| Literature DB >> 31659508 |
Kazunori Kawamura1, Wakana Mori2, Masayuki Fujinaga2, Tomoteru Yamasaki2, Yiding Zhang2, Hidekatsu Wakizaka3, Akiko Hatori2, Lin Xie2, Katsushi Kumata2, Takayuki Ohkubo2,4, Yusuke Kurihara2,4, Masanao Ogawa2,4, Nobuki Nengaki2,4, Ming-Rong Zhang2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Neuropeptide Y (NPY) has been implicated in a wide variety of physiological processes, including feeding, learning, memory, emotion, cardiovascular homeostasis, hormone secretion, and circadian rhythms. NPY Yl receptor (NPY Y1-R) is the most widely studied NPY receptor, and is involved in many of these processes. BMS-193885 (1) was previously developed as a potent and selective NPY Y1-R antagonist, which has good systemic bioavailability and brain penetration. To evaluate the characteristics of 1 in vivo, we developed 11C-labeled BMS-193885 ([11C]1) and its desmethyl analog ([11C]2) for potential use as two new positron emission tomography (PET) tracers.Entities:
Keywords: BMS-193885; Carbon-11; Neuropeptide Y1 receptor; Positron emission tomography
Year: 2019 PMID: 31659508 PMCID: PMC6379498 DOI: 10.1186/s41181-019-0056-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJNMMI Radiopharm Chem ISSN: 2365-421X
Fig. 1Synthesis of [11C]1 via [11C]methyl iodide (A) and [11C]2 via [11C]phosgene (B)
Biodistribution of radioactivity in mice after the injection with [11C]1 or [11C]2
| Tissue | Radioactivity level (%ID/g)a | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 minb | 15 minb | 30 minb | 60 minb | |||||
| [11C] | [11C] | [11C] | [11C] | [11C] | [11C] | [11C] | [11C] | |
| Blood | 0.76±0.07 | 0.65±0.05 | 0.60±0.06 | 0.21±0.01 | 0.50±0.04 | 0.17±0.02 | 0.46±0.06 | 0.19±0.20 |
| Heart | 1.93±0.23 | 0.69±0.09 | 1.38±0.04 | 0.42±0.02 | 1.10±0.05 | 0.28±0.04 | 0.82±0.07 | 0.14±0.04 |
| Lung | 5.08±1.12 | 1.00±0.08 | 3.43±0.28 | 0.79±0.11 | 2.72±0.21 | 0.82±0.13 | 2.13±0.36 | 0.65±0.08 |
| Liver | 16.09±1.85 | 29.54±1.57 | 8.82±2.28 | 24.28±3.04 | 5.05±0.40 | 15.54±4.41 | 4.09±1.60 | 8.43±2.71 |
| Pancreas | 3.40±0.46 | 1.20±0.18 | 3.75±0.35 | 1.27±0.11 | 3.64±0.22 | 1.18±0.18 | 3.70±0.41 | 1.15±0.13 |
| Spleen | 3.18±0.67 | 0.79±0.11 | 2.05±0.17 | 0.55±0.07 | 1.66±0.04 | 0.37±0.07 | 1.41±0.24 | 0.23±0.05 |
| Kidney | 17.41±1.12 | 13.25±1.18 | 14.06±1.00 | 10.96±0.51 | 12.93±1.01 | 9.89±0.52 | 13.37±2.72 | 9.23±1.61 |
| Small intestine | 6.98±2.37 | 15.78±6.51 | 9.11±1.31 | 30.77±8.94 | 11.02±1.44 | 27.23±12.69 | 12.43±1.54 | 13.52±4.25 |
| Muscle | 0.64±0.05 | 0.44±0.21 | 0.57±0.08 | 0.30±0.02 | 0.52±0.11 | 0.38±0.17 | 0.47±0.07 | 0.33±0.19 |
| Brain | 0.21±0.01 | 0.05±0.02 | 0.40±0.06 | 0.04±0.04 | 0.32±0.05 | 0.01±0.00 | 0.32±0.05 | 0.03±0.01 |
aMean±S.D. (n=4)
bTime elapsed after the injection of 11C-labeled tracer
Fig. 2The effects of pretreatment with 1 (10 mg/kg) or elacridar (5 mg/kg) on the biodistribution of radioactivity at 30 min post-injection with [11C]1 or [11C]2 in mice. The injected dose of [11C]1 or [11C]2 were 7.1–14 MBq (0.079–0.23 nmol) or 6.0 MBq (0.16 nmol), respectively. The radioactivity level was expressed as the mean %ID/g
Fig. 3Radio-HPLC chromatograms from metabolite analyses of mouse plasma at 30 min post-injection with [11C]1 (A) or [11C]2 (B). The injected dose of [11C]1 or [11C]2 were 37–56 MBq (0.73–0.95 nmol) or 46–61 MBq (1.1–1.5 nmol), respectively
Fig. 4Radio- (A) and UV-HPLC (B) chromatograms from metabolite analyses of mouse plasma at 30 min post-injection with [11C]1 and 1 (50 mg/kg). The injected dose of [11C]1 was 26–30 MBq (0.38–0.45 nmol)