Preclinical Evaluation of Novel 64Cu-Labeled Gastrin-Releasing Peptide Receptor Bioconjugates for PET Imaging of Prostate Cancer

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Abstract

We report herein the preclinical evaluation of new [64Cu]Cu-gastrin-releasing peptide receptor (GRPR)-targeting tracers, employing the potent peptide antagonist DPhe-Gln-Trp-Ala-VaI-Gly-His-Sta-Leu-NH2 conjugated to NOTA (in 1) or NODAGA (in 2) chelators via a 6-aminohexanoic acid linker. The Cu-1/2 metalated peptides were synthesized by reacting 1/2 with CuCl2 and were characterized by LC-ESI-MS and HR-ESI-MS. Cu-1/2 exhibited high GRPR-binding affinities with IC50 values <3 nM, as measured in a competition assay using the GRPR-expressing human PC-3 prostate cancer cell line and [125I]I-Tyr4-BBN as the competing ligand. Tracers [64Cu]Cu-1/2 were prepared in quantitative radiochemical yield (by radio-HPLC), and their identities were confirmed by coelution with their Cu-1/2 standards via comparative HPLC studies. Lipophilicity was measured in 1-octanol/PBS (pH 7.4), and the negative log D7.4 values (≤-1) confirmed the anticipated hydrophilic character for [64Cu]Cu-1/2. Both tracers demonstrated excellent in vitro stability, with ≥98% remaining intact through 24 h at physiological conditions (PBS, pH 7.4, 37 °C). Biodistribution in PC-3 tumor-bearing mice demonstrated good tumor uptake (%ID/g at 4 h: 4.34 ± 0.71 for [64Cu]Cu-1, 3.92 ± 1.03 for [64Cu]Cu-2) and rapid renal clearance (≥87% ID at 4 h). Tumor uptake was receptor-mediated, as verified by parallel GRPR-blocking studies. Small-animal PET/CT imaging studies validated the biodistribution data. These preclinical data support that the [64Cu]Cu-1/2 tracers show promise for further development as diagnostic PET imaging agents of GRPR-expressing tumors.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1290-1297
Number of pages8
JournalBioconjugate Chemistry
Volume32
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 21 2021

Funding

For funding, we thank the University of Missouri Research Reactor (Hennkens, internal support), the United States Department of Veterans’ Affairs (Smith, VA MERIT Application 1I01BX003392), and the Fulbright Foundation in Greece (Shegani, Visiting Scholar Program 2018–2019). We gratefully acknowledge the support provided by the VA Biomolecular Imaging Center at the Harry S. Truman VA Hospital and the University of Missouri—Columbia. For technical expertise and contributions, we also thank Dr. Fabio Gallazzi (LC-ESI-MS analyses), Dr. Brian P. Mooney (HR-ESI-MS analyses), Susan Rottinghaus (cell culture), Lisa Watkinson and Terry Carmack (biodistribution studies), and Ashley Berendzen (small-animal PET/CT imaging).

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