| Literature DB >> 36091456 |
Dunfang Liu1,2, Qian Xia1,2, Ding Ding1, Weihong Tan1,3,4.
Abstract
Molecular imaging has greatly advanced basic biology and translational medicine through visualization and quantification of molecular events in a cellular context and living organisms. Nuclear medicine, including positron emission tomography (PET) and single-photon emission tomography (SPECT), is one of the most representative molecular imaging modalities which is widely used in clinical theranostics. Recently, numerous molecular imaging agents have been developed to improve the quality and expand the applicable diseases of molecular imaging. Based on the choice of specific imaging agents, molecular imaging is capable of studying tumor biological activities, detecting tumor metastasis, and imaging Alzheimer's disease-related amyloid proteins. Among these imaging agents, functional oligonucleotides-based imaging probes are becoming increasingly important due to their unique features. Antisense oligonucleotides, small interfering RNA, and aptamers are privileged molecular tools in precision medicine for cancer diagnosis and treatment. These chemically synthesized oligonucleotides without batch-to-batch variations are flexible to incorporate with other molecules without affecting their functionalities. Therefore, through the combination of oligonucleotides with radioisotopes, a series of molecular imaging agents were developed in the past decades to achieve highly sensitive and accurate biomedical imaging modalities for clinical theranostic. Due to the nature of oligonucleotides, the strategies of oligonucleotide radiolabeling are different from conventional small molecular tracers, and the radiolabeling strategy with rational design is highly correlated to the imaging quality. In this review, we summarize recent advancements in functional oligonucleotide radiolabeling strategies and respective molecular imaging applications. Meanwhile, challenges and future development insights of functional oligonucleotide-based radiopharmaceuticals are discussed in the end.Entities:
Keywords: functional oligonucleotides; molecular imaging; precision medecine; radiolabeling; radiopharmaceutical
Year: 2022 PMID: 36091456 PMCID: PMC9449898 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2022.986412
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
SCHEME 1Radiolabeling of functional oligonucleotides and its molecular imaging applications.
Characteristics of common nuclear medicine radionuclides and current methods of radiolabeling radioisotope to oligonucleotides.
| Isotope | T1/2 | Mode of decay (%) | Common production methods | Oligonucleotides functionalization | Radiolabeling strategy | Conjugation method | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 99mTc | 6 h | IT (γ89) | 99Mo/99mTc generator | 5′ Hexylamine | Direct radiolabeling (TCEP as reducing agent) | None |
|
| None or 5′ hexylamine | Direct radiolabeling (stannous chloride as reducing agent) | None |
| ||||
| 5′ Amine | Labeling | N-Acylation |
| ||||
| 5′ Hexylamine | Labeling via chelator (HYNIC, EDDA) | N-Acylation |
| ||||
| 3′ Amine | Labeling | N-Acylation |
| ||||
| 68Ga | 68.3 min | β+ (89) | 68Ge/68Ga generator | 5′ Dodecylamine | Labeling | N-Acylation |
|
| EC (11) | 68Zn (p,n)68Ga | ||||||
| 64Cu | 12.7 h | β+ (17.9) | 64Ni(p,n)64Cu | 5′ Dodecylamine | Labeling | N-Acylation |
|
| β− (39) EC (43) | 64Ni(d,2n)64Cu 68Zn (p,α)64Cu | 3′ Amine | Labeling | N-Acylation |
| ||
| 89Zr | 78.4 h | β+ (22.8) | 89Y (p,n)89Zr | 5′ DBCO | Labeling | Alkyne-azide cycloaddition |
|
| EC (77) | |||||||
| 90Y | 64.1 h | β− (100) | 89Y (n,γ)90Y | 5′ Thiol | Labeling | S-Acylation |
|
| 177Lu | 6.7 d | β− (100) | 176 Yb(n,γ)177 Yb | 5′ Hexylamine | Labeling via chelator (DTPA) | N-Acylation |
|
| 188Re | 16.9 h | β− (72) | 188W/188Re generator | 3′Amine- | Labeling | N-Acylation |
|
| γ (15) | |||||||
| 18F | 110 min | β+ (97) | 18O (p,n)18F | 5′ Hexylamine | Labeling | N-Alkylation |
|
| EC (3) | 5′ Thiol | Labeling | S-Alkylation |
| |||
| 5′ Alkyne | Labeling | Alkyne-azide cycloaddition |
| ||||
| 5′ Amine | Labeling | N-Alkylation |
| ||||
| 125I | 59.5 d | EC (100) | 124Xe (n,γ)125Xe | 5′ Hexylamine | Labeling | N-Alkylation |
|
| 5′ Tyramine | Direct labeling | None |
| ||||
| 5′ tributyl-stannylbenzamide | Direct labeling | None |
| ||||
| 5′ pyrimidine | Direct labeling | None |
| ||||
| 76Br | 16.2 h | β+ (57) | 76Se (p,n)76Br | 3′ Phosphoro-thioate monoester | Direct labeling | None |
|