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Mono‐, bi‐, or tridentate ligands? The labeling of peptides with 99m Tc‐carbonyls
Author(s) -
Alberto Roger,
Kyong Pak Jae,
van Staveren Dave,
Mundwiler Stefan,
Benny Paul
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
peptide science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.556
H-Index - 125
eISSN - 1097-0282
pISSN - 0006-3525
DOI - 10.1002/bip.20129
Subject(s) - denticity , chemistry , biomolecule , ligand (biochemistry) , combinatorial chemistry , peptide , histidine , cysteine , stereochemistry , computational biology , metal , biochemistry , organic chemistry , receptor , amino acid , biology , enzyme
The labeling of targeting peptides with 99m Tc is a useful concept for the diagnosis of various diseases such as cancer. Although in research for at least one decade, only a very few radiopharmaceuticals based on peptides are in clinical use. The difficulty of labeling, and the resulting authenticity of the new vector, is largely responsible for this observation. In this overview, we present an alternate strategy based on the organometallic fac‐[ 99m Tc(CO) 3 ] + core for introducing 99m Tc in biomolecules in general and in peptides in particular. The three coordination sites available in [ 99m Tc(OH 2 ) 3 (CO) 3 ] + can be occupied with many different ligand types, pendant to a biomolecule and serving as the anchor group for labeling. This makes the appropriate choice difficult. We intend to present some useful concepts for the practice. Monodentate chelators are robust but bear the risk of multiple binding of biomolecules. Coordinating a bidentate ligand of choice prior to labeling bypasses this problem and enables a systematic drug discovery by variation of the bidentate ligand. Bidentate ligands attached to the biomolecule are stronger but occasionally require protection of the remaining site by a monodentate ligand. Both approaches refer to a mixed‐ligand [2+1] approach. Tridentate chelators are the most efficient but need some protecting group chemistry in order to achieve selectivity for the coupling process. Examples with cysteine and histidine are presented. This article aims to provide versatile and reproducible approaches for the labeling of biomolecules while not focusing on particular systems. It should be left to the readers to derive a strategy for their own peptide. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers (Pept Sci), 2004

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