| Literature DB >> 29330383 |
Pedro Brugarolas1,2, Jorge E Sánchez-Rodríguez3,4, Hsiu-Ming Tsai5, Falguni Basuli6, Shih-Hsun Cheng5, Xiang Zhang6, Andrew V Caprariello7,8, Jerome J Lacroix3,9, Richard Freifelder5, Dhanabalan Murali10, Onofre DeJesus10, Robert H Miller7,11, Rolf E Swenson6, Chin-Tu Chen5, Peter Herscovitch12, Daniel S Reich13, Francisco Bezanilla3, Brian Popko14.
Abstract
Central nervous system (CNS) demyelination represents the pathological hallmark of multiple sclerosis (MS) and contributes to other neurological conditions. Quantitative and specific imaging of demyelination would thus provide critical clinical insight. Here, we investigated the possibility of targeting axonal potassium channels to image demyelination by positron emission tomography (PET). These channels, which normally reside beneath the myelin sheath, become exposed upon demyelination and are the target of the MS drug, 4-aminopyridine (4-AP). We demonstrate using autoradiography that 4-AP has higher binding in non-myelinated and demyelinated versus well-myelinated CNS regions, and describe a fluorine-containing derivative, 3-F-4-AP, that has similar pharmacological properties and can be labeled with 18F for PET imaging. Additionally, we demonstrate that [18F]3-F-4-AP can be used to detect demyelination in rodents by PET. Further evaluation in Rhesus macaques shows higher binding in non-myelinated versus myelinated areas and excellent properties for brain imaging. Together, these data indicate that [18F]3-F-4-AP may be a valuable PET tracer for detecting CNS demyelination noninvasively.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29330383 PMCID: PMC5766510 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-18747-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Increased binding of [14C]4-AP in white matter areas of dysmyelinated and demyelinated mouse brains. (A) Increased binding of 4-AP in Shiverer mice. Left: LFB staining showing lack of myelin in the Shiverer mouse. Middle: [14C]4-AP autoradiography. The same sections were used for autoradiography and LFB staining. The corpus callosum is marked by arrows. False color images are shown to highlight the differences in uptake. Right: [14C]2-DG autoradiography and false color image. Dot plot: quantification of the autoradiographic signal intensity in the corpus callosum. The cortex was used to normalize across animals. Line represents mean value and error bars represent standard deviation. P value was calculated using two-tail Student’s t-test (α = 0.05, n.s. = non significant). (B) Increased binding of [14C]4-AP in focal lesions produced by injection of lysolecithin. Left: LFB staining showing focal demyelination on the right side of the corpus callosum (dashed line). A black charcoal spot left by the syringe shows the site of injection. Middle: [14C]4-AP autoradiography and false color image. Dot plot: quantification of the autoradiographic signal intensity in the lesion and contralateral control areas. Each pair of dots connected by a thin line represents one animal, ≥6 sections quantified per animal. The cortex was used to normalize across animals. Horizontal line represents mean value and error bars represent 95% confidence interval. P value calculated using two-tail Student’s t-test (α = 0.05, paired data). (C) Changes in binding of [14C]4-AP in DTA mice. DTA mice show prominent demyelination 9 weeks post injection of tamoxifen and robust remyelination 15 weeks post injection. Left: LFB staining showing normal myelin at 3 weeks post injection, severe demyelination 9 weeks post injection and robust significant remyelination 15 weeks post injection. Middle: [14C]4-AP autoradiography and false color image. Dot plot: quantification of the autoradiographic signal intensity in the corpus callosum. The cortex was used to normalize across animals. Each dot represents one animal, ≥6 sections quantified per animal. Line represents mean value and error bars represent 95% confidence interval. P value calculated using ANOVA (α = 0.05). Right: scatter plot showing disease course (clinical score as follows: 0 = no symptoms, 1 = flaccid tail, 2 = mild ataxia, 3 = severe ataxia and splayed gait, 4 = severe ataxia plus tremor plus dragging of hind limbs, 5 = severe ataxia plus tremor plus problems righting themselves, and 6 = immobile, laterally recumbent).
Figure 2Fluorinated derivatives of 4-AP. (A) Compounds tested in this study: (1) 4-aminopyridine. (2) 3,4-diaminopyridine. (3) 3-hydroxymethyl-4-aminopyridine. (4) 3-fluoro-4-aminopyridine. (5) 3-fluoromethyl-4-aminopyridine. (6) 3-fluoroethyl-4-aminopyridine. (7) 2-fluoro-4-aminopyridine. (B) Drug binding to K+ channels expressed in frog oocytes: K+ currents were generated by a series of 50 ms pulses from −70 mV to +40 mV in increments of 10 mV in the presence of cumulative concentrations of 4-AP derivatives. Each panel represents the K+ current recorded from the same oocyte before and after addition of each drug. Scale bar: 1 μA/10 ms. (C) Relative K+ current vs. concentration for each drug obtained at +20 mV. (D) Half-maximal inhibitory concentration of each molecule and 95% confidence interval obtained from fitting the data to the Hill equation. n = number of times each drug was tested in separate oocytes. (E) Drug binding to K+ channels in explanted mouse optic nerves: compound action potential (CAP) traces before (solid line) and after (dashed line) addition of each drug. Scale bar: 5 mV/5 ms. (F) Relative increase of maximum CAP amplitude vs. concentration for each drug. Amplitude was normalized to the amplitude before the drug. (G) Half-maximal effective concentration of each molecule and 95% confidence interval obtained from fitting the data to the Hill equation. n = number of times each drug was tested in separate nerves.
Figure 3Pharmacology of 4-AP derivatives. (A) Pharmacological parameters for 4-AP derivatives and control compounds. cLogP: predicted logP value from SciFinder calculated using Advanced Chemistry Development (ACD/Labs) Software V11.02. logD: experimental partition coefficient octanol:water at pH 7.4 (n = 3). Pe: permeability coefficient across artificial membrane (n = 3). t: half-life in mouse microsomes (n = 3). (B) In vivo effects after intraperitoneal injection of 4-AP derivatives (200 μL/200 g mouse).
Figure 4Increased binding of [14C]3-F-4-AP in mouse models of MS. (A) Increased binding of [14C]3-F-4-AP in the corpus callosum of the Shiverer mouse. Left: LFB staining showing lack of myelin in the Shiverer mouse. Middle: [14C]3-F-4-AP autoradiography with false color image to highlight differences. Dot plot: quantification of the autoradiographic signal intensity in the corpus callosum. The cortex was used to normalize across animals. Each dot represents one animal, ≥ 6 sections quantified per animal. Line represents the mean and error bars represent 95% confidence interval. P value calculated using two-tail Student’s t-test (α = 0.05). (B) Increased uptake of [14C]3-F-4-AP in focal lesions produced by injection of lysolecithin. Left: LFB staining showing focal demyelination on the middle to right side of the corpus callosum (dashed line). Middle: [14C]3-F-4-AP autoradiography and false color image. Dot plot: quantification of the autoradiographic signal intensity in the lesion and contralateral control areas. Each pair of dots connected by a thin line represents one animal, ≥6 sections quantified per animal. The cortex was used to normalize across animals. Horizontal line represents mean value and error bars represent 95% confidence interval. P value calculated using two-tail Student’s t-test (α = 0.05, paired data). (C) Changes in uptake of [14C]3-F-4-AP in DTA mice. [14C]4-AP autoradiography and false color images corresponding to 0–3 weeks post injection of tamoxifen (normal myelin), 9 weeks post injection (demyelination) and 15 weeks post injection (remyelination). Dot plot: quantification of the autoradiographic signal intensity in the corpus callosum. Each dot represents one animal, ≥6 sections quantified per animal. The cortex was used to normalize across animals. Line represents mean value and error bars represent 95% confidence interval. P value calculated using ANOVA (α = 0.05).
Figure 5Characterization of [18F]3-F-4-AP in control animals. (A) Organ distribution in mice measured using gamma counting (n = 4). (B) Time activity curves decay-corrected for the time of injection of the rat brain extracted from the quantification of 0–90 min dynamic PET scan in 5 min frames. Sprague Dawley rats received 0.15–0.30 μCi/g of [18F]3-F-4-AP via tail vein injection (n = 4, mean ± s.e.m). (C) Representative sagittal, axial and coronal fused PET/CT images. PET/CT images of the head were acquired 0 to 30 min post injection. (D) Representative LFB and autoradiography images (coronal and sagittal) of rat brains 30 min post injection of [18F]3-F-4-AP. Rats received 0.5–1 μCi/g via tail vein injection. There is high correlation between the LFB stain (myelin) and the autoradiography images.
Figure 6Detection of demyelination by PET and confirmation by autoradiography and histochemical staining. (A) Representative coronal fused PET/CT images of the cerebellum of injected rats. Sprague Dawley rats received 0.15–0.30 μCi/g of [18F]3-F-4-AP via tail vein injection. PET/CT images were acquired 0 to 25 min post injection. Dashed circle represents region of interest. (B) Quantification of the SUV of the lesioned and control regions of interest. There is significant increase in SUV on the on the LPC-injected animals (P = 0.0063) but not on the saline-injected animals. (C) Representative ex vivo autoradiography and LFB staining of LPC injected rat. (Scale bar: 4 mm). There is high correlation between PET, autoradiography and LFB staining.
Figure 7Characterization of [18F]3-F-4-AP in Rhesus monkeys. (A) Maximum intensity projection of [18F]3-F-4-AP from 2–6 min post injection of one monkey. (B) Time activity curves for major organs decay-corrected for time of injection for the same monkey. (C) High resolution brain images from a second monkey (2–6 min). Corresponding MRI slices from NeuroMaps atlas are included for reference. (D) Corresponding decay-corrected time activity curves (0–120 min and 0–20 min) for selected brain regions.