Abstract
A new class of intracellular contrast agents (CA) for magnetic resonance imaging has been developed, based on Gd(DTPA) with two positively charged amide-linked substituents. Uptake of Gd(DTPA) into cultured tumor cell lines (B16 mouse melanoma, MH3924A Morris hepatoma) was below the detection limit while CA with the melanin-binding pharmacophore 2-(diethylamino)ethylamine reached intracellular concentrations of ca. 0.03 fmol/cell (ca. 20 microM) for melanoma and 0.02 fmol/cell for hepatoma (24 h at 10 microM CA). With the polyamine substituents bis(2-aminoethyl)amine or spermidine, CA uptake increased up to 3-fold for melanoma (0.083 fmol/cell) and 9-fold for hepatoma (0.18 fmol/cell). Uptake of polyamine-substituted CA was reduced by the polyamine transport inhibitor benzyl viologen. Molar relaxivities for three Gd-DTPA-polyamine complexes were in the range 5.6-6.9 for the free complex in solution and 7.7-23.5 s-1 mM-1 for Morris hepatoma cell pellets. T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging at 2.35 T of rats with MH3924A tumors showed contrast enhancement in tumor at 1 and 24 h postinjection of polyamine-substituted CA.
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