Abstract

PurposeRadiolabeled heterodimeric peptide has emerged as a highly promising targeting strategy for PET imaging due to their superior properties. RGD and GE11 are two peptides binding to receptor integrin αvβ3 and EGFR, respectively, which both overexpress in many different types of tumors. This study focuses on the synthesis and evaluation of a RGD and GE11-containing heterodimeric radiotracer [64Cu]Cu-NOTA-RGD-GE11 for PET imaging of tumors that simultaneously overexpress integrin αvβ3 and EGFR. Procedures[64Cu]Cu-NOTA-RGD-GE11 was prepared by the conjugation of RGD-PEG4-NOTA-N3 and GE11-PEG4-BCN via metal-free click chemistry, followed by radiolabeling with 64Cu. Cell uptake and efflux studies, saturation binding assay, the animal PET/CT and biodistribution studies were conducted to characterize the biological properties of [64Cu]Cu-NOTA-RGD-GE11. Results[64Cu]Cu-NOTA-RGD-GE11 was synthesized with a radiochemical purity of >97 % and molar activity of 23 GBq/μmol at the end of synthesis. [64Cu]Cu-NOTA-RGD-GE11 showed moderate hydrophilicity, good stability in mouse serum and high specific uptake by the human pancreatic cancer cell line (BxPC3) in the in vitro studies. Compared to the two monomeric counterparts [64Cu]Cu-NOTA-RGD and [64Cu]Cu-NOTA-GE11, [64Cu]Cu-NOTA-RGD-GE11 demonstrated significantly improved tumor uptakes (e.g. 4.63 ± 0.25 %ID/g vs 1.24 ± 0.18 %ID/g and 0.77 ± 0.13 %ID/g, 2 h after injection, p < 0.05) in the subsequent in vivo evaluation in mice bearing BxPC3 xenograft. Tumor uptake could be blocked in the presence of both non-radioactive c(RGDyK) and GE11 peptides, indicating good tumor specificity of [64Cu]Cu-NOTA-RGD-GE11 in vivo. ConclusionThe results suggested that the as-developed [64Cu]Cu-NOTA-RGD-GE11 could serve as a potential PET tracer for the noninvasive imaging of integrin αvβ3 and EGFR expression in tumors.

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