Abstract

During the last four decades, nuclear medicine has undergone enormous growth, and positron emission tomography (PET) has been in the driving seat for most of the time. 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) is the most widely used agent for the detection of hibernating myocardium and metabolically active cancer tissue. But its cost and limited availability are the main limitations. For a long time different researchers and groups of pharmacists have tried to label glucose with a cheaper and long-acting radionuclide like 99mTc. However, they failed to achieve this goal owing to the chemical complexity of 99mTc and the lack of maintaining the physiological activity of diagnostic compounds. A pre-targeting strategy based on strain-promoted [3 + 2] azide-alkyne cycloaddition (SPAAC) reaction was applied to solve this problem. Functional click synthons were synthesized: 2-azido-2-deoxy-d-glucose (GlucN3) as a glucose analogue, and N- (2- (2- (2- (bis (pyridin-2-ylmethyl) amino) ethoxy) ethoxy) ethyl-2- (6H-11,12-didehydrodibenzo [a,e] cycloocten-5-ylideneaminooxy) acetamide (C7) as a 99mTc(CO)3 labeling and azido-binding group. The results of biodistribution experiments in mice bearing S180 tumor show the relatively high tumor/blood ratio (up to 2.95) and tumor/muscle ratio (up to 6.37), and both of them decreases significantly in the glucose blocking experiment. It indicates that GlucN3 behaves similarly to glucose and that in vivo SPAAC reactions can occur effectively. It is supposed that this pre-targeting strategy can indeed enhance target specificity and may be used for glucose metabolism imaging in tumor diagnosis.

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