| Literature DB >> 31172290 |
Yi Ting Wang1, Paul Edison2,3.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Abnormal accumulation of tau protein is the main hallmark of tauopathies and is closely associated with neurodegeneration and cognitive impairment, whereas the advance in PET imaging provides a non-invasive detection of tau inclusions in the brain. In this review, we discuss the potential of PET imaging as a biomarker in tauopathies, the latest development of novel tau tracers with new clinical information that has been disclosed, and the opportunities for improving diagnosis and designing clinical trials in the future. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Dementia; Neurodegeneration; Neurodegenerative diseases; Neurofibrillary tangles; Positron emission tomography; Tau
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31172290 PMCID: PMC6554240 DOI: 10.1007/s11910-019-0962-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep ISSN: 1528-4042 Impact factor: 5.081
Fig. 1Tau protein isoforms in the human CNS. Six tau isoforms are present in the brain. N1 (green) and N2 (blue) are produced through the alternative splicing of exons 2 and 3 respectively. Exon 10 encodes the second aspect of the microtubule-binding repeat domain, R2 (red). Depending on the presence of the R2 domain, tau proteins are termed either 3R-tau or 4R-tau. (Figure used with permission from BMB Rep. Park SA, Ahn SI, Gallo J-M. Tau mis-splicing in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative disorders. BMB Rep. 2016;49:405–413)
Pathological classification of Tauopathies
| Predominant tau isoforms | 3R-tau | 4R-tau | 3R- & 4R-tau |
|---|---|---|---|
| Disorders | • Pick’s disease (PiD) | • PSP | • NFT dementia (including AD) |
| • FTLD- | • CBD | • PART | |
| • FTDP-17 with 3R-tau | • AGD | • CTE | |
| • GGT | • FTLD- | ||
| • FTLD- | • FTDP-17 with 3R- & 4R-tau | ||
| • FTDP-17 with 4R-tau |
3R-tau: tau protein isoform with 3 repeats in the microtubule-binding domain; 4R-tau: tau protein isoform with 4 repeats in the microtubule-binding domain; 3R- & 4R-tau: mixed 3 and 4 repeat tau protein isoforms
PSP progressive supranuclear paralysis, CBD corticobasal degeneration, AGD argyrophilic grain disease, GGT globular glial tauopathy, CTE chronic traumatic encephalopathy, PART primary age–related tauopathy, FTLD-MAPT Frontotemporal lobar degeneration associated with mutations in MAPT
Fig. 2[18F]FDDNP-PET images. Co-registered FDDNP-PET, PIB-PET and MRI scans of a patient with Alzheimer’s disease. Images in the left column: parietal lobe; images in the right column: temporal lobe. [16]. (Reprinted from J. Alzheimers Dis;26. Shin J, Kepe V, Barrio JR, Small GW. The merits of FDDNP-PET imaging in Alzheimer’s disease., Suppl 3:135–145. Copyright (2011), with permission from IOS Press”.) The publication is available at IOS Press through 10.3233/JAD-2011-0008
Fig. 3[11C]PBB3 PET images. [11C]PBB3 parametric standardised uptake value ratio (SUVR) images compared with [11C]PiB. [11C]PBB3 shows tracer uptake in cortical areas in advanced AD patient. This research was originally published in JNM. Shah M, Catafau AM. Molecular Imaging Insights into Neurodegeneration: Focus on Tau PET Radiotracers. J. Nucl. Med. 2014;55:871–874. © SNMMI [21]
Fig. 4PET images of THK compounds. [18F]AV-1451 (T807). [18F]AV-1451 (flortaucipir, T807) exhibited strong and selective binding affinity to PHF-tau on AD brain [13, 30]. With favourable pharmacokinetics and a binding pattern consistent with the Braak staging, [18F]AV-1451 is considered as the most promising PET candidates for tau imaging [21]. Clinical [18F]AV-1451 PET scans are demonstrated in Fig. 5. (THK-523 This research was originally published in Alzheimers Res. Ther) [29] (THK-5105 and THK-5351 Images courtesy of Prof. Nobuyuki Okamura, Tohoku University) (THK-5117 Reprinted by permission from Copyright Clearance Center. This research was originally published in Springer Nature, Eur. J. Nucl. Med. Mol. Imaging [28] Copyright (2015)
Fig. 5[18F]AV-1451 PET images. [18F]AV-1451 showed an increased parieto-temporal uptake in an AD subject. Other figures presented the tracer retention in CBD, PSP and a cognitively healthy elderly subject. [Image courtesy of Prof. Oskar Hansson, The Swedish BIOFINDER Study. http://biofinder.se]
Comparison of first-generation tau PET tracers
| Tracer | [11C]PBB3 | [18F]THK-5105 | [18F]THK-5117 | [18F]THK-5351 | [18F]AV-1451 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Affinity (tau isoforms) | 3R & 4R (can detect non-AD tau) | 3R & 4R | 3R & 4R | 3R & 4R | 3R & 4R (low affinity for non-AD tau) |
| Selectivity (tau-over-Aβ ratio) | 40- to 50-fold | 25-fold | No Aβ binding | No Aβ binding | > 27-fold |
| Tracer spatial distribution in human brain | Temporal cortices (especially MTL including hippocampal formation) | Temporal cortices (especially inferior & medial part) | Temporal cortices | Temporal cortices | |
| Parietal cortices | |||||
| Parietal cortices | Frontal cortices | ||||
| Posterior cingulate | Hippocampal formation | ||||
| Advantages | -Capable of capturing the progression of AD | -Correlated well with cognitive parameters, hippocampal and whole brain grey matter volumes | -Faster pharmacokinetics | -Higher binding affinity for hippocampal homogenates and faster dissociation from white matter tissue than THK-5117 | -High levels of PHF-tau binding affinity, selectivity, specificity and lipophilicity |
| -Affinity for different tau isoforms | -Higher signal-to-background ratios than THK-5105 | ||||
| -Desirable pharmacokinetic | |||||
| -Reduced exposure to radioactivity | |||||
| -Little white matter binding | |||||
| -Non-detectable/minimal binding toward off-target proteins such as MAO | |||||
| -Higher signal-to-background ratio than THK-5105 and THK-5117 | |||||
| Challenges | -Off-target binding in dural venous sinuses | -Off-target binding in brainstem, thalamus, and subcortical white matter | -Off-target binding in subcortical white matter | -Off-target binding in basal ganglia | |
| -Short radioactive half-life of [11C] | |||||
| -High background signals in grey matter | |||||
| References | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ |
Highlight of recent clinical human PET study
| Subjects | Major findings | References |
|---|---|---|
| 9 MCI patients (prodromal AD) | -[11C]PBB3 preferentially bind to tau deposits with a close spatial relationship to Aβ | [ |
| -[11C]THK5351 presented the distribution of tau pathology in AD better and was more closely related to downstream disease markers | ||
| 3 AD patients and 3 HCs | [11C]PBB3 tracer distribution was consistent with the spreading of tau pathology with AD progression | [ |
| 2 AD patients, 4 FTD patients (frontotemporal dementia) and 2 HCs | -[18F]AV-1451 is more sensitive and specific to Alzheimer’s disease type tau and shows lower off-target binding | [ |
| [18F]THK5351 may better present non-specific neurodegeneration | ||
| 69 healthy controls (PIB negative) | Explained [18F]AV-1451 variability in healthy controls across the lifespan. | [ |
| 6 AD patients, 3 PSP patients, 2 CBS patients and 4 HCs | Described the kinetics of [18F]AV-1451, the optimal scanning time and the reference region for SUVR calculation. | [ |
| 3 subjects carrying the | [18F]AV-1451 PET can be used to accurately quantify in vivo the regional distribution of hyperphosphorylated tau protein. | [ |
| 20 EOAD patients, 21 LOAD patients, 3 prodromal EOAD 13 prodromal LOAD and 30 HCs | Described the difference in [18F]AV-1451 tracer retention in early- and late-onset Alzheimer’s disease. | [ |
| 39 AD patients, 14 prodromal AD and 30 HCs | Elucidated the relationship of [18F]AV-1451 tracer retention to tau in cerebrospinal fluid. | [ |
| 11 PSP patients and 11 HCs | Characterised the tracer uptake of [18F]AV-1451 in progressive supranuclear palsy. | [ |
| [ | ||
| One 71-year-old male subject | ||
| 31 AD patients, 11 PSP patients, 8 CBS patients and 17 HCs | Characterised the tracer uptake of [18F]AV-1451 in corticobasal syndrome. | [ |
| 17 AD patients and 95 HCs | Regional thresholds of [18F]AV-1451 have the potential to be used in clinical trials for the enrolment of individuals with tau abnormalities. | [ |
| 59 cognitively unimpaired with normal amyloid (CUA-) | -Rate measurements based on granular Braak–like topographic staging or voxel-wise approaches may not provide significantly more information than simple meta-ROI rate measurements. | [ |
| 37 cognitively unimpaired with abnormal amyloid (CUA+) | ||
| 30 cognitively impaired with amnestic phenotype and abnormal amyloid (CIA+) | -Tau PET SUVR measures should be an efficient outcome measure in disease-modifying clinical trials. |
Chemical structures of first and second generation of tau PET tracers
Fig. 6PET images of second-generation Tau tracers. (APN-1607 Image courtesy of Kunju Lin, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital and Ming-Kuei Jang, APRINOIA Therapeutics.) (GTP1 Image courtesy of Sandra Sanabria Bohorquez, Genentech) (MK-6240 Image courtesy of Cyrille Sur, Merck.) (PI-2620 Reproduced from Leuzy, Antoine et al., Molecular Psychiatry, January 2019; https://www.nature.com/articles/s41380-018-0342-8; Creative Commons user licence http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) (RO-948 Image courtesy of Prof. Oskar Hansson)
Summary of second-generation Tau PET tracers
| Tracer | [18F]PBB3 | [18F]GTP1 | [18F]MK-6240 | [18F]PI-2620 | [18F]RO6958948 (RO-948) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [11C]RO6931643 (RO-643) | |||||
| [11C]RO6924963 (RO-963) | |||||
| Structural characteristics | 18F-labelled PBB derivatives | Pyridine isoquinoline amine derivative | |||
| Preclinical study | -Higher signal-to-background ratio | -Rapid pharmacokinetics | -High affinity | -High affinity | -High affinity |
| -Less off-target signals than [11C]PBB3 | -No off-target binding to MAO-A /MAO-B | -High selectivity over Aβ, MAO-A and MAO-B | -High selectivity over Aβ, MAO-A and MAO-B | ||
| -Low off-target binding | |||||
| Clinical Human study | -Broader dynamic range compared to [11C]PBB3 | -Favourable pharmacokinetics | -No off-target binding in regions seen in first-generation tau tracers | -Favourable pharmacokinetics | |
| -No prominent off-target binding in the basal ganglia and thalamus | -Correlated well with neuropathological staging of NFTs | -High affinity | |||
| -No off-target binding in the basal ganglia and choroid plexus | -High selectivity over Aβ, MAO-A and MAO-B | ||||
| -Mild tracer retention in the substantia nigra and meninges | -High signal-to-background ratio | ||||
| References | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ |