressed to clinical PET studies, but a thorough understanding of its binding specificity has been missing and has thus limited signal interpretation. Here a preclinical study with [18F]GE-179 in rodents and nonhuman primates (NHPs) is presented in an attempt to characterize [18F]GE-179 signal specificity. Rodent PET/CT was used to study drug occupancy and functional manipulation in rats by pretreating animals with NMDA targeted blocking/modulating drug doses followed by a single bolus of [18F]GE-179. Binding competition with GE-179, MK801, PCP, and ketamine, allosteric inhibition by ifenprodil, and brain activation with methamphetamine did not alter the [18F]GE-179 brain signal in rats. In addition, multimodal imaging with PET/MRI in NHPs was used to evaluate changes in radiotracer binding as a function of pharmacological challenges. Drug-induced hemodynamic changes were monitored simultaneously using functional MRI (fMRI). Comparisons of baseline and signal after drug challenge in NHPs demonstrated that the [18F]GE-179 signal cannot be manipulated in a predictable fashion in vivo. fMRI data acquired simultaneously with PET data supported this finding and provided evidence that radiotracer delivery is not altered by blood flow changes. In conclusion, the [18F]GE-179 brain signal is not readily interpretable in the context of NMDA receptor binding on the basis of the results shown in this study.Entities:
Keywords: NMDA receptors; PET/MRI; [18F]GE-179; neuroreceptor imaging
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29050469 PMCID: PMC5894869 DOI: 10.1021/acschemneuro.7b00327
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Chem Neurosci ISSN: 1948-7193 Impact factor: 4.418