Abstract

Early clinical results of two tau tracers, [18F]T808 and [18F]T807, have recently been reported. In the present study, the biodistribution, radiometabolite quantification, and competition-binding studies were performed in order to acquire comparative preclinical data as well as to establish the value of T808 and T807 as benchmark compounds for assessment of binding affinities of eight new/other tau tracers. Biodistribution studies in mice showed high brain uptake and fast washout. In vivo radiometabolite analysis using high-performance liquid chromatography showed the presence of polar radiometabolites in plasma and brain. No specific binding of [18F]T808 was found in transgenic mice expressing mutant human P301L tau. In semiquantitative autoradiography studies on human Alzheimer disease slices, we observed more than 50% tau selective blocking of [18F]T808 in the presence of 1 µmol/L of the novel ligands. This study provides a straightforward comparison of the binding affinity and selectivity for tau of the reported radiolabeled tracers BF-158, BF-170, THK5105, lansoprazole, astemizole, and novel tau positron emission tomography ligands against T807 and T808. Therefore, these data are helpful to identify structural requirements for selective interaction with tau and to compare the performance of new highly selective and specific radiolabeled tau tracers.

Highlights

  • In spite of extensive knowledge about epidemiology, histopathological features, and genetics of Alzheimer disease (AD), only symptomatic treatment is available at this moment.[1]

  • Definite diagnosis can still only be made postmortem on the basis of two pathological hallmarks: senile plaques (SP) and neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs).[2]. Both SP and NFTs have been targeted by positron emission tomography (PET) ligands that can serve as diagnostic biomarkers, as this is a sensitive in vivo method to visualize and quantify AD-specific pathological changes in the living brain.[3]

  • With a clogD7.4 between 2.0 and 3.5, a polar surface area

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Summary

Introduction

In spite of extensive knowledge about epidemiology, histopathological features, and genetics of Alzheimer disease (AD), only symptomatic treatment is available at this moment.[1].

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