| Literature DB >> 32430632 |
Vidya Narayanaswami1, Junchao Tong1, Ferdinando Fiorino2, Beatrice Severino2, Rosa Sparaco2, Elisa Magli2, Flavia Giordano2, Peter M Bloomfield1, Jaya Prabhakaran3, J John Mann3,4, Neil Vasdev1,5, Kenneth Dahl6, J S Dileep Kumar7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Serotonin 1A (5-HT1A) receptors are implicated in the pathogenesis of several psychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders motivating the development of suitable radiotracers for in vivo positron emission tomography (PET) neuroimaging. The gold standard PET imaging agent for this target is [carbonyl-11C]WAY-100635, labeled via a technically challenging multi-step reaction that has limited its widespread use. While several antagonist and agonist-based PET radiotracers for 5-HT 1A receptors have been developed, their clinical translation has been hindered by methodological challenges and/or and non-specific binding. As a result, there is continued interest in the development of new and more selective 5-HT1A PET tracers having a relatively easier and reliable radiosynthesis process for routine production and with favorable metabolism to facilitate tracer-kinetic modeling. The purpose of the current study was to develop and characterize a radioligand with suitable characteristics for imaging 5-HT1A receptors in the brain. The current study reports the in vitro characterization and radiosyntheses of three candidate 5-HT1A receptor antagonists, DF-100 (1), DF-300 (2) and DF-400 (3), to explore their suitability as potential PET radiotracers.Entities:
Keywords: 5-HT1A receptor; Carbon-11; PET; Serotonin; α1-adrenergic receptor
Year: 2020 PMID: 32430632 PMCID: PMC7237647 DOI: 10.1186/s41181-020-00096-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJNMMI Radiopharm Chem ISSN: 2365-421X
Fig. 1Binding affinity (Ki) of compounds 1–3 at 5-HT1A receptors: Competition binding curves for DF-100 (1) (PDSP#50828, top), DF-300 (2) (PDSP#50830, middle) and DF-400 (3) (PDSP#50831, bottom) in the presence of [3H]WAY100635 and 8-OH-DPAT as reference standard
Binding affinity (Ki) of compounds 1–3 for 5-HT1A receptors and other biogenic amines, neurotransmitter receptors, and transporters
| (1) | (2) | (3) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-HT1B | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| 5-HT1E | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| 5-HT1D | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | 1176 |
| 5-HT2A | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| 5-HT2B | 403 | 516 | 137 |
| 5-HT2C | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| 5-HT3 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| 5-HT4 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| 5-HT5a | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | 1805 |
| 5-HT6 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| 5-HT7R | 76 | 830 | 530 |
| Alpha1B | 1080 | 254 | 142 |
| Alpha1D | 213 | 53 | 19 |
| Alpha 2A | 453 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| Alpha2B | 670 | > 10,000 | 2215 |
| Alpha2C | 835 | > 10,000 | 1984 |
| D2R | 777 | > 10,000 | 800 |
| D3R | 369 | 2552 | 133 |
| D4R | 137 | 88 | 153 |
| D1, D5 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| DAT | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| NET | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| SERT | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| Adenosine receptors | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| AMPA | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| Beta Receptors | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| CB1, CB2 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| DOR, KOR, MOR | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| H1-H4 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| Muscarinic receptors | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| NMDA | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| NOP | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| PBR | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| Sigma 2 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
| Sigma1R | 520 | > 10,000 | > 10,000 |
Fig. 2Chemical structures and radiochemical syntheses of the candidate 5-HT1A radioligands: [11C]1, [11C]2, and [11C]3
Fig. 3Uptake of [11C]3 (a); [11C]2 (b) and [11C]1 (c) in rat brain. Shown are TACs averaged for left and right brain (A: n = 3; B and C: n = 1) in SUV and summed (0–60 min) PET images in coronal, transverse and sagittal planes, respectively, through the thalamus. The spatially co-registered MR images (2D fast spin echo) show left-half ROIs including thalamus (blue), anterior cingulate cortex (red), hippocampus (green) and cerebellum (magenta) for the corresponding color-coded TACs
Fig. 4Blocking of the uptake of [11C]3 in rat brain by WAY-100635 (a) and prazosin (b). Shown are TACs, averaged for left and right brain, (n = 1; solid: baseline; dashed: blocking) in SUV and summed (0–60 min) PET images in coronal, transverse and sagittal planes, respectively, through the thalamus at baseline and under blocking conditions. The three depicted left-half ROIs include thalamus (orange), hippocampus (red) and cerebellum (magenta) for the corresponding color-coded TACs