| Literature DB >> 35903251 |
Yohji Matsusaka1, Xinyu Chen1,2, Paula Arias-Loza1, Rudolf A Werner1, Naoko Nose3, Takanori Sasaki3, Steven P Rowe4, Martin G Pomper4, Constantin Lapa2, Takahiro Higuchi3.
Abstract
Background: Mediating glucose absorption in the small intestine and renal clearance, sodium glucose cotransporters (SGLTs) have emerged as an attractive therapeutic target in diabetic patients. A substantial fraction of patients, however, only achieve inadequate glycemic control. Thus, we aimed to assess the potential of the SGLT-targeting PET radiotracer alpha-methyl-4-deoxy-4-[18F]fluoro-D-glucopyranoside ([18F]Me4FDG) as a noninvasive intestinal and renal biomarker of SGLT-mediated glucose transport.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35903251 PMCID: PMC9281422 DOI: 10.1155/2022/4635171
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Imaging ISSN: 1535-3508 Impact factor: 3.250
Figure 1Molecular structures of [18F]Me4FDG, [18F]FDG, and glucose and their interaction with SGLT.
Figure 2Results of intestinal [18F]Me4FDG PET imaging. (a) Representative volume rendered image, coronal PET/CT fusion image, and coronal and transaxial volume of interest (VOI; light green area) of a rat. (b) Coronal maximum intensity projection images of dynamic [18F]Me4FDG PET over 15 min after radiotracer administration in untreated controls (upper rows) and after intraperitoneal (I.P., middle rows) and intra-intestinal (I.I., lower rows) treatment using the SGLT inhibitor phlorizin. In I.I. animals treated with this drug, tracer retention remained stable, while in untreated I.I.-administered controls, a markedly reduced radiotracer accumulation was observed over time. In the last column, [18F]FDG serving as a comparator also demonstrated slow radiotracer clearance in untreated animals. Quantitative comparison of radiotracer retention among all groups, displayed as (c) time-activity curves and (d) tracer retention at 15 min. Control [18F]Me4FDG group showed rapid decrease of I.I.-injected radioactivity (blue). I.I. phlorizin-pretreated [18F]Me4FDG group (red) showed little decrease, similar to (untreated) I.I.-injected [18F]FDG animals (green, serving as reference). I.P. phlorizin-pretreated [18F]Me4FDG rats (purple), however, demonstrated moderate decrease during image acquisition. Bars indicate mean ± SD values.
Figure 3Results of renal [18F]Me4FDG PET imaging. (a) Multidirectional PET images of an untreated control rat versus a phlorizin- and canagliflozin-pretreated rat 10-20 min after intravenous radiotracer administration. For controls (upper rows), renal radiotracer accumulation in the cortex was substantially increased. In phlorizin-pretreated (middle rows) and canagliflozin-pretreated animals (lower rows), however, renal cortical and soft tissue activity was extremely low, while radioactivity in the renal pelvis and bladder was high. (b) Time-activity curves (cortex-to-pelvis count ratios) of all investigated rats, which revealed substantially lower renal cortical activity in pretreated animals over time. Comparison of the kidney (c) and blood radioactivity (d) at 60 min after the tracer administration among all three groups. In untreated controls, but not phlorizin- and canagliflozin-pretreated animals, the activity in the kidney and blood was substantially increased. Bars indicate mean ± SD values. %ID: percentage of injected dose.