Necrosis binding of Ac-Lys<sup>0</sup>(IRDye800CW)-Tyr<sup>3</sup>-octreotate: a consequence from cyanine-labeling of small molecules.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_3F91E411E24B
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Necrosis binding of Ac-Lys<sup>0</sup>(IRDye800CW)-Tyr<sup>3</sup>-octreotate: a consequence from cyanine-labeling of small molecules.
Journal
EJNMMI research
ISSN
2191-219X (Print)
ISSN-L
2191-219X
Publication state
Published
Issued date
10/05/2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
11
Number
1
Pages
47
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
There is a growing body of nuclear contrast agents that are repurposed for fluorescence-guided surgery. New contrast agents are obtained by substituting the radioactive tag with, or adding a fluorescent cyanine to the molecular structure of antibodies or peptides. This enables intra-operative fluorescent detection of cancerous tissue, leading to more complete tumor resection. However, these fluorescent cyanines can have a remarkable influence on pharmacokinetics and tumor uptake, especially when labeled to smaller targeting vectors such as peptides. Here we demonstrate the effect of cyanine-mediated dead cell-binding of Ac-Lys <sup>0</sup> (IRDye800CW)-Tyr <sup>3</sup> -octreotate (800CW-TATE) and how this can be used as an advantage for fluorescence-guided surgery.
Binding of 800CW-TATE could be blocked with DOTA <sup>0</sup> -Tyr <sup>3</sup> -octreotate (DOTA-TATE) on cultured SSTR <sub>2</sub> -positive U2OS cells and was absent in SSTR <sub>2</sub> negative U2OS cells. However, strong binding was observed to dead cells, which could not be blocked with DOTA-TATE and was also present in dead SSTR <sub>2</sub> negative cells. No SSTR <sub>2</sub> -mediated binding was observed in frozen tumor sections, possibly due to disruption of the cells in the process of sectioning the tissue before exposure to the contrast agent. DOTA-TATE blocking resulted in an incomplete reduction of 61.5 ± 5.8% fluorescence uptake by NCI-H69-tumors in mice. Near-infrared imaging and dead cell staining on paraffin sections from resected tumors revealed that fluorescence uptake persisted in necrotic regions upon blocking with DOTA-TATE.
This study shows that labeling peptides with cyanines can result in dead cell binding. This does not hamper the ultimate purpose of fluorescence-guided surgery, as necrotic tissue appears in most solid tumors. Hence, the necrosis binding can increase the overall tumor uptake. Moreover, necrotic tissue should be removed as much as possible: it cannot be salvaged, causes inflammation, and is tumorigenic. However, when performing binding experiments to cells with disrupted membrane integrity, which is routinely done with nuclear probes, this dead cell-binding can resemble non-specific binding. This study will benefit the development of fluorescent contrast agents.
Binding of 800CW-TATE could be blocked with DOTA <sup>0</sup> -Tyr <sup>3</sup> -octreotate (DOTA-TATE) on cultured SSTR <sub>2</sub> -positive U2OS cells and was absent in SSTR <sub>2</sub> negative U2OS cells. However, strong binding was observed to dead cells, which could not be blocked with DOTA-TATE and was also present in dead SSTR <sub>2</sub> negative cells. No SSTR <sub>2</sub> -mediated binding was observed in frozen tumor sections, possibly due to disruption of the cells in the process of sectioning the tissue before exposure to the contrast agent. DOTA-TATE blocking resulted in an incomplete reduction of 61.5 ± 5.8% fluorescence uptake by NCI-H69-tumors in mice. Near-infrared imaging and dead cell staining on paraffin sections from resected tumors revealed that fluorescence uptake persisted in necrotic regions upon blocking with DOTA-TATE.
This study shows that labeling peptides with cyanines can result in dead cell binding. This does not hamper the ultimate purpose of fluorescence-guided surgery, as necrotic tissue appears in most solid tumors. Hence, the necrosis binding can increase the overall tumor uptake. Moreover, necrotic tissue should be removed as much as possible: it cannot be salvaged, causes inflammation, and is tumorigenic. However, when performing binding experiments to cells with disrupted membrane integrity, which is routinely done with nuclear probes, this dead cell-binding can resemble non-specific binding. This study will benefit the development of fluorescent contrast agents.
Keywords
800CW-TATE, Fluorescent molecular probes, Molecular fluorescence-guided surgery, Necrosis-avidity, Somatostatin receptor subtype 2
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
19/05/2021 14:41
Last modification date
12/01/2022 7:09