High-affinity Near-infrared Fluorescent Small-molecule Contrast Agents for In Vivo Imaging of Prostate-specific Membrane Antigen
Author(s) -
Valérie Humblet,
Rena Lapidus,
Larry R. Williams,
Takashi Tsukamoto,
Camilo Rojas,
Pavel Majer,
Bunda Hin,
Shunsuke Ohnishi,
Alec M. De Grand,
Atif Zaheer,
Jürgen T. Renze,
Akira Nakayama,
Barbara S. Slusher,
John V. Frangioni
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
molecular imaging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.815
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1536-0121
pISSN - 1535-3508
DOI - 10.2310/7290.2005.05163
Subject(s) - in vivo , fluorophore , indocyanine green , chemistry , prostate cancer , glutamate carboxypeptidase ii , molecular imaging , fluorescence , small molecule , fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy , lymph node , preclinical imaging , cancer research , ex vivo , biophysics , in vitro , pathology , cancer , medicine , biochemistry , biology , physics , microbiology and biotechnology , quantum mechanics
Surgical resection remains a definitive treatment for prostate cancer. Yet, prostate cancer surgery is performed without image guidance for tumor margin, extension beyond the capsule and lymph node positivity, and without verification of other occult metastases in the surgical field. Recently, several imaging systems have been described that exploit near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent light for sensitive, real-time detection of disease pathology intraoperatively. In this study, we describe a high-affinity (9 nM), single nucleophile-containing, small molecule specific for the active site of the enzyme PSMA. We demonstrate production of a tetra-sulfonated heptamethine indocyanine NIR fluorescent derivative of this molecule using a high-yield LC/MS purification strategy. Interestingly, NIR fluorophore conjugation improves affinity over 20-fold, and we provide mechanistic insight into this observation. We describe the preparative production of enzymatically active PSMA using a baculovirus expression system and an adenovirus that co-expresses PSMA and GFP. We demonstrate sensitive and specific in vitro imaging of endogenous and ectopically expressed PSMA in human cells and in vivo imaging of xenograft tumors. We also discuss chemical strategies for improving performance even further. Taken together, this study describes nearly complete preclinical development of an optically based small-molecule contrast agent for image-guided surgery.
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