Francis Blankenberg
Associate Professor of Radiology (Pediatric Radiology) and, by courtesy, of Pediatrics
Radiology - Pediatric Radiology
Clinical Focus
- Radiology
- Radiology, Pediatric
- Pediatric Radiology
Academic Appointments
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Associate Professor, Radiology - Pediatric Radiology
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Associate Professor (By courtesy), Pediatrics
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Member, Cardiovascular Institute
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Member, Stanford Cancer Institute
Professional Education
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Internship: Stanford University Dept of General Surgery (1987) CA
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Residency: Stanford University Radiology Residency (1991) CA
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Medical Education: UCLA David Geffen School Of Medicine Registrar (1986) CA
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Fellowship: Lucile Packard Childrens Hospital Pediatric Radiology Fellowship (1992) CA
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Fellowship: UCSF Medical Center (1993) CA
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Board Certification: American Board of Radiology, Diagnostic Radiology (1992)
Current Research and Scholarly Interests
Studies on apoptotic cell death using the H MRS phenomenon.
2024-25 Courses
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Independent Studies (11)
- Directed Reading in Pediatrics
PEDS 299 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Directed Reading in Radiology
RAD 299 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Early Clinical Experience
PEDS 280 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Early Clinical Experience in Radiology
RAD 280 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Graduate Research
PEDS 399 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Graduate Research
RAD 399 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Medical Scholars Research
PEDS 370 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Medical Scholars Research
RAD 370 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Readings in Radiology Research
RAD 101 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Undergraduate Directed Reading/Research
PEDS 199 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum) - Undergraduate Research
RAD 199 (Aut, Win, Spr, Sum)
- Directed Reading in Pediatrics
All Publications
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Molecular Imaging of Apoptosis in Atherosclerosis by Targeting CellMembrane Phospholipid Asymmetry.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
2020; 76 (16): 1862–74
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Apoptosis in atherosclerotic lesions contributes to plaque vulnerability by lipid core enlargement and fibrous cap attenuation. Apoptosis is associated with exteriorization of phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) on the cell membrane. Although PS-avid radiolabeled annexin-V has been employed for molecular imaging of high-risk plaques, PE-targeted imaging in atherosclerosis has not been studied.OBJECTIVES: This study sought to evaluate the feasibility of molecular imaging with PE-avid radiolabeled duramycin in experimental atherosclerotic lesions in a rabbit model and compare duramycin targeting with radiolabeled annexin-V.METHODS: Of the 27 rabbits, 21 were fed high-cholesterol, high-fat diet for 16weeks. Nine of the 21 rabbits received 99mTc-duramycin (test group), 6 received 99mTc-linear duramycin (duramycin without PE-binding capability, negative radiotracer control group), and 6 received 99mTc-annexin-V for radionuclide imaging. The remaining normal chow-fed 6 animals (disease control group) received 99mTc-duramycin. Invivo microSPECT/microCT imaging was performed, and the aortas were explanted for exvivo imaging and for histological characterization of atherosclerosis.RESULTS: A significantly higher duramycin uptake was observed in the test group compared with that of disease control and negative radiotracer control animals; duramycin uptake was also significantly higher than the annexin-V uptake. Quantitative duramycin uptake, represented as the square root of percent injected dose per cm (ID/cm) of abdominal aorta was >2-fold higher in atherosclerotic lesions in test group (0.08 ± 0.01%) than in comparable regions of disease control animals (0.039 ± 0.0061%, p=3.70·10-8). Mean annexin uptake (0.060 ± 0.010%) was significantly lower than duramycin (p=0.001). Duramycin uptake corresponded to the lesion severity and macrophage burden. The radiation burden to the kidneys was substantially lower with duramycin (0.49% ID/g) than annexin (5.48% ID/g; p=4.00·10-4).CONCLUSIONS: Radiolabeled duramycin localizes in lipid-rich areas with high concentration of apoptotic macrophages in the experimental atherosclerosis model. Duramycin uptake in atherosclerotic lesions was significantly greater than annexin-V uptake and produced significantly lower radiation burden to nontarget organs.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jacc.2020.08.047
View details for PubMedID 33059832
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Deep-learning-assisted diagnosis for knee magnetic resonance imaging: Development and retrospective validation of MRNet
PLOS MEDICINE
2018; 15 (11)
View details for DOI 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002699
View details for Web of Science ID 000451827800015
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Deep learning for chest radiograph diagnosis: A retrospective comparison of the CheXNeXt algorithm to practicing radiologists.
PLoS medicine
2018; 15 (11): e1002686
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chest radiograph interpretation is critical for the detection of thoracic diseases, including tuberculosis and lung cancer, which affect millions of people worldwide each year. This time-consuming task typically requires expert radiologists to read the images, leading to fatigue-based diagnostic error and lack of diagnostic expertise in areas of the world where radiologists are not available. Recently, deep learning approaches have been able to achieve expert-level performance in medical image interpretation tasks, powered by large network architectures and fueled by the emergence of large labeled datasets. The purpose of this study is to investigate the performance of a deep learning algorithm on the detection of pathologies in chest radiographs compared with practicing radiologists.METHODS AND FINDINGS: We developed CheXNeXt, a convolutional neural network to concurrently detect the presence of 14 different pathologies, including pneumonia, pleural effusion, pulmonary masses, and nodules in frontal-view chest radiographs. CheXNeXt was trained and internally validated on the ChestX-ray8 dataset, with a held-out validation set consisting of 420 images, sampled to contain at least 50 cases of each of the original pathology labels. On this validation set, the majority vote of a panel of 3 board-certified cardiothoracic specialist radiologists served as reference standard. We compared CheXNeXt's discriminative performance on the validation set to the performance of 9 radiologists using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC). The radiologists included 6 board-certified radiologists (average experience 12 years, range 4-28 years) and 3 senior radiology residents, from 3 academic institutions. We found that CheXNeXt achieved radiologist-level performance on 11 pathologies and did not achieve radiologist-level performance on 3 pathologies. The radiologists achieved statistically significantly higher AUC performance on cardiomegaly, emphysema, and hiatal hernia, with AUCs of 0.888 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.863-0.910), 0.911 (95% CI 0.866-0.947), and 0.985 (95% CI 0.974-0.991), respectively, whereas CheXNeXt's AUCs were 0.831 (95% CI 0.790-0.870), 0.704 (95% CI 0.567-0.833), and 0.851 (95% CI 0.785-0.909), respectively. CheXNeXt performed better than radiologists in detecting atelectasis, with an AUC of 0.862 (95% CI 0.825-0.895), statistically significantly higher than radiologists' AUC of 0.808 (95% CI 0.777-0.838); there were no statistically significant differences in AUCs for the other 10 pathologies. The average time to interpret the 420 images in the validation set was substantially longer for the radiologists (240 minutes) than for CheXNeXt (1.5 minutes). The main limitations of our study are that neither CheXNeXt nor the radiologists were permitted to use patient history or review prior examinations and that evaluation was limited to a dataset from a single institution.CONCLUSIONS: In this study, we developed and validated a deep learning algorithm that classified clinically important abnormalities in chest radiographs at a performance level comparable to practicing radiologists. Once tested prospectively in clinical settings, the algorithm could have the potential to expand patient access to chest radiograph diagnostics.
View details for PubMedID 30457988
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Molecular Imaging of Apoptosis in IschemiaReperfusion Injury With RadiolabeledDuramycin Targeting Phosphatidylethanolamine: Effective Target Uptake and Reduced Nontarget Organ Radiation Burden.
JACC. Cardiovascular imaging
2018
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of imaging apoptosis in experimental ischemia-reperfusion model by technetium-99m (99mTc)-labeled Duramycin, and compare it to an established tracer, 99mTc-labeled Annexin-V, which has a relative disadvantage of high radiation burden to nontarget organs.BACKGROUND: During apoptosis, the cell membrane phospholipids-phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) are exposed and can be targeted by Annexin-V and Duramycin, respectively, for invivo imaging. Identification of a reversible cell death process should permit therapeutic intervention to help reduce myocyte loss and left ventricle dysfunction.METHODS: In a 40-min left coronary artery ischemia-reperfusion model in 17 rabbits, 7 mCi of 99mTc-labeled Duramycin (n= 10), 99mTc-linear Duramycin (a negative tracer control; n= 3), or 99mTc-Annexin-V (a positive tracer-control; n= 4) were intravenously administered 30 min after reperfusion. Of the 10 Duramycin group animals, 4 animals were treatedwith an antiapoptotic agent, minocycline at the time of reperfusion. Invivo and exvivo micro-single-photon emission computed tomography (muSPECT) and micro-computed tomography (muCT) imaging was performed 3 h after reperfusion, followed by quantitative assessment of tracer uptake and pathological characterization. Fluorescent Duramycin and Annexin-V were injected in 4 rats to visualize colocalization in infarct areas in a 40-min left coronary artery occlusion and 30-min reperfusion model.RESULTS: Intense uptake of Duramycin and Annexin-V was observed in the apical (infarcted) areas. The percent injected dose per gram uptake of Duramycin in apical region (0.751 ± 0.262%) was significantly higher than remote area in same animals (0.045 ± 0.029%; p< 0.01). Duramycin uptake was insignificantly lower than Annexin-V uptake (1.23 ± 0.304%; p > 0.01) but demonstrated substantially lower radiation burden to kidneys (0.358 ± 0.210% vs. 1.58 ± 0.316%, respectively; p< 0.001). Fluorescence studies with Duramycin and Annexin V showed colocalization in infarct areas. Minocycline treatment substantially resolved Duramycin uptake (0.354% ± 0.0624%; p< 0.01).CONCLUSIONS: Duramycin is similarly effective in imaging apoptotic cell death as Annexin-V with lower nontarget organ radiation. Clinical feasibility of apoptosis imaging with a PE-seeking tracer should be tested.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jcmg.2017.11.037
View details for PubMedID 29454770
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Preparation of Tc99m-Labeled Pseudomonas Bacteriophage without Adversely Impacting Infectivity or Biodistribution
BIOCONJUGATE CHEMISTRY
2017; 28 (11): 2698–2706
Abstract
Bacteriophages (phages) are ubiquitous viruses which have adapted to infect and replicate within target bacteria, their only known hosts, in a strain specific fashion with minimal cross infectivity. The recent steep rise in antibiotic resistance throughout the world has renewed interest in adapting phages for the imaging and treatment of bacterial infection in humans. In this article, we describe the current limitations surrounding the radiolabeling of phage for the imaging and treatment of bacterial infection and methods to overcome these difficulties. Specifically, we examined the effects of hydrazinonicotinamide conjugation and removal of bacterial DNA on the infectivity, biodistribution, and radionuclide imaging of a phage lytic for a clinically relevant strain of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a common Gram-negative bacterial pathogen often resistant to multiple antibiotics. We found that all but the briefest reaction of concentrated phage with hydrazinonicotinamide (≤3 min) resulted in nearly complete loss of infectivity. Furthermore, we determined that digestion and removal of bacterial DNA was needed to avoid high nonspecific uptake of hydrazinonicotinamide-labeled phage within the liver and spleen as well as prolonged circulation in the blood. We also demonstrate the surprisingly wide soft tissue and organ biodistribution and rapid pharmacokinetics of 99mTc-hydrazinonicotinamide-labeled phage in normal mice as well as its imaging characteristics and efficacy in wounded mice infected with bioluminescent Pseudomonas aeruginosa. In conclusion, the preservation of phage infectivity and removal of all bacterial containments including DNA are critical methodologic considerations in the labeling of phages for imaging and therapy.
View details for PubMedID 29020448
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Cardioprotective Effects of HSP72 Administration on Ischemia- Reperfusion Injury
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY
2017; 70 (12): 1479–92
Abstract
Although early reperfusion is the most desirable intervention after ischemic myocardial insult, it may add to damage through oxidative stress.This study investigated the cardioprotective effects of a single intravenous dose of heat shock protein-72 (HSP72) coupled to a single-chain variable fragment (Fv) of monoclonal antibody 3E10 (3E10Fv) in a rabbit ischemia-reperfusion model. The Fv facilitates rapid transport of HSP72 into cells, even with intact membranes.A left coronary artery occlusion (40 min) reperfusion (3 h) model was used in 31 rabbits. Of these, 12 rabbits received the fusion protein (Fv-HSP72) intravenously. The remaining 19 control rabbits received a molar equivalent of 3E10Fv alone (n = 6), HSP72 alone (n = 6), or phosphate-buffered saline (n = 7). Serial echocardiographic examinations were performed to assess left ventricular function before and after reperfusion. Micro-single-photon emission computed tomography imaging of 99mTc-labeled annexin-V was performed with micro-computed tomography scanning to characterize apoptotic damage in vivo, followed by gamma counting of the excised myocardial specimens to quantify cell death. Histopathological characterization of the myocardial tissue and sequential cardiac troponin I measurements were also undertaken.Myocardial annexin-V uptake was 43% lower in the area at risk (p = 0.0003) in Fv-HSP72-treated rabbits compared with control animals receiving HSP72 or 3E10Fv alone. During reperfusion, troponin I release was 42% lower and the echocardiographic left ventricular ejection fraction 27% higher in the Fv-HSP72-treated group compared with control animals. Histopathological analyses confirmed penetration of 3E10Fv-containing molecules into cardiomyocytes in vivo, and treatment with Fv-HSP72 showed fewer apoptotic nuclei compared with control rabbits.Single-dose administration of Fv-HSP72 fusion protein at the time of reperfusion reduced myocardial apoptosis by almost one-half and improved left ventricular functional recovery after myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury in rabbits. It might have potential to serve as an adjunct to early reperfusion in the management of myocardial infarction.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.jacc.2017.07.762
View details for Web of Science ID 000410172700009
View details for PubMedID 28911512
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC5659834
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Cardioprotective effects of HSP72 administration on ischemiareperfusion injury
SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC. 2017
View details for Web of Science ID 000404949900098
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Targeted scVEGF/Lu-177 radiopharmaceutical inhibits growth of metastases and can be effectively combined with chemotherapy
EJNMMI RESEARCH
2016; 6
Abstract
scVEGF/(177)Lu is a novel radiopharmaceutical targeted by recombinant single-chain (sc) derivative of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) that binds to and is internalized by vascular endothelial growth factor receptors (VEGFR). scVEGF/(177)Lu potential as adjuvant and neoadjuvant anti-angiogenic therapy was assessed in metastatic and orthotopic mouse models of triple-negative breast cancer.Metastatic lesions in Balb/c mice were established by intracardiac injection of luciferase-expressing 4T1luc mouse breast carcinoma cells. Mice with metastatic lesions received single intravenous (i.v.) injection of well-tolerated dose of scVEGF/(177)Lu (7.4 MBq/mouse) at day 8 after 4T1luc cell injection. Primary orthotopic breast tumors in immunodeficient mice were established by injecting luciferase-expressing MDA231luc human breast carcinoma cells into mammary fat pad. Tumor-bearing mice were treated with single injections of scVEGF/(177)Lu (7.4 MBq/mouse, i.v), or liposomal doxorubicin (Doxil, 1 mg doxorubicin per kg, i.v.), or with a combination of Doxil and scVEGF/(177)Lu given at the same doses, but two hours apart. "Cold" scVEGF-targeting conjugate was included in controls and in Doxil alone group. The effects of treatments were defined by bioluminescent imaging (BLI), computed tomography (CT), computed microtomography (microCT), measurements of primary tumor growth, and immunohistochemical analysis.In metastatic model, adjuvant treatment with scVEGF/(177)Lu decreased overall metastatic burden and improved survival. In orthotopic primary tumor model, a combination of Doxil and scVEGF/(177)Lu was more efficient in tumor growth inhibition than each treatment alone. scVEGF/(177)Lu treatment decreased immunostaining for VEGFR-1, VEGFR-2, and pro-tumorigenic M2-type macrophage marker CD206.Selective targeting of VEGFR with well-tolerated doses of scVEGF/(177)Lu is effective in metastatic and primary breast cancer models and can be combined with chemotherapy. As high level of VEGFR expression is a common feature in a variety of cancers, targeted delivery of (177)Lu for specific receptor-mediated uptake warrants further exploration.
View details for DOI 10.1186/s13550-016-0163-1
View details for PubMedID 26780081
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Tc-99m-Annexin A5 quantification of apoptotic tumor response: a systematic review and meta-analysis of clinical imaging trials
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING
2015; 42 (13): 2083-2097
Abstract
(99m)Tc-Annexin A5 has been used as a molecular imaging probe for the visualization, characterization and measurement of apoptosis. In an effort to define the quantitative (99m)Tc-annexin A5 uptake criteria that best predict tumor response to treatment, we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of the results of all clinical imaging trials found in the literature or publicly available databases.Included in this review were 17 clinical trials investigating quantitative (99m)Tc-annexin A5 (qAnx5) imaging using different parameters in cancer patients before and after the first course of chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy. Qualitative assessment of the clinical studies for diagnostic accuracy was performed using the QUADAS-2 criteria. Of these studies, five prospective single-center clinical trials (92 patients in total) were included in the meta-analysis after exclusion of one multicenter clinical trial due to heterogeneity. Pooled positive predictive values (PPV) and pooled negative predictive values (NPV) (with 95% CI) were calculated using Meta-Disc software version 1.4.Absolute quantification and/or relative quantification of (99m)Tc-annexin A5 uptake were performed at baseline and after the start of treatment. Various quantitative parameters have been used for the calculation of (99m)Tc-annexin A5 tumor uptake and delta (Δ) tumor changes post-treatment compared to baseline including: tumor-to-background ratio (TBR), ΔTBR, tumor-to-noise ratio, relative tumor ratio (TR), ΔTR, standardized tumor uptake ratio (STU), ΔSTU, maximum count per pixel within the tumor volume (Cmax), Cmax%, absolute ΔU and percentage (ΔU%), maximum ΔU counts, semiquantitative visual scoring, percent injected dose (%ID) and %ID/cm(3). Clinical trials investigating qAnx5 imaging have included patients with lung cancer, lymphoma, breast cancer, head and neck cancer and other less common tumor types. In two phase I/II single-center clinical trials, an increase of ≥25% in uptake following treatment was considered a significant threshold for an apoptotic tumor response (partial response, complete response). In three other phase I/II clinical trials, increases of ≥28%, ≥42% and ≥47% in uptake following treatment were found to be the mean cut-off levels in responders. In a phase II/III multicenter clinical trial, an increase of ≥23% in uptake following treatment was found to be the minimum cut-off level for a tumor response. In one clinical trial, no significant difference in (99m)Tc-annexin A5 uptake in terms of %ID was found in healthy tissues after chemotherapy compared to baseline. In two other clinical trials, intraobserver and interobserver measurements of (99m)Tc-annexin A5 tumor uptake were found to be reproducible (mean difference <5%, kappa = 0.90 and 0.82, respectively) and to be highly correlated with treatment outcome (Spearman r = 0.99, p < 0.0001). The meta-analysis demonstrated a pooled positive PPV of 100% (95% CI 92 - 100%) and a pooled NPV of 70% (95% CI 55 - 82%) for prediction of a tumor response after the first course of chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy in terms of ΔU%. In a symmetric sROC analysis, the AUC was 0.919 and the Q* index was 85.21 %.Quantitative (99m)Tc-annexin A5 imaging has been investigated in clinical trials for the assessment of apoptotic tumor responses. This meta-analysis showed a high pooled PPV and a moderate pooled NPV with ΔU cut-off values ranging between 20% and 30%. Standardization of quantification and harmonization of results are required for high-quality clinical research. A standardized uptake value score (SUV, ΔSUV) using quantitative SPECT/CT imaging may be a promising approach to the simple, reproducible and semiquantitative assessment of apoptotic tumor changes.
View details for DOI 10.1007/s00259-015-3152-0
View details for Web of Science ID 000363867900017
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[Tc-99m]Annexin V-128 SPECT Monitoring of Splenic and Disseminated Listeriosis in Mice: a Model of Imaging Sepsis
MOLECULAR IMAGING AND BIOLOGY
2015; 17 (3): 345-354
Abstract
Here, we evaluate [(99m)Tc]annexin V-128, an in vivo marker of apoptosis, for single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging of localization and antibiotic treatment of disseminated bacterial infection, using a well-described mouse model that employs bioluminescent Listeria monocytogenes.Sixteen groups of five mice in six separate experiments were infected with bioluminescent Listeria, and in vivo bioluminescence imaging (BLI) was performed each day, to assess the location and extent of infection and response to antibiotics. [(99m)Tc]annexin V-128 was then injected for SPECT imaging, and the two sets of images were correlated and validated.Signals from BLI and [(99m)Tc]annexin V-128 SPECT co-localized within the spleen and other organs including bone marrow, intestine, nasopharynx, and brain. Decreases in [(99m)Tc]annexin V-128 uptake and BLI signal within the spleen directly reflected the reduction of bacterial infection by ampicillin treatment.Tc-99m-Annexin V-128 uptake as observed by SPECT allowed for the detection of systemic listeriosis and ampicillin treatment in mice. [(99m)Tc]annexin V-128 should be further explored for the assessment of bacterial spread and antibiotic efficacy in patients with disseminated bacterial infection.
View details for DOI 10.1007/s11307-014-0804-6
View details for PubMedID 25416406
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Correlation of HMPAO uptake with live single cell synchrotron mid-Infrared spectromicroscopy in inherited mitochondrial disease
SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC. 2015
View details for Web of Science ID 000358738803171
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Annexin V blockade of the immunosuppressive effects of phosphatidylserine in 4T1 murine mammary tumors
SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC. 2015
View details for Web of Science ID 000358738802149
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Enhanced Caspase Activity Contributes to Aortic Wall Remodeling and Early Aneurysm Development in a Murine Model of Marfan Syndrome
ARTERIOSCLEROSIS THROMBOSIS AND VASCULAR BIOLOGY
2015; 35 (1): 146-154
Abstract
Rupture and dissection of aortic root aneurysms remain the leading causes of death in patients with the Marfan syndrome, a hereditary connective tissue disorder that affects 1 in 5000 individuals worldwide. In the present study, we use a Marfan mouse model (Fbn1(C1039G/+)) to investigate the biological importance of apoptosis during aneurysm development in Marfan syndrome.Using in vivo single-photon emission computed tomographic-imaging and ex vivo autoradiography for Tc99m-annexin, we discovered increased apoptosis in the Fbn1(C1039G/+) ascending aorta during early aneurysm development peaking at 4 weeks. Immunofluorescence colocalization studies identified smooth muscle cells (SMCs) as the apoptotic cell population. As biological proof of concept that early aortic wall apoptosis plays a role in aneurysm development in Marfan syndrome, Fbn1(C1039G/+) mice were treated daily from 2 to 6 weeks with either (1) a pan-caspase inhibitor, Q-VD-OPh (20 mg/kg), or (2) vehicle control intraperitoneally. Q-VD-OPh treatment led to a significant reduction in aneurysm size and decreased extracellular matrix degradation in the aortic wall compared with control mice. In vitro studies using Fbn1(C1039G/+) ascending SMCs showed that apoptotic SMCs have increased elastolytic potential compared with viable cells, mostly because of caspase activity. Moreover, in vitro (1) cell membrane isolation, (2) immunofluorescence staining, and (3) scanning electron microscopy studies illustrate that caspases are expressed on the exterior cell surface of apoptotic SMCs.Caspase inhibition attenuates aneurysm development in an Fbn1(C1039G/+) Marfan mouse model. Mechanistically, during apoptosis, caspases are expressed on the cell surface of SMCs and likely contribute to elastin degradation and aneurysm development in Marfan syndrome.
View details for DOI 10.1161/ATVBAHA.114.304364
View details for PubMedID 25359856
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Tc99m-annexin V-128 SPECT imaging of listeriosis in mice
SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC. 2014
View details for Web of Science ID 000361438101388
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HMPAO uptake assay with t-BHP or irradiation of primary patient SURF-1 fibroblast cultures
SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC. 2014
View details for Web of Science ID 000361438102471
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Monitoring mitochondrial disease related nephropathy and subclinical redox stress of the brain in the kd/kd murine model
SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC. 2014
View details for Web of Science ID 000361438102472
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Ferumoxytol enhanced resting state fMRI and relative cerebral blood volume mapping in normal human brain.
NeuroImage
2013; 83: 200-209
Abstract
The brain demonstrates spontaneous low-frequency (<0.1Hz) cerebral blood flow (CBF) fluctuations, measurable by resting state functional MRI (rs-fMRI). Ultra small superparamagnetic iron oxide particles have been shown to enhance task-based fMRI signals (cerebral blood volume fMRI or CBV-fMRI), compared to the BOLD effect, by a factor of ≈2.5 at 3T in primates and humans. We evaluated the use of ferumoxytol for steady state, resting state FMRI (CBV-rs-fMRI) and relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) mapping, at 3T, in healthy volunteers. All standard resting state networks (RSNs) were identified in all subjects. On average the RSN Z statistics (MELODIC independent components) and volumes of the visual and default mode (DMN) networks were comparable. rCBV values were averaged for the visual (Vis) and DMN networks and correlated with the corresponding DMN and visual network Z statistics. There was a negative correlation between the rCBV and the Z statistics for the DMN, for both BOLD and CBV-rs-fMRI contrast (R(2)=0.63, 0.76). A similar correlation was not found for the visual network. Short repetition time rs-fMRI data were Fourier transformed to evaluate the effect of ferumoxytol on cardiac and respiratory fluctuations in the brain rs-BOLD, CBV signals. Cardiac and respiratory fluctuations decreased to baseline within large vessels post ferumoxytol. Robust rs-fMRI and CBV mapping is possible in normal human brain.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2013.06.066
View details for PubMedID 23831413
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Apoptosis Participates in Early Aneurysm Development via ECM Remodeling in Marfan Syndrome
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS. 2013
View details for Web of Science ID 000332162904488
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Attenuation of Apoptosis by Telmisartan in Atherosclerotic Plaques of Apolipoprotein E-/- Mice: Evaluation Using Technetium 99m-Annexin A5
MOLECULAR IMAGING
2013; 12 (5): 300-309
Abstract
Technetium 99m (99mTc)-annexin A5, a marker of ongoing apoptosis, is supposed to be useful in the detection of metabolically active atheroma. The aim of this study was to determine the potential of 99mTc-annexin A5 for evaluating the therapeutic effects of an angiotensin II receptor type 1 blocker (ARB) (telmisartan) on atherosclerosis. Male apolipoprotein E-/- mice were divided into telmisartan-treated (3 mg/kg/d, n = 10) and control (n = 10) groups. After 16 to 21 weeks of treatment, 99mTc-annexin A5 was injected and cryostat sections of aortic tissues (n = 10-12/aorta) were prepared. The 99mTc-annexin A5 accumulation level in the plaques was evaluated by autoradiography. Serial sections of the plaques were histologically examined to identify the lesion phenotypes (normal vessels, early lesions, atheromatous lesions, and fibrotic lesions), plaque size, macrophage infiltration levels, and lipid deposition levels. Telmisartan treatment significantly decreased the plaque size (0.05 ± 0.05 vs 0.11 ± 0.08, mm2), macrophage infiltration level (0.02 ± 0.02 vs 0.03 ± 0.02, mm2), lipid deposition level (0.01 ± 0.01 vs 0.02 ± 0.02, mm2), and 99mTc-annexin A5 accumulation level (1.30 ± 1.09 vs 2.15 ± 1.91, × 10-6/g). 99mTc-annexin A5 accumulation levels in the plaques positively correlated with macrophage infiltration (r = .69, p < .05) and lipid deposition (r = .66, p < .05) levels. Apoptosis imaging with 99mTc-annexin A5 may be useful for evaluating the therapeutic effects of ARBs on atherosclerosis.
View details for DOI 10.2310/7290.2012.00045
View details for Web of Science ID 000336724400006
View details for PubMedID 23763985
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Recent Advances in the Molecular Imaging of Programmed Cell Death: Part II-Non-Probe-Based MRI, Ultrasound, and Optical Clinical Imaging Techniques
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2013; 54 (1): 1-4
Abstract
There is much that can be done to detect apoptosis and other forms of cell death with existing clinical modalities including ultrasound, MRI, and optical imaging without the need for current or new intravenous contrast agents. We will discuss how these widely available imaging technologies can readily be applied to the imaging of apoptosis in patients undergoing chemotherapy or radiation treatment. The limiting factor of course is the lack of knowledge of the optimal times after the start of treatment for the most accurate assessment of apoptosis and necrosis with each modality and specific technique. It is hoped that imaging studies that systematically look at treatment response can soon be performed to address these issues.
View details for DOI 10.2967/jnumed.112.111740
View details for Web of Science ID 000313606800022
View details for PubMedID 23160790
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Synchrotron infrared imaging of advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs) in cardiac tissue from mice fed high glycemic diets
BIOMEDICAL SPECTROSCOPY AND IMAGING
2013; 2 (4): 301–15
Abstract
Recent research findings correlate an increased risk for dieases such as diabetes, macular degeneration and cardiovascular disease (CVD) with diets that rapidly raise the blood sugar levels; these diets are known as high glycemic index (GI) diets which include white breads, sodas and sweet deserts. Lower glycemia diets are usually rich in fruits, non-starchy vegetables and whole grain products. The goal of our study was to compare and contrast the effects of a low vs. high glycemic diet using the biochemical composition and microstructure of the heart. The improved spatial resolution and signal-to-noise for SR-FTIR obtained through the coupling of the bright synchrotron infrared photon source to an infrared spectral microscope enabled the molecular-level observation of diet-related changes within unfixed fresh frozen histologic sections of mouse cardiac tissue. High and low glycemic index (GI) diets were started at the age of five-months and continued for one year, with the diets only differing in their starch distribution (high GI diet = 100% amylopectin versus low GI diet = 30% amylopectin/70% amylose). Serial cryosections of cardiac tissue for SR-FTIR imaging alternated with adjacent hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained sections allowed not only fine-scale chemical analyses of glycogen and glycolipid accumulation along a vein as well as protein glycation hotspots co-localizing with collagen cold spots but also the tracking of morphological differences occurring in tandem with these chemical changes. As a result of the bright synchrotron infrared photon source coupling, we were able to provide significant molecular evidence for a positive correlation between protein glycation and collagen degradation in our mouse model. Our results bring a new insight not only to the effects of long-term GI dietary practices of the public but also to the molecular and chemical foundation behind the cardiovascular disease pathogenesis commonly seen in diabetic patients.
View details for DOI 10.3233/BSI-130057
View details for Web of Science ID 000214729500005
View details for PubMedID 26500847
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC4617198
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Brain uptake of Tc99m-HMPAO correlates with clinical response to the novel redox modulating agent EPI-743 in patients with mitochondrial disease
MOLECULAR GENETICS AND METABOLISM
2012; 107 (4): 690-699
Abstract
While decreased ATP production and redox imbalance are central to mitochondrial disease pathogenesis, efforts to develop effective treatments have been hampered by the lack of imaging markers of oxidative stress. In this study we wished to determine if Tc99m-HMPAO, a SPECT imaging marker of cerebral blood flow and glutathione/protein thiol content, could be used to monitor the effect(s) of EPI-743, an oral redox modulating, para-benzoquinone based therapeutic for mitochondrial disease. We hypothesized that treatment changes in HMPAO uptake would be inversely proportional to changes in oxidative stress within the brain and directly correlate to clinical response to EPI-743 therapy. Twenty-two patients with mitochondrial disease were treated with EPI-743. Each underwent baseline and 3-month Tc99m-HMPAO SPECT scanning along with clinical/neurologic evaluations. Diseases treated were: Leigh syndrome (n=7), polymerase γ deficiency (n=5), MELAS (n=5), Friedreich ataxia (n=2), Kearns-Sayre syndrome, Pearson syndrome, and mtDNA depletion syndrome. Neuro-anatomic uptake analyses of HMPAO were performed with NeuroGam™ (Segami Corp.) statistical software and clinical response was assessed by the Newcastle Paediatric Mitochondrial Disease Scale or Newcastle Mitochondrial Disease Adult Scale depending on patient age. For all 22 patients there was a significant linear correlation between the change in cerebellar uptake of HMPAO and the improvement in Newcastle score (r=0.623, **p=0.00161). The MELAS subgroup showed a significant relationship of whole brain uptake (n=5, r=0.917, *p=0.028) to improvement in Newcastle score. We conclude that Tc99m-HMPAO SPECT scanning has promise as a general marker of the oxidative state of the brain and its response to redox modulating therapies. Further studies will be needed to confirm these findings in a more homogenous study population.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.ymgme.2012.09.023
View details for Web of Science ID 000311816200010
View details for PubMedID 23084792
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Recent Advances in the Molecular Imaging of Programmed Cell Death: Part I-Pathophysiology and Radiotracers
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2012; 53 (11): 1659-1662
Abstract
In humans, apoptosis (programmed cell death) is the most common form of cell death after necrosis. Apoptosis is a series of genetically preprogrammed biochemical and morphologic energy-requiring events that, after a specific external or internal stimulus, results in the physiologic disappearance of a cell via its self-disintegration and packaging of its contents into membrane vesicles called apoptotic bodies. Apoptotic bodies can readily be ingested, with their nutrients and even organelles recycled by neighboring cells or phagocytes without local inflammation. In contrast, necrosis is characterized by the primary loss of plasma membrane integrity and the uncontrolled release of a cell's contents, often causing local inflammation, tissue damage, and scarring. Alternate forms of cell death also exist, associated with specific molecular mechanisms involving enzymes, organelles, genes, external stimuli, or blockade of normal cell proliferation. In this review we will briefly outline the molecular mechanisms of apoptosis that can be imaged with radiotracers now under development.
View details for DOI 10.2967/jnumed.112.108944
View details for Web of Science ID 000311128400007
View details for PubMedID 23033360
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Quantitative Determination of Apoptosis of Pancreatic beta-Cells in a Murine Model of Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2012; 53 (10): 1585-1591
Abstract
Type 1 diabetes mellitus is characterized by a significant deficit in pancreatic β-cell mass, presumably caused by β-cell apoptosis. We investigated the incidence of β-cell apoptosis in streptozotocin-treated mice and nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice with (99m)Tc-annexin A5.Vehicle-treated mice, streptozotocin-treated mice, and NOD mice at the ages of 5, 9, 16, and 20 wk (5-8 mice per group) were injected with (99m)Tc-annexin A5 and sacrificed 6 h later for autoradiography, and the regional (99m)Tc-annexin A5 level in the pancreas was evaluated. Pancreatic islets were identified by insulin immunohistochemical staining, and apoptotic cells were determined by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL) staining. The (99m)Tc-annexin A5 level in pancreatic islets was expressed as the percentage injected dose per area of pancreatic islets and normalized by animal body weight (%ID × 10(6)/mm(2)/kg). The level of apoptotic cells in pancreatic islets was expressed as the number of TUNEL-positive cells per area of pancreatic islets (cells/mm(2)).The (99m)Tc-annexin A5 accumulation level was significantly higher (2.5 ± 0.7 vs. 0.7 ± 0.1 %ID × 10(6)/mm(2)/kg, P < 0.05) and the number of TUNEL-positive cells was significantly higher (1,170 ± 535 vs. 5 ± 6 cells/mm(2), P < 0.05) in the pancreatic islets of the streptozotocin-treated mice than in those of the vehicle-treated mice. The (99m)Tc-annexin A5 accumulation level was significantly higher (1.1 ± 0.4 vs. 0.5 ± 0.1 %ID × 10(6)/mm(2)/kg, P < 0.05) and the number of TUNEL-positive cells was significantly higher (152 ± 82 vs. 4 ± 9 cells/mm(2), P < 0.05) in the pancreatic islets of 16-wk-old NOD mice than in those of 5-wk-old NOD mice. In addition, the level of (99m)Tc-annexin A5 correlated with the number of TUNEL-positive cells in the pancreatic islets of the streptozotocin-treated mice (r = 0.821, P < 0.001) and NOD mice (r = 0.721, P < 0.001).There is significant islet cell apoptosis with (99m)Tc-annexin A5 accumulation in the pancreas of both streptozotocin and NOD mice.
View details for DOI 10.2967/jnumed.111.102459
View details for Web of Science ID 000309432400018
View details for PubMedID 22930815
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99mTc AnnexinV-128 for in vivo diagnosis of experimental collagen induced arthritis
SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC. 2012
View details for Web of Science ID 000443680203109
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Initial experience in the treatment of inherited mitochondrial disease with EPI-743
MOLECULAR GENETICS AND METABOLISM
2012; 105 (1): 91-102
Abstract
Inherited mitochondrial respiratory chain disorders are progressive, life-threatening conditions for which there are limited supportive treatment options and no approved drugs. Because of this unmet medical need, as well as the implication of mitochondrial dysfunction as a contributor to more common age-related and neurodegenerative disorders, mitochondrial diseases represent an important therapeutic target. Thirteen children and one adult with genetically-confirmed mitochondrial disease (polymerase γ deficiency, n=4; Leigh syndrome, n=4; MELAS, n=3; mtDNA deletion syndrome, n=2; Friedreich ataxia, n=1) at risk for progressing to end-of-life care within 90 days were treated with EPI-743, a novel para-benzoquinone therapeutic, in a subject controlled, open-label study. Serial measures of safety and efficacy were obtained that included biochemical, neurological, quality-of-life, and brain redox assessments using technetium-99m-hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime (HMPAO) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) radionuclide imaging. Twelve patients treated with EPI-743 have survived; one polymerase γ deficiency patient died after developing pneumonia and one patient with Surf-1 deficiency died after completion of the protocol. Of the 12 survivors, 11 demonstrated clinical improvement, with 3 showing partial relapse, and 10 of the survivors also had an improvement in quality-of-life scores at the end of the 13-week emergency treatment protocol. HMPAO SPECT scans correlated with clinical response; increased regional and whole brain HMPAO uptake was noted in the clinical responders and the one subject who did not respond clinically had decreased regional and whole brain HMPAO uptake. EPI-743 has modified disease progression in >90% of patients in this open-label study as assessed by clinical, quality-of-life, and non-invasive brain imaging parameters. Data obtained herein suggest that EPI-743 may represent a new drug for the treatment of inherited mitochondrial respiratory chain disorders. Prospective controlled trials will be undertaken to substantiate these initial promising observations. Furthermore, HMPAO SPECT imaging may be a valuable tool for the detection of central nervous system redox defects and for monitoring response to treatments directed at modulating abnormal redox.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.ymgme.2011.10.009
View details for PubMedID 22115768
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Targeted Systemic Radiotherapy with scVEGF/Lu-177 Leads to Sustained Disruption of the Tumor Vasculature and Intratumoral Apoptosis
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2011; 52 (10): 1630-1637
Abstract
Tumor vessels abundantly express receptors for vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), despite treatment with conventional or antiangiogenic drugs. We wished to determine whether the high levels of VEGF receptor (VEGFR) within the tumor vasculature could be leveraged for intracellular delivery of therapeutically significant doses of scVEGF/(177)Lu, a novel radiopharmaceutical based on a recombinant single-chain (sc) derivative of VEGF, in orthotopic breast cancer models.scVEGF-PEG (polyethylene gycol)-DOTA conjugates containing 2.0-, 3.4-, or 5.0-kDa PEG linkers site-specifically conjugated to a cysteine-containing tag (Cys-tag) in scVEGF were radiolabeled with (177)Lu (scVEGF/(177)Lu) for in vivo studies. Human MDA231luc and mouse 4T1luc cell lines were injected orthotopically to establish breast carcinoma tumors in immunodeficient and immunocompetent hosts, respectively. The effects of scVEGF/(177)Lu were defined by analysis of changes in tumor growth and immunohistochemical staining for the endothelial markers CD31 and VEGFR-2 and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL) staining for intratumoral apoptosis.Biodistribution assays and dosimetric calculations established that scVEGF/(177)Lu with a 3.4-kDa PEG linker delivered the highest dose of radiation to tumors (69.9 cGy/MBq/g of tissue) and the lowest dose to the kidneys (33.3 cGy/MBq/organ). Total doses below 40 MBq/mouse of scVEGF/(177)Lu did not affect renal function, and 3 divided doses of 6.3 MBq/mouse or a bolus dose of 18.9 MBq/mouse induced only transient lymphopenia and weight loss (<10% baseline weight). In mice with orthotopic mammary breast carcinoma, intravenous injections of well-tolerated bolus and fractionated doses of scVEGF/(177)Lu in the range from 6.3 to 18.9 MBq/mouse (25-76 MBq/m(2)) resulted in dose-dependent tumor growth inhibition. Immunohistochemical analysis of tumors at 4-5 wk after single injections of scVEGF/(177)Lu indicated dose-dependent regression of tumor vasculature and widespread intratumoral apoptosis. A single dose of 7.4 MBq/mouse of scVEGF/(177)Lu given before a course of bevacizumab or sunitinib treatment enhanced the antiangiogenic effects of both drugs.Selective targeting of VEGFR in tumor vasculature with well-tolerated doses of scVEGF/(177)Lu is effective in orthotopic breast cancer models. As high levels of VEGFR expression in the tumor vasculature are a common feature in a variety of cancers, targeting tumor angiogenesis with scVEGF/(177)Lu warrants further exploration.
View details for DOI 10.2967/jnumed.111.091629
View details for PubMedID 21890879
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Multimodality Molecular Imaging of Apoptosis in Oncology
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ROENTGENOLOGY
2011; 197 (2): 308-317
Abstract
The purposes of this review are to describe the signaling pathways of and the cellular changes that occur with apoptosis and other forms of cell death, summarize tracers and modalities used for imaging of apoptosis, delineate the relation between apoptosis and inhibition of protein translation, and describe spectroscopic technologies that entail high-frequency ultrasound and infrared and midinfrared light in characterizing the intracellular events of apoptosis.Apoptosis is a highly orchestrated set of biochemical and morphologic cellular events. These events present many potential targets for the imaging of apoptosis in vivo. Imaging of apoptosis can facilitate early assessment of anticancer treatment before tumor shrinkage, which may increase the effectiveness of delivery of chemotherapy and radiation therapy and speed drug development.
View details for DOI 10.2214/AJR.11.6953
View details for Web of Science ID 000293062600036
View details for PubMedID 21785075
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Localization of Deoxyglucose and Annexin A5 in Experimental Atheroma Correlates with Macrophage Infiltration but not Lipid Deposition in the Lesion
MOLECULAR IMAGING AND BIOLOGY
2011; 13 (4): 712-720
Abstract
The aim of this study was to understand the relationship of lipid deposition to the macrophage content, macrophage metabolism, and apoptosis in plaque. We compared the uptake of 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-D-[(14)C]glucose ([(14)C]FDG) and [(99m)Tc]HYNIC-annexin V ([(99m)Tc]annexin A5) with the lesion histology in apolipoprotein E knockout (apoE(-/-)) mice.Male apoE(-/-) mice (n = 9) were injected with [(14)C]FDG and [(99m)Tc]annexin A5. Cryostat sections of aorta samples (n = 49) were used for dual-tracer autoradiography, and regional tracer uptake levels were evaluated. Lesions were identified histologically with Movat's pentachrome (AHA lesion phenotypes), Mac-2 staining (macrophage infiltration) and Oil Red O staining (lipid deposition).The highest uptakes of [(14)C]FDG (3.10 ± 1.50 %ID × kilogram per square millimeter) and [(99m)Tc]annexin A5 (0.49 ± 0.20 %ID × kilogram per square millimeter) were shown in atheromatous lesions (types III and IV). Each tracer uptake showed better correlation with macrophage infiltration than lipid deposition ([(14)C]FDG, r = 0.44 vs. r = 0.14; [(99m)Tc]annexin A5, r = 0.65 vs. r = 0.48).Both tracers were concentrated in type III and IV atheromatous lesions which corresponded to macrophage infiltration rather than lipid deposition.
View details for DOI 10.1007/s11307-010-0389-7
View details for Web of Science ID 000292310000012
View details for PubMedID 20686858
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Mid-Infrared Reflectivity of Mouse Atheromas: A Case Study
BIOMEDICAL APPLICATIONS OF SYNCHROTRON INFRARED MICROSPECTROSCOPY
2011: 351–68
View details for Web of Science ID 000286308900013
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Mechanisms behind Local Immunosuppression Using Inhaled Tacrolimus in Preclinical Models of Lung Transplantation
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY CELL AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
2010; 43 (4): 403-412
Abstract
Inhaled immunosuppression with tacrolimus (TAC) is a novel strategy after lung transplantation. Here we investigate the feasibility of tacrolimus delivery via aerosol, assess its immunosuppressive efficacy, reveal possible mechanisms of action, and evaluate its airway toxicity. Rats received 4 mg/kg TAC via oral or inhaled (AER) administration. Pharmacokinetic properties were compared, and in vivo airway toxicity was assessed. Full-thickness human airway epithelium (AE) was grown in vitro at an air-liquid interface. Equal TAC doses (10-1,000 ng) were either added to the bottom chamber (MED) or aerosolized for gas-phase exposure (AER). Airway epithelium TAC absorption, cell toxicity, and interactions of TAC with NFκB activation were studied. Single-photon emission computed tomography demonstrated a linear tracer accumulation within the lungs during TAC inhalation. The AER TAC generated higher lung-tissue concentrations, but blood concentrations that were 11 times lower. Airway histology and gene expression did not reveal drug toxicity after 3 weeks of treatment. In vitro AE exposed to TAC at 10-1,000 ng, orally or AER, maintained its pseudostratified morphology, did not show cell toxicity, and maintained its epithelial integrity, with tight junction formation. The TAC AER-treated AE absorbed the drug from the apical surface and generated lower-chamber TAC concentrations sufficient to suppress activated lymphocytes. Tacrolimus AER was superior to TAC MED at preventing AE IFN-γ, IL-10, IL-13, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 5 (RANTES) and TNF-α up-regulation. Tacrolimus inhibited airway epithelial cell NFκB activation. In conclusion, TAC can be delivered easily and effectively into the lungs without causing airway toxicity, decreases inflammatory AE cytokine production, and inhibits NFκB activation.
View details for DOI 10.1165/rcmb.2009-0208OC
View details for PubMedID 19880819
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Characterization of a Recombinant Form of Annexin VI for Detection of Apoptosis
BIOCONJUGATE CHEMISTRY
2010; 21 (8): 1554-1558
Abstract
We developed a recombinant form of human annexin VI called annexin VI-601 (M(r) 76,224) with the N-terminal extension of Ala-Gly-Gly-Cys-Gly-His to allow ready attachment of fluorescent or radioactive labels. The protein was produced by expression in E. coli and was purified by calcium-dependent membrane binding, anion-exchange chromatography, and heparin-Sepharose affinity chromatography. The protein could be readily labeled with iodoacetamidofluorescein and with (99m)Tc. The protein bound with high affinity to PS-containing phospholipid vesicles and to erythrocytes with exposed phosphatidylserine. Fluorescent annexin VI-601 readily detected apoptosis of Jurkat cells by flow cytometry at much lower calcium concentrations than those required for equivalent detection by annexin V. In vivo administration of radiolabeled protein showed that blood clearance was much slower than annexin V. In conclusion, annexin VI may have advantages over annexin V in certain situations for both in vitro and in vivo detection of apoptosis and therapeutic targeting of PS due to its lower calcium requirement for membrane binding and its higher molecular weight.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bc100239k
View details for Web of Science ID 000280918900022
View details for PubMedID 20672837
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Molecular Imaging of Changes in the Prevalence of Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor in Sunitinib-Treated Murine Mammary Tumors
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2010; 51 (6): 959-966
Abstract
Several drugs targeting vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and its receptors (VEGFRs) are approved for cancer treatment. However, these drugs induce relatively modest and frequently unpredictable tumor responses. In this work, we explored whether noninvasive imaging of VEGFR, a direct target of antiangiogenic drugs, can provide real-time information on responses to the treatment with sunitinib, a small-molecule VEGFR inhibitor approved by the Food and Drug Administration.We imaged VEGFR in an orthotopic mammary tumor model during the course of treatment with sunitinib using a recently developed SPECT tracer, a (99m)Tc-labeled single-chain VEGF (scVEGF), that binds to and is internalized by VEGFR. Tumors from imaged mice were harvested and cryosectioned, and alternating sections were analyzed by autoradiography and immunohistochemistry to determine the expression of endothelial cell markers VEGFR-2 and CD31.In vitro assays with endothelial cells overexpressing VEGFR-2 established that sunitinib does not inhibit VEGFR-2-mediated uptake of scVEGF-based tracers. SPECT and autoradiography with (99m)Tc-scVEGF of tumor cryosections revealed a 2.2- to 2.6-fold decrease in tracer uptake after 4 daily doses of sunitinib. However, once treatment was discontinued, tracer uptake rapidly (3 d) increased, particularly at the tumor edges. Immunohistochemical analysis of VEGFR-2 and CD31 supported SPECT and autoradiographic imaging findings, revealing the corresponding depletion of VEGFR-2- and CD31-positive endothelial cells from tumor vasculature during therapy and the rapid reemergence of VEGFR-2- and CD31-positive vasculature at the tumor edges after discontinuation of treatment.Our findings suggest that imaging with (99m)Tc-scVEGF might be useful for monitoring VEGFR responses to antiangiogenic treatment regimens.
View details for DOI 10.2967/jnumed.109.072199
View details for PubMedID 20484434
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Annexin A5 Uptake in Ischemic Myocardium: Demonstration of Reversible Phosphatidylserine Externalization and Feasibility of Radionuclide Imaging
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2010; 51 (2): 259-267
Abstract
Ischemic insult to the myocardium is associated with cardiomyocyte apoptosis. Because apoptotic cell death is characterized by phosphatidylserine externalization on cell membrane and annexin-A5 (AA5) avidly binds to phosphatidylserine, we hypothesized that radiolabeled AA5 should be able to identify the regions of myocardial ischemia.Models of brief myocardial ischemia by the occlusion of the coronary artery for 10 min (I-10) and reperfusion for 180 min (R-180) for the detection of phosphatidylserine exteriorization using (99m)Tc-labeled AA5 and gamma-imaging were produced in rabbits. (99m)Tc-AA5 uptake after brief ischemia was compared with an I-40/R-180 infarct model. Histologic characterization of both myocardial necrosis and apoptosis was performed in ischemia and infarct models. Phosphatidylserine exteriorization was also studied in a mouse model, and the dynamics and kinetics of phosphatidylserine exposure were assessed using unlabeled recombinant AA5 and AA5 labeled with biotin, Oregon Green, or Alexa 568. Appropriate controls were established.Phosphatidylserine exposure after ischemia in the rabbit heart could be detected by radionuclide imaging with (99m)Tc-AA5. Pathologic characterization of the explanted rabbit hearts did not show apoptosis or necrosis. Homogenization and ultracentrifugation of the ischemic myocardial tissue from rabbit hearts recovered two thirds of the radiolabeled AA5 from the cytoplasmic compartment. Murine experiments demonstrated that the cardiomyocytes expressed phosphatidylserine on their cell surface after an ischemic insult of 5 min. Phosphatidylserine exposure occurred continuously for at least 6 h after solitary ischemic insult. AA5 targeted the exposed phosphatidylserine on cardiomyocytes; AA5 was internalized into cytoplasmic vesicles within 10-30 min. Twenty-four hours after ischemia, cardiomyocytes with internalized AA5 had restored phosphatidylserine asymmetry of the sarcolemma, and no detectable phosphatidylserine remained on the cell surface. The preadministration of a pan-caspase inhibitor, zVAD-fmk, prevented phosphatidylserine exposure after ischemia.After a single episode of ischemia, cardiomyocytes express phosphatidylserine, which is amenable to targeting by AA5, for at least 6 h. Phosphatidylserine exposure is transient and internalized in cytoplasmic vesicles after AA5 binding, indicating the reversibility of the apoptotic process.
View details for DOI 10.2967/jnumed.109.068429
View details for Web of Science ID 000274152800029
View details for PubMedID 20124049
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Noninvasive assessment of tumor VEGF receptors in response to treatment with Pazopanib: A molecular imaging study
TRANSLATIONAL ONCOLOGY
2010; 3 (1): 56-64
Abstract
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and its receptors (VEGFRs) drive angiogenesis, and several VEGFR inhibitors are already approved for use as single agents or in combination with chemotherapy. Although there is a clear benefit with these drugs in a variety of tumors, the clinical response varies markedly among individuals. Therefore, there is a need for an efficient method to identify patients who are likely to respond to antiangiogenic therapy and to monitor its effects over time. We have recently developed a molecular imaging tracer for imaging VEGFRs known as scVEGF/(99m)Tc; an engineered single-chain (sc) form of VEGF radiolabeled with technetium Tc 99m ((99m)Tc). After intravenous injection, scVEGF/(99m)Tc preferentially binds to and is internalized by VEGFRs expressed within tumor vasculature, providing information on prevalence of functionally active receptors. We now report that VEGFR imaging readily detects the effects of pazopanib, a small-molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor under clinical development, which selectively targets VEGFR, PDGFR, and c-Kit in mice with HT29 tumor xenografts. Immunohistochemical analysis confirmed that the changes in VEGFR imaging reflect a dramatic pazopanib-induced decrease in the number of VEGFR-2(+)/CD31(+) endothelial cells (ECs) within the tumor vasculature followed by a relative increase in the number of ECs at the tumor edges. We suggest that VEGFR imaging can be used for the identification of patients that are responding to VEGFR-targeted therapies and for guidance in rational design, dosing, and schedules for combination regimens of antiangiogenic treatment.
View details for DOI 10.1593/tlo.09271
View details for PubMedID 20165696
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Molecular Imaging of Atherosclerotic Plaque Vulnerability: Comparison between F-18-FDG and Tc-99m-Annexin A5
MOLECULAR IMAGING FOR INTEGRATED MEDICAL THERAPY AND DRUG DEVELOPMENT
2010: 69–77
View details for DOI 10.1007/978-4-431-98074-2_8
View details for Web of Science ID 000271884900008
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Imaging Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) Receptors in Turpentine-Induced Sterile Thigh Abscesses with Radiolabeled Single-Chain VEGF
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2009; 50 (12): 2058-2063
Abstract
Angiogenesis plays a central role in the pathogenesis of chronic inflammatory disorders. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and its receptors are the most important regulators of angiogenesis. We wished to determine whether labeled forms of single-chain VEGF (scVEGF) could be used to image VEGF receptors in a well-characterized model of sterile soft-tissue inflammation induced by intramuscular injection of turpentine.Anesthetized adult male Swiss-Webster mice received a 20-microL intramuscular injection of turpentine into the right thigh. At 4, 7, or 10 d later, groups of 3-5 mice were injected via the tail vein with 50 microg of either scVEGF that had been site specifically labeled with Cy5.5 (scVEGF/Cy) or inactivated scVEGF/Cy (inVEGF/Cy) and then examined by fluorescence imaging. At 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10, or 12 d, additional groups of 3-5 mice were injected via the tail vein with 74-111 MBq of (99m)Tc-scVEGF (or (99m)Tc-inVEGF) and then examined by SPECT imaging.On days 3 through 10, both forms of scVEGF (scVEGF/Cy and (99m)Tc-scVEGF) showed significantly higher uptake (P < 0.05) in the right (abscessed) thigh than in the contralateral thigh (and higher uptake than the inactivated tracer). Peak uptake occurred on day 7 (3.67 +/- 1.79 [ratio of uptake in abscessed thigh to uptake in normal thigh, mean +/- SD] and 0.72 +/- 0.01 for scVEGF/Cy and inVEGF/Cy, respectively, and 3.49 +/- 1.22 and 1.04 +/- 0.41 for (99m)Tc-scVEGF and (99m)Tc-inVEGF, respectively) and slowly decreased thereafter. Autoradiography revealed peak tracer uptake in the thick irregular angiogenic rim of the abscess cavity on day 9 (5.83 x 10(-7) +/- 9.22 x 10(-8) and 5.85 x 10(-8) +/- 5.95 x 10(-8) percentage injected dose per pixel for (99m)Tc-scVEGF and (99m)Tc-inVEGF, respectively); in comparison, a thin circumscribed rim of uptake was seen with (99m)Tc-inVEGF. Immunostaining revealed that VEGFR-2 (VEGF receptor) colocalized with CD31 (endothelial cell marker) at all time points in the abscess rim, whereas F4/80 (macrophage) immunostaining reached a maximum at day 7 and decreased by day 10.The uptake of scVEGF in turpentine-induced abscesses was specific and directly related to VEGFR-2 expression in the neovasculature of the angiogenic rim. Peak tracer uptake coincided with maximum macrophage infiltration, suggesting that scVEGF imaging may be useful for the detection, localization, and monitoring of chronic inflammation in bone, joints, or soft tissues.
View details for DOI 10.2967/jnumed.109.068023
View details for PubMedID 19910439
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Apoptosis Imaging: Anti-Cancer Agents in Medicinal Chemistry
ANTI-CANCER AGENTS IN MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
2009; 9 (9): 944-951
Abstract
There is a rapid expansion in the number of new anti-cancer drugs with remarkably different mechanisms of action that can augment traditional chemotherapy. As these agents are often used in combination with traditional chemotherapy testing the effects of these novel agents has proven difficult requiring large sample sizes to detect relatively small differences in patient survival. Despite the wide variety of mechanisms, most new drugs are thought to ultimately induce apoptosis of tumor cells or their supportive vasculature. Imaging agents that can non-invasively monitor apoptosis in response to these new drugs could therefore help streamline the drug development process. They may also help guide oncologists to identify those patients that could best benefit from a given therapeutic regimen, dose, or duration of drug. In this article we will outline the existing imaging agents and modalities that are currently undergoing clinical testing and those that could be rapidly translated into humans.
View details for Web of Science ID 000271340900002
View details for PubMedID 20225999
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Analysis of In Situ and Ex Vivo Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor Expression During Experimental Aortic Aneurysm Progression
ARTERIOSCLEROSIS THROMBOSIS AND VASCULAR BIOLOGY
2009; 29 (10): 1452-?
Abstract
Mural inflammation and neovascularization are characteristic pathological features of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) disease. Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR) expression may also mediate AAA growth and rupture. We examined VEGFR expression as a function of AAA disease progression in the Apolipoprotein E-deficient (Apo E(-/-)) murine AAA model.Apo E(-/-) mice maintained on a high-fat diet underwent continuous infusion with angiotensin II at 1000 ng/kg/min (Ang II) or vehicle (Control) via subcutaneous osmotic pump. Serial transabdominal ultrasound measurements of abdominal aortic diameter were recorded (n=16 mice, 3 to 4 time points per mouse) for up to 28 days. Near-infrared receptor fluorescent (NIRF) imaging was performed on Ang II mice (n=9) and Controls (n=5) with scVEGF/Cy, a single-chain VEGF homo-dimer labeled with Cy 5.5 fluorescent tracer (7 to 18 microg/mouse IV). NIRF with inactivated single chain VEGF/Cy tracer (scVEGF/In, 18 microg/mouse IV) was performed on 2 additional Ang II mice to control for nonreceptor-mediated tracer binding and uptake. After image acquisition and sacrifice, aortae were harvested for analysis. An additional AAA mouse cohort received either an oral angiogenesis inhibitor or suitable negative or positive controls to clarify the significance of angiogenesis in experimental aneurysm progression. Aneurysms developed in the suprarenal aortic segment of all Ang II mice. Significantly greater fluorescent signal was obtained from aneurysmal aorta as compared to remote, uninvolved aortic segments in Ang II scVEGF/Cy mice or AAA in scVEGF/In mice or suprarenal aortic segments in Control mice. Signal intensity increased in a diameter-dependent fashion in aneurysmal segments. Immunostaining confirmed mural VEGFR-2 expression in medial smooth muscle cells. Treatment with an angiogenesis inhibitor attenuated AAA formation while decreasing mural macrophage infiltration and CD-31(+) cell density.Mural VEGFR expression, as determined by scVEGF/Cy fluorescent imaging and VEGFR-2 immunostaining, increases in experimental AAAs in a diameter-dependent fashion. Angiogenesis inhibition limits AAA progression. Clinical VEGFR expression imaging strategies, if feasible, may improve real-time monitoring of AAA disease progression and response to suppressive strategies.
View details for DOI 10.1161/ATVBAHA.109.187757
View details for PubMedID 19574559
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Imaging the molecular signatures of apoptosis and injury with radiolabeled annexin V.
Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society
2009; 6 (5): 469-476
Abstract
Annexin V is a ubiquitous intracellular protein in humans that has a variety of intriguing characteristics, including a nanomolar affinity for the membrane-bound constitutive anionic phospholipid known as phosphatidylserine (PS). PS is selectively expressed on the surface of apoptotic or physiologically stressed cells. As such, radiolabeled forms of annexin V have been used in both animal models and human Phase I and Phase II trials to determine if this tracer can be employed as an early surrogate marker of therapeutic efficacy in NSCLC and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Many other pulmonary imaging applications of radiolabeled annexin V are also possible, including the detection and monitoring of active pulmonary inflammation and other pathophysiologic stressors in a variety of diseases. In this article, the salient molecular features of apoptosis (and other forms of cell death) that permits imaging with radiolabeled annexin V will be discussed. The latest results from Phase II imaging trials with NSCLC and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma will be also be detailed. Finally, the potential future application of this tracer for the imaging of other pulmonary pathologies will be outlined.
View details for DOI 10.1513/pats.200901-001AW
View details for PubMedID 19687221
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC2731806
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18F-FDG and 99mTc-annexin A5 preferentially accumulate into unstable plaque in relation to macrophages infiltration but not lipid deposition: Histological basis of nuclear imaging on unstable plaques
OXFORD UNIV PRESS. 2009: S74–S74
View details for Web of Science ID 000207860500253
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Selective localization of annexin V within depolarized skeletal muscle
SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC. 2009
View details for Web of Science ID 000444145701042
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Fluorescent tomographic imaging subacute and chronic sterile abscesses using scVEGF/Cy5.5
SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC. 2009
View details for Web of Science ID 000444145701034
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Tc99m-scVEGF SPECT imaging of anti-angiogenic therapy with Sutent
SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC. 2009
View details for Web of Science ID 000444145700573
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SPECT and PET Imaging of EGF Receptors with Site-Specifically Labeled EGF and Dimeric EGF
BIOCONJUGATE CHEMISTRY
2009; 20 (4): 742-749
Abstract
We describe a new generation of tracers for molecular imaging of the cell surface receptors for epidermal growth factor (EGF). These receptors play a key role in the progression of many tumors and are major drug development targets. Our tracers are based on a recombinant human EGF expressed with a cysteine-containing tag that enables facile site-specific radiolabeling with (99m)Tc for single photon emission computed tomography or site-specific conjugation of (64)Cu PEGylated chelators for positron emission tomography. These tracers retain EGF activities in vitro and display selective and highly specific focal uptake in tumors in vivo. We expect that nuclear imaging of EGF receptors with these tracers will be useful for clinical diagnosis, therapeutic monitoring, and development of new drugs and treatment regimens.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bc800443w
View details for PubMedID 19320434
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The Use of Tc-99m-Recombinant Human Annexin V Imaging for Differential Diagnosis of Aseptic Loosening and Low-Grade Infection in Hip and Knee Prostheses
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2009; 50 (4): 534–37
Abstract
The aim of this study was to assess the pattern of annexin V uptake in hip and knee prostheses suspected of being infected.A total of 7 patients undergoing revision surgery for hip or knee prostheses were studied; 5 patients had total hip replacements, and 2 had total knee replacements. Infection was confirmed by pathology, culture results, laboratory evaluation, and clinical follow-up. All patients also underwent a bone scan before surgery.Annexin V scan findings were positive in 5 patients and negative in 2. Annexin V uptake was either focal (n = 4) or linear (n = 1). There were 4 true-positive, 2 true-negative, 1 false-positive, and no false-negative annexin V studies. Annexin V uptake was either more extensive or less extensive than, and usually was incongruent with, (99m)Tc-methylene diphosphonate uptake.Our findings suggest that annexin V imaging shows greater uptake with infection than with aseptic loosening and has a high negative predictive value for prosthetic infection.
View details for DOI 10.2967/jnumed.108.059345
View details for Web of Science ID 000272487200008
View details for PubMedID 19289427
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Macrophage Infiltration and Apoptosis can be Imaged Utilizing F-18-fdg and Tc-99m-annexin A5: Potential Indicators of Plaque Vulnerability
81st Annual Scientific Session of the American-Heart-Association
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS. 2008: S1002–S1002
View details for Web of Science ID 000262104503721
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Monitoring of Treatment-Induced Apoptosis in Oncology with PET and SPECT
CURRENT PHARMACEUTICAL DESIGN
2008; 14 (28): 2974-2982
Abstract
The early assessment of a solid tumor's response to conventional or new drug therapy to complement or replace current RECIST (or other clinical) criteria remains an elusive goal. The work horse PET tracer (18)F-FDG, may represent the most immediate method to track individual tumor response to therapy for many types of cancer. Newer radiotracers such as radiolabeled annexin V, have also shown the ability to selectively localize to tumor cells undergoing apoptosis (programmed cell death) in response to successful treatment in vivo. In this article we will review therapy reduced tumor apoptosis and the radiotracers used to date to image this process in both animal models and clinical trials.
View details for Web of Science ID 000261915500005
View details for PubMedID 18991713
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Prolonged High-Fat Feeding Enhances Aortic F-18-FDG and Tc-99m-Annexin A5 Uptake in Apolipoprotein E-Deficient and Wild-Type C57BL/6J Mice
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2008; 49 (10): 1707-1714
Abstract
(18)F-FDG, a marker of the enhanced metabolism characteristic of activated inflammatory cells, and (99m)Tc-annexin A5, a marker of apoptosis, are both widely believed to be useful for the imaging of unstable atheroma (rupture-prone vulnerable plaques [VP]). Serum cholesterol functions as a proinflammatory factor, driving the formation of VP, and affects the immune responses of aortic tissues systemically. It is therefore reasonable to postulate that prolonged cholesterol loading may alter the aortic uptake of these tracers. Here, we evaluated the aortic uptake of (18)F-FDG and (99m)Tc-annexin A5 in apolipoprotein E-deficient (apoE(-/-)) and wild-type mice placed on high-fat diets.Male apoE(-/-) and wild-type (C57BL/6J) mice were maintained on high-fat diets after the age of 5 wk. Wild-type mice fed regular chow were used as controls. At the ages of 10, 18, and 25 wk (5-15 mice per group at each time point), mice were injected with (18)F-FDG or (99m)Tc-annexin A5 after 12 h of fasting. At 1 h after (18)F-FDG injection (or 2 h after (99m)Tc-annexin A5 injection), mice were sacrificed, and the aortas were removed for well-type scintillation counting of radioactivity. The results were expressed as percentage injected dose per gram of tissue and normalized by animal body weight [(ID%/g) x kg]. En face staining was then performed to assess the location and size (surface area) of the lipid pool within each aortic specimen. Concurrent blood samples were obtained to determine the plasma lipid profile of each group.No atherosclerotic lesions were found in wild-type mice regardless of the diet, whereas the lesion area progressively increased with age in apoE(-/-) mice. Mean plasma cholesterol levels remained stable with the regular diet in wild-type mice (73-78 mg/dL) but increased with cholesterol feeding in wild-type mice (143-179 mg/dL) and in apoE(-/-) mice (>1,300 mg/dL). Aortic tracer uptake [(ID%/g) x kg] remained stable with the regular diet in wild-type mice (0.054-0.053 and 0.021-0.023 for (99m)Tc-annexin A5) but increased with cholesterol feeding in wild-type mice (0.164 for (18)F-FDG and 0.036 for (99m)Tc-annexin A5 at 25 wk) and in apoE(-/-) mice (0.249 for (18)F-FDG and 0.047 for (99m)Tc-annexin A5 at 25 wk).The accumulation of (18)F-FDG and (99m)Tc-annexin A5 in aortic tissues is influenced not only by the progression of atherosclerotic disease but also by cholesterol loading over time.
View details for DOI 10.2967/jnumed.108.051847
View details for Web of Science ID 000260229900051
View details for PubMedID 18794270
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In vivo imaging of apoptosis
CANCER BIOLOGY & THERAPY
2008; 7 (10): 1525-1532
Abstract
Despite over a decade of intense investigation there is still no routine method for the clinical imaging of apoptosis in oncologic patients. There have been multiple tracers proposed but none as of yet has received FDA approval. Radiolabeled annexin V is one of the few radiotracers that has been widely used in Phase II trials and is still under development. In this review we will first detail the general mechanisms involved with apoptosis and other common forms of cell death. Next we will outline the latest in vivo imaging data in animal models and humans including that obtained with radiolabeled annexin V. It is hoped that improved understanding of the complex biochemical pathways involved with cell death will lead to at least several radiopharmaceuticals with the ability to image apoptosis as part of improving the care and treatment of patients suffering from cancer.
View details for Web of Science ID 000260263600005
View details for PubMedID 18836289
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In vivo detection of apoptosis
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2008; 49: 81S-95S
Abstract
After several decades of debate, it is now widely acknowledged that apoptosis, also known as programmed cell death, is central to homoeostasis and normal development and physiology in all multicellular organisms, including humans. The dysregulation of apoptosis can lead to the destruction of normal tissues in a variety of disorders, including autoimmune and neurodegenerative diseases (too much apoptosis) or the growth of tumors (too little apoptosis). In addition, effective therapy of tumors requires the iatrogenic induction of programmed cell death by radiation, chemotherapy, or both. Given the central role of apoptosis, it would be desirable to have a noninvasive imaging method to serially detect and monitor this process in cancer patients undergoing conventional radiation and chemotherapy treatments as well as for the development and testing of new drugs. In this article, the latest modalities and contrast agents described in the literature for the imaging of apoptosis in vivo are reviewed. First, the most recent developments in the biochemical characterization of the many intracellular pathways involved in this complex process are discussed. Next, a variety of new radionuclide tracers, including radiolabeled annexin V and caspase inhibitors for PET and SPECT, are described. Finally, the use of MRI, MR spectroscopy, and ultrasound as possible alternative imaging modalities for the imaging of apoptosis is addressed.
View details for DOI 10.2967/jnumed.107.045898
View details for Web of Science ID 000256491100006
View details for PubMedID 18523067
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Mid-infrared reflectivity of experimental atheromas
JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL OPTICS
2008; 13 (3)
Abstract
We report that the pathologic components present within the atheromatous plaques of ApoE knock-out mice can reflect significant amounts of mid-infrared (mid-IR) light. Furthermore, the reflected light spectra contained the unique signatures of a variety of biologic features including those found in unstable or "vulnerable" plaque. This discovery may represent a unique opportunity to develop a new intravascular diagnostic modality that can detect and characterize sites of atherosclerosis.
View details for DOI 10.1117/1.2937469
View details for Web of Science ID 000257951200003
View details for PubMedID 18601520
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Direct site-specific labeling of the cys-tag moiety in scVEGF with technetium 99m
BIOCONJUGATE CHEMISTRY
2008; 19 (5): 1049-1054
Abstract
Angiogenesis is a fundamental feature of tumor development, and therefore, the tracers for molecular imaging of specific angiogenic biomarkers are expected to be useful for diagnostics, patient monitoring, and drug development. We have created a new class of imaging agents based on the most important mediator of angiogenesis, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). Our latest version is a single-chain (sc) VEGF protein containing an N-terminal Cys-tag designed for site-specific modification with a variety of imaging and therapeutic moieties. We have recently found that the Cys-tag itself can form a stable chelate with (99m)Tc using tin-tricine as an exchange reagent. This self-chelation approach yields a highly stable and fully functional form of radiolabeled scVEGF that can be used as a SPECT tracer for tumor angiogenesis. Also of note is that directly labeled scVEGF has less than one-half the nonspecific renal uptake of (99m)Tc-HYNIC-scVEGF. The simple production of scVEGF for direct chelation of (99m)Tc makes it a promising molecular imaging agent for the oncology clinic.
View details for DOI 10.1021/bc7004818
View details for PubMedID 18407683
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Translational imaging: imaging of apoptosis.
Handbook of experimental pharmacology
2008: 259-275
Abstract
Since its original description in 1972, apoptosis or programmed cell death has been recognized as the major pathway by which the body precisely regulates the number and type of its cells as part of normal embryogenesis, development, and homeostasis. Later it was found that apoptosis was also involved in the pathogenesis of a number of human diseases, cell immunity, and the action of cytotoxotic drugs and radiation therapy in cancer treatment. As such, the imaging of apoptosis with noninvasive techniques such as with radiotracers, including annexin V and lipid proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy, may have a wide range of clinical utility in both the diagnosis and monitoring therapy of a wide range of human disorders. In this chapter we review the basic biochemical and morphologic features of apoptosis and the methods developed thus far to image this complex process in humans.
View details for DOI 10.1007/978-3-540-77496-9_11
View details for PubMedID 18626606
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Cysteine-containing fusion tag for site-specific conjugation of therapeutic and imaging agents to targeting proteins.
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.)
2008; 494: 275-294
Abstract
Targeted delivery of therapeutic and imaging agents requires conjugation of a corresponding payload to a targeting peptide or protein. The ideal procedure should yield a uniform preparation of functionally active conjugates and be translatable for development of clinical products. We describe here our experience with site-specific protein modification via a novel cysteine-containing fusion tag (Cys-tag), which is a 15-amino-acid (aa) N-terminal fragment of human ribonuclease I with the R4C substitution. Several Cys-tagged proteins and peptides with different numbers of native cysteines were expressed and refolded into functionally active conformation, indicating that the tag does not interfere with the formation of internal disulfide bonds. We also describe standardized procedures for site-specific conjugation of very different payloads, such as functionalized lipids and liposomes, radionuclide chelators and radionuclides, fluorescent dyes, drug-derivatized dendrimers, scaffold proteins, biotin, and polyethyleneglycol to Cys-tagged peptides and proteins, as well as present examples of functional activity of targeted conjugates in vitro and in vivo. We expect that Cys-tag would provide new opportunities for development of targeted therapeutic and imaging agents for research and clinical use.
View details for DOI 10.1007/978-1-59745-419-3_16
View details for PubMedID 18726580
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Monitoring the protective effects of minocycline treatment with radiolabeled annexin v in an experimental model of focal cerebral ischemia
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2007; 48 (11): 1822-1828
Abstract
Minocycline is an antibiotic now recognized to have antiapoptotic and antiinflammatory properties. Because of these properties, minocycline may be of benefit in reducing neuronal apoptosis from ischemia and subsequent postischemic inflammation if administered soon after a stroke. We now explore the feasibility of using (99m)Tc-annexin V, an in vivo marker of apoptosis, with SPECT to monitor the antiapoptotic effects of minocycline therapy.CB6/F1 adult male mice underwent unilateral distal middle cerebral artery occlusion (dMCA) occlusion and were imaged and sacrificed at 1, 3, 7, or 30 d after injury. Animals were given minocycline (or vehicle) 30 min and 12 h after dMCA occlusion and then given 22.5 mg/kg twice daily for up to 7 d. Before imaging, behavioral tests were performed to evaluate the neurologic function. After imaging, brains were collected for histology and assessed for the degree of apoptosis and microglial activation.(99m)Tc-Annexin V uptake in injured hemispheres was significantly decreased 2- to 3-fold by minocycline at all time points. Minocyline reduced infarct size as seen histologically and improved behavioral indices as late as 30 d. Infarct volume as seen histologically correlated with radiolabeled annexin V uptake seen by SPECT. In situ fluorescent microscopy demonstrated that annexin V bound primarily to neurons at 1 and 3 d, with a shift toward microglia by 7 and 30 d.We found that minocycline significantly reduces neuronal apoptosis and infarct size and improves neurologic outcome in mice after acute focal cortical ischemia.
View details for DOI 10.2967/jnumed.107.041335
View details for Web of Science ID 000252894900019
View details for PubMedID 17942809
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Comparison of Tc-99m-annexin A5 with F-18-FDG for the detection of atherosclerosis in ApoE-/- mice
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING
2007; 34 (11): 1747-1755
Abstract
(99m)Tc-annexin A5, a marker of ongoing apoptosis, and (18)F-FDG, a marker of the increased metabolism of inflammatory cells, are supposed to be useful in the detection of metabolically active atheroma. This study reports a comparison of the intralesional distribution of these tracers in relation to lesion development in ApoE-/- mice.Male ApoE-/- mice (n = 12-14/group) were maintained on a Western-type diet after the age of 5 weeks. At 25 weeks, (99m)Tc-annexin A5 or (18)F-FDG was injected and the aortas were harvested for autoradiography (ARG) and Oil Red O staining. Regional radioactivity accumulation was compared in relation to the Oil Red O staining score (ranging from 0 to 3, a semiquantitative parameter for evaluating lesion development).Both (99m)Tc-annexin A5 and (18)F-FDG showed preferential uptake into atherosclerotic lesions, with higher uptake levels for (18)F-FDG (mean, 56.07 %IDxkg/m(2)) than for (99m)Tc-annexin A5 (mean, 10.38 %IDxkg/m(2)). The regional uptake levels of each tracer correlated with the Oil Red O staining score (r = 0.65, p < 0.05 for (99m)Tc-annexin A5; r = 0.56, p < 0.05 for (18)F-FDG). The uptake ratios of advanced lesions (score >0.5) to early lesions (score <0.5) were significantly higher for (99m)Tc-annexin A5 than for (18)F-FDG (f = 4.73, p = 0.03).Both (99m)Tc-annexin A5 and (18)F-FDG accumulate in atherosclerotic lesions and correlate with the severity of each lesion. The higher absolute uptake levels of (18)F-FDG may be advantageous for lesion detection, whereas the preferential uptake of (99m)Tc-annexin A5 in advanced lesions may be a useful indicator of late-stage lesions or vulnerable plaque transformation.
View details for DOI 10.1007/s00259-007-0433-2
View details for Web of Science ID 000250205400006
View details for PubMedID 17437104
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Radiolabeled monocyte chemotactic protein I for the detection of inflammation in experimental atherosclerosis
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2007; 48 (11): 1816-1821
Abstract
Chemotactic peptides, such as Monocyte Chemotactic Protein 1 (MCP-1), play a key role in transendothelial migration of mononuclear cells during the development and progression of atherosclerotic disease. Because atherosclerotic plaques that are precursors of acute coronary events harbor abundant macrophage infiltration, we hypothesized that the detection of a high concentration of MCP-1 receptors on inflammatory cells should noninvasively identify vulnerable plaques.Atherosclerotic lesions were induced by balloon deendothelialization of the abdominal aorta, which was followed by a 0.5% cholesterol diet for 16 wk in 7 New Zealand White rabbits; 5 unmanipulated rabbits, fed normal chow for 16 wk, were used as controls. Radionuclide imaging was performed immediately after intravenous (99m)Tc-labeled MCP-1 administration and 3 h later. At the end of imaging session, aortas were explanted and submitted for estimation of quantitative MCP-1 uptake (in percentage injected dose per gram, %ID/g) and pathologic characterization.Atherosclerotic lesions were clearly visible in all hyperlipidemic animal gamma-imaging. No tracer uptake was seen in the control rabbits. The mean quantitative MCP-1 uptake in atherosclerotic lesions was 4-fold higher than that of the aortic specimens from the control rabbits (0.065 +/- 0.005 vs. 0.016 +/- 0.006; P < 0.0001). Histology confirmed a strong correlation between MCP-1 uptake and the number of macrophages in American Heart Association type II-IV lesions (r = 0.87, P < 0.0001).Noninvasive radionuclide imaging of inflammation is feasible by MCP-1 in experimentally induced atherosclerosis. It is proposed that detection of the extent of inflammation in advanced atherosclerotic plaques may allow identification of unstable plaques.
View details for DOI 10.2967/jnumed.107.043463
View details for Web of Science ID 000252894900018
View details for PubMedID 17942805
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Imaging of vasa vasorum in atherosclerotic plaque with Tc-99m-labeled single chain-VEGF
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS. 2007: 230
View details for Web of Science ID 000250394301070
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Variable growth rates and diameter-dependent expression of vascular endothelial growth factor receptors in experimental abdominal aortic aneurysms
8th Annual Conference on Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS. 2007: E37–E38
View details for Web of Science ID 000246714600051
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Tc-99m-Annexin A5 for noninvasive characterization of atherosclerotic lesions: imaging and histological studies in myocardial infarction-prone Watanabe heritable hyperlipidemic rabbits
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING
2007; 34 (6): 889-899
Abstract
Apoptosis is commonly observed in advanced atherosclerotic lesions. 99mTc-annexin A5 (99mTc-annexin V) has been proposed as a potential tracer for imaging apoptosis in atherosclerotic plaques. Accordingly, we determined the usefulness of 99mTc-annexin A5 as an atherosclerosis imaging tracer in a rabbit model (myocardial infarction-prone Watanabe heritable hyperlipidemic rabbits; WHHLMI rabbits) of spontaneous atherosclerosis.The WHHLMI and control rabbits were injected intravenously with 99mTc-annexin A5. After in vivo planar imaging, the radioactivity in the aorta was measured. Autoradiography, TUNEL staining, Azan-Mallory staining and immunohistological studies were performed serially throughout the aorta.99mTc-Annexin A5 accumulation in the aorta of the WHHLMI rabbits was 5.6-fold higher than in that of control rabbits. Autoradiography showed heterogeneous multifocal accumulation of 99mTc-annexin A5 in WHHLMI rabbits. 99mTc-Annexin A5 accumulation was highest in the atheromatous lesions (6.2+/-2.5, %IDxBW/mm2x10(3)), followed in decreasing order by neointimal (4.9+/-1.3), fibroatheromatous (4.5+/-1.9), and collagen-rich lesions (3.3+/-1.4). The regional 99mTc-annexin A5 accumulation was significantly correlated with the TUNEL-positive cell density, macrophage density and "vulnerability index," an index of the morphological destabilized characteristics. The in vivo imaging clearly visualized the atherosclerotic lesions in WHHLMI rabbits.The present study in WHHLMI rabbits showed higher 99mTc-annexin A5 accumulation in grade IV atheroma than in other more stable lesions. 99mTc-Annexin A5 may be useful in identifying atheroma that is at higher risk for rupture and possibly in assessing the response to anti-atherosclerotic therapy.
View details for DOI 10.1007/s00259-006-0289-x
View details for Web of Science ID 000246592300011
View details for PubMedID 17216472
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Nuclear medicine applications in molecular imaging: 2007 update
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING
2007; 51 (2): 99-110
Abstract
This review examines several classes of radiolabeled agents, including analogs localizing in somatostatin, benzodiazepine and dopamine receptors; analogs of progesterone and estrogen; and agents localizing in lesions with hypoxia. It concludes the status of agents advocated for detecting angiogenesis and inflammation. The current clinical status of these agents, and their potential roles in diagnosis and treatment are discussed.
View details for Web of Science ID 000248293000003
View details for PubMedID 17420712
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Molecular imaging of VEGF receptors in angiogenic vasculature with single-chain VEGF-based probes
NATURE MEDICINE
2007; 13 (4): 504-509
Abstract
We describe a new generation of protein-targeted contrast agents for multimodal imaging of the cell-surface receptors for vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). These receptors have a key role in angiogenesis and are important targets for drug development. Our probes are based on a single-chain recombinant VEGF expressed with a cysteine-containing tag that allows site-specific labeling with contrast agents for near-infrared fluorescence imaging, single-photon emission computed tomography or positron emission tomography. These probes retain VEGF activities in vitro and undergo selective and highly specific focal uptake into the vasculature of tumors and surrounding host tissue in vivo. The fluorescence contrast agent shows long-term persistence and co-localizes with endothelial cell markers, indicating that internalization is mediated by the receptors. We expect that multimodal imaging of VEGF receptors with these probes will be useful for clinical diagnosis and therapeutic monitoring, and will help to accelerate the development of new angiogenesis-directed drugs and treatments.
View details for DOI 10.1038/nm1522
View details for Web of Science ID 000245543900041
View details for PubMedID 17351626
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Improved detection of cell death in vivo with annexin V radiolabeled by site-specific methods
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2006; 47 (9): 1546-1553
Abstract
Labeled annexin V is widely used to detect cell death in vitro and in vivo. Nearly all studies have been done with annexin V derivatized via amine-directed bifunctional agents; it was thought that these molecules retained full bioactivity compared with unmodified protein. We now show that this assumption is incorrect by measuring the affinity of annexin V for cells in vitro by quantitative calcium titration under conditions of low membrane occupancy.Annexin V was modified with 4 different amine-directed agents: the N-hydroxysuccinimide esters of hydrazinonicotinic acid, mercaptoacetyltriglycine, and biotin; and with fluorescein isothiocyanate.In all cases, the membrane-binding affinity was decreased by derivatization, even at very low average stoichiometries. A statistical model based on the Poisson distribution accurately predicted the observed heterogeneity of derivatization as a function of average derivatization stoichiometry. This model also showed that multiply derivatized forms, which are the ones most likely to have compromised bioactivity, contributed disproportionately to the binding and imaging signals. The in vitro binding assay correctly predicted in vivo uptake in a mouse liver model of apoptosis for all proteins tested. The annexin V-128 protein, labeled at a single specific site at the N terminus, showed twice as much apoptosis-specific liver uptake as did all forms of annexin V derivatized randomly via amino groups.The membrane-binding activity of annexin V is much more sensitive to amine-directed chemical modification than previously realized. New annexin V molecules labeled by site-specific methods will greatly improve sensitivity for detecting cell death in vivo.
View details for Web of Science ID 000240460600026
View details for PubMedID 16954565
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In vivo imaging of apoptosis in patients with acute stroke: Correlation with blood-brain barrier permeability
BRAIN RESEARCH
2006; 1103: 13–19
Abstract
We wished to determine the ability of radiolabeled annexin V to concentrate at sites of ischemic injury in patients with acute cerebral stroke. Secondly, we sought to correlate annexin V imaging in these patients with the degree of blood-brain barrier (BBB) breakdown.Twelve patients with acute stroke had a complete neurological examination, including the National Institutes of Health (NIH) stroke scale and the Glasgow Coma Score (GCS). A non-contrast CT scan was performed on all patients. A SPECT of the brain was obtained 2 h after injection of annexin V. The integrity of the BBB was evaluated in seven patients using Tc-99m-DTPA brain SPECT.All patients had an infarct in the MCA territory. Eight patients had abnormal increased annexin V activity, which was more common in patients with cortical strokes (P = 0.01). The concentration of annexin had no correlation to the volume of stroke, but it was significantly and inversely related to the GCS on admission (r = -0.7, P = 0.02). Foci of apoptosis were noted contralateral to the affected hemisphere as well. All seven patients who underwent DTPA SPECT showed breakdown of the BBB. DTPA uptake was significantly and positively associated with NIH score (r = 0.80, P = 0.01) and inversely associated with GCS (r = -0.89, P = -0.03).This study shows that it is possible to identify in vivo regions of ischemic neuronal injury using radiolabeled annexin V in patients with acute stroke. Annexin imaging can play a major role in the selection of therapy in the initial period following stroke in adults.
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.brainres.2006.05.073
View details for Web of Science ID 000239880500002
View details for PubMedID 16806116
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In vivo tumor angiogenesis imaging with site-specific labeled Tc-99m-HYNIC-VEGF
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING
2006; 33 (7): 841-848
Abstract
We recently developed a cysteine-containing peptide tag (C-tag) that allows for site-specific modification of C-tag-containing fusion proteins with a bifunctional chelator, HYNIC (hydrazine nicotinamide)-maleimide. We then constructed and expressed C-tagged vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and labeled it with HYNIC. We wished to test (99m)Tc-HYNIC-C-tagged VEGF ((99m)Tc-HYNIC-VEGF) for the imaging of tumor vasculature before and after antiangiogenic (low continuous dosing, metronomic) and tumoricidal (high-dose) cyclophosphamide treatment.HYNIC-maleimide was reacted with the two thiol groups of C-tagged VEGF without any effect on biologic activity in vitro. (99m)Tc-HYNIC-VEGF was prepared using tin/tricine as an exchange reagent, and injected via the tail vein (200-300 microCi, 1-2 microg protein) followed by microSPECT imaging 1 h later.Sequencing analysis of HYNIC-containing peptides obtained after digestion confirmed the site-specific labeling of the two accessible thiol groups of C-tagged VEGF. Tumor vascularity was easily visualized with (99m)Tc/VEGF in Balb/c mice with 4T1 murine mammary carcinoma 10 days after implantation into the left axillary fat pad in controls (12.3+/-5.0 tumor/bkg, n=27) along with its decrease following treatment with high (150 mg/kg q.o.d. x 4; 1.14+/-0.48 tumor/bkg, n=9) or low (25 mg/kg q.d. x 7; 1.03+/-0.18 tumor/bkg, n=9) dose cyclophosphamide. Binding specificity was confirmed by observing a 75% decrease in tumor uptake of (99m)Tc/biotin-inactivated VEGF, as compared with (99m)Tc-HYNIC-VEGF.(99m)Tc can be loaded onto C-tagged VEGF in a site-specific fashion without reducing its bioactivity. (99m)Tc-HYNIC-VEGF can be rapidly prepared for the imaging of tumor vasculature and its response to different types of chemotherapy.
View details for DOI 10.1007/s00259-006-0099-1
View details for PubMedID 16699765
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Tc-99-HYNIC-annexin VSPECT imaging of acute stroke and its response to neuroprotective therapy with anti-Fas ligand antibody
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING
2006; 33 (5): 566-574
Abstract
The first aim of the study was to determine whether (99m)Tc-HYNIC-annexin V, a marker of cellular stress and apoptosis, can detect ischemic injury in patients with acute stroke. Secondly, we wished to test radiolabeled annexin's ability to monitor therapy in a rodent model of focal ischemic injury.SPECT imaging of patients was performed between 1 and 2 h after intravenous injection of 30 mCi (1,110 MBq) of tracer. Eight MFL4 (anti-FasL) antibody-treated (400 microg i.p. days 0 and 3) and 21 control adult male Sprague-Dawley rats underwent small animal SPECT imaging with 5-10 mCi (185-370 MBq) of tracer, 1 and 6 days after a 2-h intraluminal thread occlusion of the left middle cerebral artery.Two patients with acute stroke had regions of multifocal annexin uptake that correlated with sites of restricted diffusion on MRI. Anti-FasL antibody treatment significantly reduced annexin uptake by 92% with a 60% decrease in the number of caspase-8 staining (apoptotic) neurons on day 1. On day 6, treated animals had an 80% reduction in tracer uptake with a 75% decrease in infarct size as compared with controls. Annexin uptake in controls and treated animals (day 6) linearly correlated with infarct size (r (2)=0.603, p=0.0036) and the number of TUNEL-positive (apoptotic) nuclei (r (2)=0.728, p=0.00084).Annexin imaging shows foci of increased uptake at sites of ischemic injury in patients with acute stroke. Annexin imaging can assess the effects of therapy for ischemic cerebral injury in rats, suggesting its potential as a non-invasive indicator of drug efficacy in future clinical trials.
View details for DOI 10.1007/s00259-005-0046-6
View details for PubMedID 16477433
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Imaging apoptosis by Tc-99m-labeled annexin V spect after stroke
31st International Stroke Conference
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS. 2006: 645–45
View details for Web of Science ID 000234829800215
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Radiolabeling of HYNIC-annexin V with technetium-99m for in vivo imaging of apoptosis
NATURE PROTOCOLS
2006; 1 (1): 108-110
Abstract
Apoptosis is a critical factor in AIDS and other viral illnesses, cerebral and myocardial ischemia, autoimmune and neurodegenerative states, organ and bone marrow transplant rejection, and tumor response to chemotherapy and radiation. Improved methods to identify sites of apoptosis are increasing our understanding of the pathophysiology and treatment of these and numerous other human disorders. Here we describe the most used method for labeling annexin V, a protein with a high affinity for apoptotic cells in vitro, with technetium-99m (99mTc) as a radionuclide imaging agent that can localize and non-invasively quantify apoptosis in vivo when coupled with single-photon emission tomography. In this method, annexin V is first attached to the bifunctional chelator molecule hydrazino nicotinate (HYNIC). Once prepared, HYNIC-annexin V can be labeled with 99mTc, a widely available gamma-radiation-emitting radionuclide, for intravenous injection in as little as 30 min without the need for specialized reagents or equipment.
View details for DOI 10.1038/nprot.2006.17
View details for PubMedID 17406220
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The Imaging of Apoptosis with the Radiolabelled Annexin A5: A New Tool in Translational Research
CURRENT CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
2006; 1 (2): 129–37
Abstract
Programmed cell death also called apoptosis plays a pivotal role in many physiological and pathological conditions. In the multi-step process of drug development, a number of medications are being designed to target strategic checkpoints of the apoptotic cascade either to induce or to inhibit programmed cell death. Conceptually, the assessment of programmed cell death in response to various therapeutic interventions appears to be critical for evaluating the efficacy of many drugs that act through apoptotic pathways. In the last decade, nuclear medicine techniques provided proofs of principle for the imaging of apoptosis both in vitro and in vivo. The purpose of this article was to review current knowledge on the imaging of apoptosis with radiolabelled annexin A5 in various pre-clinical and clinical models, and beyond that, to assess the potential integration of such a dedicated technology into translational research.
View details for DOI 10.2174/157488406776872541
View details for Web of Science ID 000214388700001
View details for PubMedID 18666365
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Structural requirements for in vivo detection of cell death with Tc-99m-annexin V
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2005; 46 (5): 807-815
Abstract
(99m)Tc-Annexin V is used to image cell death in vivo via high-affinity binding to exposed phosphatidylserine. We investigated how changes in membrane-binding affinity, molecular charge, and method of labeling affected its biodistribution in normal mice and its uptake in apoptotic tissues.An endogenous Tc chelation site (Ala-Gly-Gly-Cys-Gly-His) was added to the N-terminus of annexin V to create annexin V-128. The membrane-binding affinity of annexin V-128 was then progressively reduced by 1-4 mutations in calcium-binding sites. In addition, mutations were made in other residues that altered molecular charge without altering membrane-binding affinity. All mutant proteins were labeled with (99m)Tc at the same N-terminal endogenous chelation site. Wild-type annexin V was also labeled with (99m)Tc after derivatization with hydrazinonicotinamide (HYNIC). Radiolabeled proteins were tested for biodistribution in normal mice and in mice treated to induce apoptosis of the liver.Comparison of (99m)Tc-annexin V-128 with (99m)Tc-HYNIC-annexin V showed that the protein labeled at the endogenous chelation site had the same or higher uptake in apoptotic tissues, while showing 88% lower renal uptake at 60 min after injection. The blood clearance of annexin V was unaffected by changes in either the membrane-binding affinity or the molecular charge. Kidney uptake was unaffected by changes in binding affinity. In marked contrast, uptake in normal liver and spleen decreased markedly as affinity decreased. The same pattern was observed in animals treated with cycloheximide to induce apoptosis. Control experiments with charge mutants showed that the effects seen with the affinity mutants were not due to the concomitant change in molecular charge that occurs in these mutants.(a) All four domains of annexin V are required for optimal uptake in apoptotic tissues; molecules with only 1 or 2 active domains are unlikely to be suitable for imaging of cell death in vivo. (b) Uptake in normal liver and spleen is specific (dependent on phosphatidylserine-binding affinity), whereas renal uptake is nonspecific. (c) (99m)Tc-Annexin V-128 detects cell death as well as (99m)Tc-HYNIC-annexin V, while showing 88% less renal retention of radioactivity due to much more rapid urinary excretion of radioactivity.
View details for Web of Science ID 000228952400021
View details for PubMedID 15872355
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC1201384
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Enhanced apoptotic reaction correlates with suppressed tumor glucose utilization after cytotoxic chemotherapy: Use of Tc-99m-annexin V, F-18-FDG, and histologic evaluation
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2005; 46 (5): 794-799
Abstract
Cancer chemotherapy enhances the apoptosis, whereas apoptosis is a suicidal mechanism requiring energy. We determined the relationship between apoptosis and glucose utilization during cancer chemotherapy using (99m)Tc-annexin V ((99m)Tc-annexin A5) and (18)F-FDG and compared their uptake with histologic findings in a rat tumor model.Allogenic hepatoma cells (KDH-8) were inoculated into the left calf muscle of male Wistar rats (WKA). Eleven days after the inoculation, the rats were randomly divided into 3 groups: The first group (n = 7) received a single dose of gemcitabine (90 mg/kg, intravenously), the second group (n = 8) received cyclophosphamide (150 mg/kg, intraperitoneally), and the third group (n = 7) was untreated and served as the control group. We injected (99m)Tc-annexin V 48 h after the chemotherapy and then injected (18)F-FDG to all rats 1 h before sacrifice. Six hours after (99m)Tc-annexin V injection, the rats were sacrificed and the organs, including the tumor, were removed and radioactivity was counted. The radioactivities of (18)F and (99m)Tc in the organs were determined using normalization by tissue weight. Histologic evaluation by the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate nick-end labeling (TUNEL) method and the immunostaining of glucose transporter-1 (GLUT-1) were also performed to obtain the indices of apoptosis and glucose utilization, respectively. The rate of positively stained cells was calculated and analyzed statistically.After chemotherapy using gemcitabine and cyclophosphamide, the (99m)Tc-annexin V uptake (percentage injected dose per gram x kg [(%ID/g) x kg]; mean +/- SD) in tumor increased significantly (0.062 +/- 0.012 (%ID/g) x kg in the gemcitabine-treated group and 0.050 +/- 0.012 (%ID/g) x kg in the cyclophosphamide group vs. 0.031 +/- 0.005 (%ID/g) x kg in the control group; P < 0.01). In contrast, the (18)F-FDG in tumor decreased significantly (0.483 +/- 0.118 (%ID/g) x kg in the gemcitabine group and 0.583 +/- 0.142 (%ID/g) x kg in the cyclophosphamide group) compared with that in the control group (0.743 +/- 0.084 (%ID/g) x kg; P < 0.01). In addition, (18)F-FDG uptake in tumor negatively correlated with (99m)Tc-annexin V uptake (r = -0.75; P < 0.01). In the gemcitabine and cyclophosphamide groups, the rate of TUNEL positively stained cells was significantly higher than that in the control group (10.2% +/- 1.7% and 8.0% +/- 1.5% vs. 5.2% +/- 1.5%; P < 0.01), whereas the GLUT-1 expression level showed no definite changes in histologic analyses.These data indicate that an enhanced apoptotic reaction correlated with suppressed tumor glucose utilization after cytotoxic chemotherapy as determined using radiotracers and histologic evaluation. The increase in (99m)Tc-annexin V and the decrease in (18)F-FDG in tumor can be useful markers for predicting therapeutic outcomes and for prognosis at the early stage of chemotherapy.
View details for Web of Science ID 000228952400019
View details for PubMedID 15872353
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Only the CD62L(+) subpopulation of CD4(+)CD25(+) regulatory T cells protects from lethal acute GVHD
BLOOD
2005; 105 (5): 2220-2226
Abstract
CD4+CD25+ regulatory T (Treg) cells are potent modulators of alloimmune responses. In murine models of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation, adoptive transfer of donor CD4+CD25+ Treg cells protects recipient mice from lethal acute graft-versus-host disease (aGVHD) induced by donor CD4+CD25- T cells. Here we examined the differential effect of CD62L+ and CD62L- subsets of CD4+CD25+ Treg cells on aGVHD-related mortality. Both subpopulations showed the characteristic features of CD4+CD25+ Treg cells in vitro and did not induce aGVHD in vivo. However, in cotransfer with donor CD4+CD25- T cells, only the CD62L+ subset of CD4+CD25+ Treg cells prevented severe tissue damage to the colon and protected recipients from lethal aGVHD. Early after transplantation, a higher number of donor-type Treg cells accumulated in host mesenteric lymph node (LN) and spleen when CD4+CD25+CD62L+ Treg cells were transferred compared with the CD62L- subset. Subsequently, CD4+CD25+CD62L+ Treg cells showed a significantly higher capacity than their CD62L- counterpart to inhibit the expansion of donor CD4+CD25- T cells. The ability of Treg cells to efficiently enter the priming sites of pathogenic allo-reactive T cells appears to be a prerequisite for their protective function in aGVHD.
View details for DOI 10.1182/blood-2004-05-2044
View details for PubMedID 15546950
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Time course of apoptotic tumor response after a single dose of chemotherapy: Comparison with Tc-99m-annexin V uptake and histologic findings in an experimental model
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2004; 45 (12): 2083-2087
Abstract
In tumors the process of apoptosis occurs over an interval of time after chemotherapy. To determine the best timing for detecting apoptosis in vivo with (99m)Tc-annexin V after chemotherapy, we examined the changes in (99m)Tc-annexin V accumulation over time in comparison with those of caspase-3 and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate nick-end labeling (TUNEL) expression level after cyclophosphamide treatment in an experimental model.Hydrazinonicotinamide (HYNIC)-annexin V was labeled with (99m)Tc ((99m)Tc-annexin V). Rats were inoculated with allogenic hepatoma cells (KDH-8) into the left calf muscle. Eleven days after the inoculation, the rats were randomly divided into the group receiving a single dose of cyclophosphamide (150 mg/kg intraperitoneally) and the control group. (99m)Tc-Annexin V (18.5 MBq [0.5 mCi] per rat) was injected intravenously in the rats 4, 12, and 20 h after the treatment and also to the control rats (n = 5 in each group). Radioactivity in tissues was determined 6 h after (99m)Tc-annexin V injection. Immunostaining of caspase-3 and TUNEL were performed to detect apoptosis, and the rates of positively stained cells were calculated.(99m)Tc-Annexin V accumulation in tumors significantly increased at 20 h (0.077 +/- 0.007 [%ID/g] x kg, where %ID/g = percentage injected dose per gram) but not at 4 or 12 h (0.048 +/- 0.008 and 0.052 +/- 0.014 [%ID/g] x kg, respectively) after cyclophosphamide treatment. (99m)Tc-Annexin V accumulation in tumors and the rate of apoptotic cells determined by caspase-3 immunostaining and TUNEL were significantly higher in treated rats 20 h after cyclophosphamide treatment as compared with control rats.The effective detection of apoptotic tumor response with (99m)Tc-annexin V required 20 h after cyclophosphamide treatment in an experimental model. The present results provide an important basis for determining the best timing of annexin V imaging after the start of chemotherapy in a clinical setting.
View details for Web of Science ID 000225927200019
View details for PubMedID 15585485
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Tumor imaging using a standardized radiolabeled adapter protein docked to vascular endothelial growth factor
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2004; 45 (8): 1373-1380
Abstract
Direct radiolabeling of proteins can result in the loss of targeting activity, requires highly customized procedures, and yields heterogeneous products. Here we describe a novel imaging complex comprised of a standardized (99m)Tc-radiolabeled adapter protein noncovalently bound to a "Docking tag" fused to a "Targeting protein". The assembly of this complex is based on interactions between human 109-amino acid (HuS) and 15-amino acid (Hu-tag) fragments of ribonuclease I, which serve as an "Adapter protein" and a Docking tag, respectively.HuS modified with hydrazinonicotinamide (HYNIC) was radiolabeled using (99m)Tc-tricine to a specific activity of 3.4-7.4 MBq/microg. Protein complexes were then formed by mixing (99m)Tc-HuS with equimolar amounts of either Hu-tagged VEGF(121) (Hu-VEGF [vascular endothelial growth factor]) or Hu-tagged anti-VEGFR-2 single-chain antibody (Hu-P4G7) and incubating on ice for 15 min. 4T1 luc/gfp luciferase-expressing murine mammary adenocarcinoma cells (1 x 10(4)) were implanted subcutaneously or injected intravenously into BALB/c mice. Bioluminescent imaging (BLI) was performed 10 d later. Immediately after BLI visualization of tumor, 18.5-37 MBq of tracer (5-10 microg of protein) were injected via tail vein. One hour later planar or SPECT images were obtained, followed by killing the mice.There was significantly (P = 0.0128) increased uptake of (99m)Tc-HuS/Hu-VEGF (n = 10) within subcutaneous tumor as compared with (99m)Tc-HuS/Hu-P4G7 (n = 5) at biodistribution assay (2.68 +/- 0.75 vs. 1.8 +/- 0.21; tumor-to-subcutaneous tissue [ratio of specific activities], respectively), despite similar molecular weights. The focal (99m)Tc-HuS/Hu-VEGF uptake seen on planar images (3.44 +/- 1.16 [tumor to soft-tissue background]) corresponded directly to the locations of tumor observed by BLI. Region of interest analyses of SPECT images revealed a significant increase of (99m)Tc-HuS/Hu-VEGF (n = 5) within the lungs with BLI-detectable pulmonary tumor nodules as compared with controls (n = 4) (right: 4.47 +/- 2.07 vs. 1.79 +/- 0.56; left: 3.66 +/- 1.65 vs. 1.62 +/- 0.45, tumor lung [counts/pixel]/normal lung [counts/pixel], respectively).(99m)Tc-HuS/Hu-VEGF complex is stable for at least 1 h in vivo and can be effectively used to image mouse tumor neovasculature in lesions as small as several millimeters in soft tissue. We expect that a similar approach can be adapted for in vivo delivery of other targeting proteins of interest without affecting their bioactivity.
View details for PubMedID 15299064
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Molecular imgaging with single photon emission computed tomography - How new tracers can be employed in the nuclear medicine clinic
IEEE ENGINEERING IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY MAGAZINE
2004; 23 (4): 51-57
View details for PubMedID 15508385
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Apoptosis in a rodent model of cranial suture fusion: In situ imaging and gene expression analysis
PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY
2004; 113 (7): 2037-2047
Abstract
Craniosynostosis, the premature fusion of cranial sutures, is one of the most common craniofacial anomalies, with a reported incidence of up to one in 2500 live births. Despite its prevalence, the cause of craniosynostosis remains unknown. Previously, apoptosis has been postulated to be a contributing factor in the pathogenesis of craniosynostosis, although the role of programmed cell death in cranial sutures is poorly understood. To address this problem, the authors used an established rodent model of posterior-frontal suture fusion and sagittal suture patency to globally examine apoptosis in cranial sutures. Apoptosis was evaluated by systemically coinjecting Sprague-Dawley rats with both fluorescent and technetium-99m-labeled annexin V at time points before, during, and after the period of predicted posterior-frontal suture fusion to determine the magnitude and time course of overall apoptotic activity in both fusing and patent sutures. Using these novel in situ imaging techniques, the authors observed a significant increase in the overall levels of apoptosis in both the posterior-frontal and sagittal suture complexes during the period of predicted posterior-frontal suture fusion. To further explore this increase in apoptotic activity, they used microarray technology to study apoptosis-related genes within the suture complex. Interestingly, there was activation of distinct apoptotic pathways in the posterior-frontal and sagittal sutures during the period of predicted posterior-frontal suture fusion. Whereas increased transcription of genes associated with the mitochondria-mediated apoptotic pathway occurred in the posterior-frontal suture during fusion, activation of genes associated with the death receptor-mediated apoptotic pathway predominated in the patent sagittal suture during the same time period. These data suggest that although overall apoptotic activity in rat patent and fusing sutures is similar, the pathways mediating apoptosis within each suture are distinct.
View details for DOI 10.1097/01.prs.000012118201199.c1
View details for PubMedID 15253194
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Detection of focal hypoxic-ischemic injury and neuronal stress in a rodent model of unilateral MCA occlusion/reperfusion using radiolabeled annexin V
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING
2004; 31 (5): 733-739
Abstract
In this study we wished to determine whether technetium-99m annexin V, an in vivo marker of cellular injury and death, could be used to noninvasively monitor neuronal injury following focal middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion/reperfusion injury. Sixteen adult male Sprague-Dawley rats (along with four controls) underwent left (unilateral) MCA intraluminal beaded thread occlusion for 2 h followed by reperfusion. One hour following tail vein injection of 5-10 mCi of (99m)Tc-annexin V, animals underwent either single-photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT) or autoradiography followed by immunohistochemical analyses. There was abnormal, bilateral, multifocal uptake of (99m)Tc-annexin V in each cerebral hemisphere as seen by both SPECT and autoradiography at 4 h and 1, 3, and 7 days after initiation of occlusion. The average maximal annexin V uptake at 4 h was 310%+/-85% and 365%+/-151% above control values (P<0.006) within the right and left hemispheres, respectively, peaking on day 3 with values of 925%+/-734% and 1,194%+/-643% (P<0.03) that decreased by day 7 to 489%+/-233% and 785%+/-225% (P<0.01). Total lesional volume of the left hemisphere was 226%, 261%, and 451% ( P<0.03) larger than the right at 4, 24, and 72 h after injury, respectively. Annexin V localized to the cytoplasm of injured neurons ipsilateral to the site of injury as well as to otherwise normal-appearing neurons of the contralateral hemisphere as confirmed by dual fluorescent microscopy. It is concluded that there is abnormal bilateral, multifocal annexin V uptake, greater on the left than on the right side, within 4 h of unilateral left MCA ischemic injury and that the uptake peaks at 3 days and decreases by 7 days after injury. This pattern suggests that neuronal stress may play a role in the response of the brain to focal injury and be responsible for annexin V uptake outside the region of ischemic insult.
View details for DOI 10.1007/s00259-004-1473-5
View details for PubMedID 14985868
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Nuclear medicine in the era of genomics and proteomics: Lessons from annexin V
JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
2004; 3 (3): 345–49
Abstract
In the past decade, genomics and proteomics have begun to develop many new targets for potential diagnostic and therapeutic agents. Among the life sciences, nuclear medicine is also deeply involved in the field of clinical investigation. Experience with radiolabeled annexin V highlights the many steps required to translate a good basic-science concept into the clinical setting. This model also emphasizes the value of synergy between basic and medical specialties in developing and optimizing a clinically useful product initially derived from basic investigation.
View details for DOI 10.1021/pr049968a
View details for Web of Science ID 000222075500002
View details for PubMedID 15253415
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Feasibility of Tc-99m-annexin V for repetitive detection of apoptotic tumor response to chemotherapy: An experimental study using a rat tumor model
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2004; 45 (2): 309-312
Abstract
Annexin V (annexin A5), a human protein with a high affinity for phosphatidylserine, labeled with (99m)Tc can detect apoptosis in vivo. In the repetitive detection of apoptosis with (99m)Tc-annexin V, however, the specific binding of annexin V to phosphatidylserine might affect the subsequent detection of apoptosis with this compound. To determine whether there is interference with repetitive doses of annexin V, we evaluated the effects of previous administration of cold annexin V on accumulation of (99m)Tc-annexin V in tumors in an experimental tumor model.Rats bearing hepatoma received cyclophosphamide (150 mg/kg, intraperitoneally) 11 d after the tumor inoculation. Cold annexin V (20 microg/kg, intravenously) was administered 24 h before or after the cyclophosphamide treatment (n = 7/group). (99m)Tc-Annexin V was injected intravenously (radioactive dose, 5-23 MBq/kg; mass dose, 20 microg/kg), and radioactivity in tissues was determined 6 h later.Accumulation of (99m)Tc-annexin V in tumors was not significantly affected by previous treatment with cold annexin V before or after chemotherapy.These results demonstrate the feasibility of (99m)Tc-annexin V imaging for repetitive detection of apoptosis, which is highly required in the clinical setting.
View details for Web of Science ID 000189082500045
View details for PubMedID 14960654
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The Imaging of apoptosis with the radiolabeled annexin V: Optimal timing for clinical feasibility
TECHNOLOGY IN CANCER RESEARCH & TREATMENT
2004; 3 (1): 23-32
Abstract
In recent years, the imaging of drug-induced apoptosis has become one of the centers of interest in experimental and clinical research. In particular, the accurate monitoring of chemosensitivity as well as the early prediction of chemoresistance in response to various pro-apoptotic interventions are critical requirements for the best management of oncology patients. The use of technetium [(99m)Tc]-labeled annexin V on animal and human models of cancers provides a proof of principle for the feasibility of a non-invasive, in vivo detection of an apoptotic signal and then for the early assessment of tumor response in the course of chemotherapy. Although promising, however, the initial clinical data point out on the technical limitations that are still to be resolved in terms of tumor-to-background ratio and optimal timing for the imaging of apoptosis. In the present review article, we report the results of animal studies aimed to the evaluation of apoptotic peaks following chemotherapy. In the light of these basic research works, we analyze the profiles of radiolabeled annexin V uptake over time as observed in clinical trials. We then discuss possible new imaging strategies designed to optimize the visualization of apoptotic changes within tumor tissues using the [(99m)Tc]-labeled annexin V. We also suggest longer lived forms of radiolabeled annexin V designed to better understand the temporal patterns of apoptotic tumor response, which in turn, may help to capture the best time-window for the imaging of cell death.
View details for Web of Science ID 000220138000003
View details for PubMedID 14750890
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Multi-modality imaging identifies key times for annexin V imaging as an early predictor of therapeutic outcome.
Molecular imaging
2004; 3 (1): 1-8
Abstract
Radiolabeled annexin V may provide an early indication of the success or failure of anticancer therapy on a patient-by-patient basis as an in vivo marker of tumor cell killing. An important question that remains is when, after initiation of treatment, should annexin V imaging be performed. To address this issue, we obtained simultaneous in vivo measurements of tumor burden and uptake of radiolabeled annexin V in the syngeneic orthotopic murine BCL1 lymphoma model using in vivo bioluminescence imaging (BLI) and small animal single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). BCL1 cells labeled for fluorescence and bioluminescence assays (BCL1-gfp/luc) were injected into mice at a dose that leads to progressive disease within two to three weeks. Tumor response was followed by BLI and SPECT before and after treatment with a single dose of 10 mg/kg doxorubicin. Biodistribution analyses revealed a biphasic increase of annexin V uptake within the tumor-bearing tissues of mice. An early peak occurring before actual tumor cells loss was observed between 1 and 5 hr after treatment, and a second longer sustained rise from 9 to 24 hr after therapy, which heralds the onset of tumor cell loss as confirmed by BLI. Multimodality imaging revealed the temporal patterns of tumor cell loss and annexin V uptake revealing a better understanding of the timing of radiolabeled annexin V uptake for its development as a marker of therapeutic efficacy.
View details for PubMedID 15142407
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Time course of apoptotic tumor response using Tc-99m-Annexin V following a single dose of chemotherapy: comparison with immunohistological findings in an experimental animal model
International Symposium for PET and Molecular Imaging
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV. 2004: 249–252
View details for DOI 10.1016/j.ics.2004.01.057
View details for Web of Science ID 000223654500036
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Recent advances in the imaging of programmed cell death
CURRENT PHARMACEUTICAL DESIGN
2004; 10 (13): 1457-1467
Abstract
A deficiency or an excess of programmed cell death (apoptosis) is an integral component of autoimmune disorders, organ and bone marrow transplant rejection, and cancer. A technique to image programmed cell death would be useful in the development of drugs to treat these and others diseases, and to monitor the effectiveness of therapy. The most widely studied agent for the in vivo study of apoptosis is radiolabeled annexin V, an endogenous protein labeled with technectium-99m, now undergoing clinical trials in both Europe and the United States. While annexin V has been studied extensively in humans the precise mechanism(s) of uptake of this agent in vivo is unclear and needs further study. Other agents are also underdevelopment including radiolabeled forms of Z-VAD.fmk, a potent inhibitor of the enzymatic cascade intimately associated with apoptosis. MR imaging techniques and tracers also hold promise as methods to monitor apoptotic cell death. In this article we will review these and other imaging technologies for the non-invasive imaging of cell death. The mechanism(s) and latest data on the conditions in which cellular stress and early apoptosis occur will also be discussed in detail including potential new strategies for the targeting and novel therapeutic interventions of tissues and organs undergoing stress or apoptosis when cell salvage is still possible.
View details for PubMedID 15134569
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Imaging cell death in vivo
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2003; 47 (4): 337-348
Abstract
A technique to image programmed cell death would be useful both in clinical care and in drug development. The most widely studied agent for the in vivo study of apoptosis is radiolabeled annexin V, an endogenous protein labeled with technectium-99m, now undergoing clinical trials in both Europe and the United States. While annexin V has been studied extensively in humans the precise mechanism(s) of uptake this agent in vivo is unclear and needs further study. Other agents are also under development, including radiolabeled forms of Z-VAD.fmk, a potent inhibitor of the enzymatic cascade intimately associated with apoptosis. In addition other technologies, such as diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance imaging with contrast agents, such as small paramagnetic iron oxide particles coated with peptides have also been advocated as methods to monitor apoptotic cell death. The potential applications of imaging apoptosis as a marker of early response to therapy in cancer, acute cerebral and myocardial ischemic injury and infarction, immune mediated inflammatory disease and transplant rejection are reviewed.
View details for Web of Science ID 000220755000009
View details for PubMedID 14973423
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Molecular imaging: the latest generation of contrast agents and tissue characterization techniques
JOURNAL OF CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY
2003; 90 (3): 443-453
Abstract
Molecular Imaging technologies will have a profound impact on both basic research and clinical imaging in the near future. As the field covers many different specialties and scientific disciplines it is not possible to review all in a single article. In the current article we will turn our attention to those modalities that are either currently in use or in development for the medical imaging clinic.
View details for DOI 10.1002/jcb.10635
View details for PubMedID 14523978
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Bcl-2-mediated inhibition of apoptosis in rat cardiac allografts worsens development of graft coronary artery disease
JOURNAL OF HEART AND LUNG TRANSPLANTATION
2003; 22 (9): 986-992
Abstract
We hypothesized that adenovirally mediated Bcl-2 transfection of donor hearts would reduce the apoptosis that occurs during acute rejection while worsening the development of chronic graft coronary artery disease (GCAD).PVG donor hearts were treated with either AdvBcl-2 or AdvNull virus before heterotopic transplantation into ACI rats. Bcl-2 expression was assessed on post-operative day 4 (POD) 4 by western blot. Apoptosis was measured using (99m)Technetium-bound-annexin V imaging and caspase 3 activity assay. Allograft survival was determined in a separate cohort of animals. Long-term-treated animals were then assessed for measures of GCAD on POD 90.Western blot analysis showed upregulation of Bcl-2 expression in AdvBcl-2-treated hearts. (99m)Tc-annexin V images demonstrated decreased uptake in the AdvBcl-2 group (1.41 +/- 0.33% vs 1.94 +/- 0.37%, p = 0.026). Caspase 3 activity was also significantly lower in this treatment group (0.112 +/- 0.032 vs 0.204 +/- 0.096, p = 0.049). Allograft survival was similar in both groups, respectively (7.7 +/- 1.2 vs 6.8 +/- 1.5 days, p = 0.340). GCAD, as determined by percent luminal narrowing (5.9 +/- 6.1% vs 1.6 +/- 1.5%, p = 0.039), intima-to-media ratio (5.1 +/- 5.1% vs 1.5 +/- 1.7%, p = 0.040) and percent of affected vessels (15.1 +/- 9.9% vs 5.3 +/- 4.4%, p = 0.009), was higher for the AdvBcl-2 group.Treatment of cardiac allografts with AdvBcl-2 resulted in a reduction of apoptosis that did not significantly improve short-term graft survival, but worsened chronic GCAD.
View details for DOI 10.1016/S1053-2498(02)01187-7
View details for PubMedID 12957608
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Murine cranial suture fusion and patency: microarray analysis and functional validation
89th Annual Clinical Congress of the American-College-of-Surgeons
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC. 2003: S57–S58
View details for Web of Science ID 000185248100141
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Composite spirometric-computed tomography outcome measure in early cystic fibrosis lung disease
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
2003; 168 (5): 588-593
Abstract
With the advent of therapies aimed at young patients with cystic fibrosis, who have mildly reduced pulmonary function, the need for improved outcome measures that discriminate treatment effects has become important. Pulmonary function measurements or chest high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) scores have been separately used to assess interventions. We evaluated these modalities separately and together during a treatment study to develop a more sensitive outcome measure. In a 1-year trial, 25 children randomized either to daily Pulmozyme or to normal saline aerosol were evaluated at randomization and at 3 and 12 months. Outcome variables were pulmonary function test (PFT) results, a global HRCT score, and a composite score incorporating PFTs and HRCT scoring. Regression analyses with generalized estimating equations permitted estimation of the difference in treatment effect between groups over time for each outcome. The largest difference in treatment effects observed at 12 months, measured by the percentage change from baseline, were with the composite total and maximal CT/PFT scores (35.4 and 30.4%), compared with mean forced expiratory flow during the middle half of the FVC (FEF25-75%) (13.0%) and total and maximal global HRCT scores (6.2%, 7.2%). The composite total and maximal CT/PFT scores were the most sensitive outcome measures for discriminating a treatment effect in children with cystic fibrosis with normal or mildly reduced pulmonary function during a 1-year trial of Pulmozyme.
View details for DOI 10.1164/rccm.200209-1093OC
View details for PubMedID 12746252
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An automated approach to quantitative air trapping measurements in mild cystic fibrosis
CHEST
2003; 123 (5): 1655-1663
Abstract
To automatically derive the degree of air trapping in mild cystic fibrosis (CF) disease from high-resolution CT (HRCT) data, and to evaluate the discriminating power of the measurement.The data consist of six pairs of anatomically matched tomographic slices, obtained during breath-holding in triggered HRCT acquisitions. The pairs consist of an inspiratory slice, at > or = 95% of slow vital capacity, and an expiratory slice at near residual volume (nRV). The subjects are 25 patients with mild CF and 10 age-matched, normal control subjects.Lung segmentation is automatic. The limits defining air trapping in the expiratory slices are determined by the distribution of densities in the expanded lung. They are modulated by density changes between expiration and inspiration. Air trapping defects consist of contiguous low-density voxels. The difference between patients and control subjects was evaluated in comparison to pulmonary function test (PFT) results and lung density distribution descriptors (global density descriptors).In mild CF, air trapping does not correlate with global PFT results, except for the ratio of residual volume (RV) to total lung capacity (TLC); however, the size of air trapping defects was the best discriminator between patients and control subjects (p < 0.005). Of PFT results, only RV/TLC reached significance at p < 0.05. The global density descriptors reached near significance in the nRV images only.Air trapping defined as defect size and measured in an objective automated manner is a powerful discriminator for mild CF.
View details for PubMedID 12740287
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Application of dedicated small animal SPECT: Radiolabeled annexin V tomographic imaging of ischemic reperfusion injury in the rat brain.
50th Annual Meeting of the Society-of-Nuclear-Medicine
SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC. 2003: 215P–215P
View details for Web of Science ID 000182729600700
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Tc-99m-Hynic-annexin V imaging to evaluate inflammation and apoptosis in rats with autoimmune myocarditis
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING
2003; 30 (2): 232-238
Abstract
Inflammation and cell death are two important components of myocarditis. We evaluated the distribution of inflammation and apoptotic cell death in rats with autoimmune myocarditis using two radiotracers - technetium-99m Hynic-annexin V ((99m)Tc-annexin) as a marker of apoptotic cell death and carbon-14 deoxyglucose ((14)C-DG) as a marker of inflammation - in comparison with histologic findings. Three, 7 and 14 weeks after immunization with porcine cardiac myosin (acute, subacute, and chronic phases, respectively) (99m)Tc-annexin and (14)C-DG were injected. The uptake in the total heart was determined as the percentage of injected dose per gram (% ID/g) by tissue counting. Dual-tracer autoradiography with (99m)Tc-annexin and (14)C-DG was performed. The distribution of each of these agents was compared with the results of hematoxylin and eosin staining to identify areas of inflammation, and TUNEL staining to identify areas of apoptosis. Total cardiac uptake of (99m)Tc-annexin in the acute phase of myocarditis was significantly higher than that in normal rats (1.28%+/-0.30% vs 0.46%+/-0.01%; P<0.0001); it then decreased in the subacute phase and reached normal levels (0.56%+/-0.08% vs 0.60%+/-0.08%; P=NS). Total cardiac uptake of (14)C-DG in the acute phase of myocarditis was significantly higher than that in normal rats (2.78%+/-0.95% vs 1.02%+/-0.25%; P<0.0001); it then decreased in the subacute phase, but still remained higher than in controls (2.06%+/-0.52% vs 1.37%+/-0.46%; P<0.05). Using autoradiography and staining of tissue specimens, it was found that most histologic inflammatory foci corresponded to areas of high (14)C-DG uptake; some also corresponded to areas of high (99m)Tc-annexin uptake in the acute phase of myocarditis. (99m)Tc-annexin localization was strongly correlated with the number of TUNEL-positive cells (P<0.0001, r=0.83), but the uptake of (14)C-DG showed no relationship with it. There is a marked difference in the distribution of inflammation and apoptotic cell death in the myocardium of animals with immune myocarditis. These changes are mirrored by the localization of (14)C-DG and (99m)Tc-annexin. Sites of inflammation and zones of apoptotic cell death change over the course of immune myocarditis.
View details for DOI 10.1007/s00259-002-1006-z
View details for Web of Science ID 000181033800008
View details for PubMedID 12552341
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Detection of apoptotic tumor response in vivo after a single dose of chemotherapy with Tc-99m-annexin V
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2003; 44 (1): 92-97
Abstract
Annexin V, a human protein with a high affinity for phosphatidylserine, has been labeled with (99m)Tc to detect apoptosis in vivo. To determine the effectiveness of imaging with this agent as a reflection of the degree of apoptosis after the first dose of chemotherapy, we studied rats with an engrafted hepatoma.Annexin V was labeled with (99m)Tc (specific activity, 3.0 MBq/ micro g protein). Eleven days after being inoculated with allogenic hepatoma cells (KDH-8) in the left calf muscle, the rats were randomized to receive a single dose of cyclophosphamide (150 mg/kg intraperitoneally) or to serve as controls. (99m)Tc-annexin V was injected 20 h later. Radioactivity in tissues was determined 6 h after injection of (99m)Tc-annexin V. Tumor uptake of (14)C-iodoanitpyrine was determined as a marker of tumor blood flow. Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate nick-end labeling (TUNEL) of tissue harvested at necropsy was performed to detect apoptosis in the tumor.Cyclophosphamide treatment significantly increased the tumor uptake (percentage activity of injected dose per gram of tissue after normalization to the animal's weight [%ID/g/kg]) of (99m)Tc-annexin V (0.070 +/- 0.007 %ID/g/kg for treated rats and 0.046 +/- 0.009 %ID/g/kg for controls, P < 0.001). (14)C-iodoantipyrine uptake was similar in the treated and untreated groups. The number of TUNEL-positive cells in the tumor was significantly larger in the treated rats (297.70 +/- 50.34 cells/mm(2)) than in the control rats (168.45 +/- 23.60 cells/mm(2), P < 0.001). Tumor uptake of (99m)Tc-annexin V correlated with the number of TUNEL-positive cells in the tumor (r = 0.712; P < 0.001).Tumor uptake of (99m)Tc-annexin V was significantly increased by a single dose of cyclophosphamide treatment, and the increase was concordant with the number of TUNEL-positive cells in the tumor. The current results are suggestive of the utility of (99m)Tc-annexin V as a noninvasive means to assess tumor response, although further testing, including clinical evaluation, is required.
View details for Web of Science ID 000180276500034
View details for PubMedID 12515881
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Donor cardiac allografts from p53 knockout mice exhibit apoptosis-independent prolongation of survival
TRANSPLANTATION PROCEEDINGS
2002; 34 (8): 3274-3276
View details for Web of Science ID 000179983100078
View details for PubMedID 12493444
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Imaging cell death with radiolabeled annexin V in an experimental model of rheumatoid arthritis
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2002; 43 (10): 1359-1365
Abstract
Rheumatoid arthritis is associated with chronic synovial inflammation due to the abnormal accumulation of macrophages and autoreactive T lymphocytes in joints. The autoreactive cells cause an inflammatory proapoptotic response to self-antigens resulting in eventual bone, cartilage, and soft-tissue loss and destruction. The goal of our study was to determine the timing and intensity of apoptosis in joints using 99mTc-labeled annexin V, an in vivo marker of apoptosis, in a murine model of immune arthritis.We used 99mTc-annexin V and autoradiography to study the extent and severity of apoptosis in the front and rear paws of DBA/1 mice with type II collagen-induced rheumatoid arthritis.Compared with control values (n = 10), there was a significant (P < 0.002) nearly 3-fold increase in uptake of 99mTc-annexin V in the front foot pads, rear toes, rear foot pads, and heels at the time of maximal extremity swelling as determined by serial caliper measurements at 4 wk after inoculation with type II bovine collagen (n = 9). The front toes had a 5- to 6-fold increase in uptake compared with control values (P < 0.001). Histologic analysis revealed only scattered rare lymphocytes in the periarticular soft tissues, without joint destruction. Dual autoradiography with 125I-bovine serum albumin as a control showed that 99mTc-annexin V localization was specific. Treatment with methylprednisolone for 1 wk (n = 8) at 4 wk after immunization with type II collagen decreased 99mTc-annexin V uptake by 3- to 6-fold compared with control values (P < 0.002).99mTc-annexin V can detect collagen-induced immune arthritis and its response to steroid therapy before joint destruction.
View details for PubMedID 12368374
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Nuclear medicine applications in molecular imaging
JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
2002; 16 (4): 352-361
Abstract
With the emergence of the new field of molecular imaging, there is an increasing demand for development of sensitive and safe novel imaging agents that can be rapidly translated from small animal models into patients. Nuclear medicine and positron emission tomography (PET) techniques have the ability to detect and serially monitor a variety of biologic and pathophysiologic processes, usually with tracer quantities of radiolabeled peptides, drugs, and other molecules at doses free of pharmacologic side effects, unlike the current generation of intravenous agents required for magnetic resonance (MR) and computed tomography (CT) scanning. In this article, we will review a representative sampling of the wide array of radiopharmaceuticals developed specifically for nuclear medicine radionuclide imaging that have been approved for clinical use, and those in pre-clinical trials. We will also review the existing strategies used to select the appropriate biologic markers and targets for radionuclide labeling that have been employed in the development of novel radiotracers and the imaging of small animals with new microSPECT (single photon emission computed tomography) technologies.
View details for DOI 10.1002/jmri.10171
View details for Web of Science ID 000178445700004
View details for PubMedID 12353251
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The use of (99m)Technetium-labeled MCP-1 to assess, graft coronary artery disease in rat cardiac allografts
JOURNAL OF HEART AND LUNG TRANSPLANTATION
2002; 21 (9): 1009-1015
Abstract
Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) is associated with the development of graft coronary artery disease (GCAD) following cardiac transplantation. This study assessed whether technetium 99m ((99m)Tc)-labeled MCP-1 binds its receptors in chronic cardiac transplants and thereby provides a potential modality to assess GCAD.Allogeneic (PVG-->ACI, n = 9) and syngeneic (ACI-->ACI, n = 9) rat heterotopic heart transplants were performed. Allograft recipients were treated with 7.5 mg/kg per day of Cyclosporin A for 10 days until tolerance was achieved. After 90 days, animals were injected intravenously with (99m)Tc-MCP-1 and killed after 1 hour. Radioactivity of heart tissues was measured and standardized to uptake in the overall blood pool. Two-dimensional (99m)Tc-MCP-1 uptake (autoradiographs) was imaged by exposing 50-microm sections on a phosphoimager overnight. ED-1 staining of monocyte/macrophages was performed on serial sections. Additional sections were stained with elastin von Gieson and hematoxylin. Hearts were scored for luminal narrowing and intima/media ratio (I/M) with computerized image analysis.Allografts exhibited significantly more luminal narrowing (22.5 +/- 10.7% vs 2.6 +/- 4.6, p = 0.0005) and higher I/M (0.173 +/- 0.151 vs 0.015 +/- 0.029, p = 0.0088) than isografts. The ratio of (99m)Tc-MCP-1 uptake in allografts (1.04 +/- 0.4) was greater than that of isograft controls (0.72 +/- 0.11, p = 0.03). Pixel counts of autoradiographs and ED-1-stained sections demonstrated a modest correlation between the two (R(2) = 0.50). No significant differences were seen in acute rejection scores.(99m)Tc-MCP-1 uptake was higher in allografts vs isografts and was consistent with a greater degree of GCAD. These data demonstrating increased radiopharmaceutical uptake in hearts with GCAD provide a foundation for the development of a potentially non-invasive imaging assay of this disease process in heart transplantation.
View details for PubMedID 12231372
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To scan or not to scan, it is a question of timing: Technetium-99M-annexin V radionuclide imaging assessment of treatment efficacy after one course of chemotherapy
CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH
2002; 8 (9): 2757–58
View details for Web of Science ID 000177988700001
View details for PubMedID 12231512
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Zinc chloride-mediated reduction of apoptosis as an adjunct immunosuppressive modality in cardiac transplantation
JOURNAL OF HEART AND LUNG TRANSPLANTATION
2002; 21 (3): 360-365
Abstract
Zinc (Zn) blocks caspase-3 activation in cardiac allografts and therefore may synergistically decrease apoptosis along with cyclosporine (CsA), which inhibits mitochondrial release of cytochrome c. Simultaneous treatment of rat recipients of heterotopic heart transplants with zinc chloride (ZnCl(2)) thus may allow lower doses of CsA for immunosuppression.PVG (RT1(c)) rat hearts were transplanted heterotopically into the abdomen of ACI (RT1(a)) rats. Group 1 (n = 15) rats received no treatment. Group 2 rats (n = 8) received 2 mg/kg/day CsA (sub-therapeutic dose) by oral gavage. Group 3 rats (n = 9) received 2 mg/kg/day oral CsA in addition to 1 mg/kg/day sub-cutaneous ZnCl(2) delivered by osmotic pump. All rats were imaged using Annexin V-bound (99m)Technetium ((99m)Tc-Annexin V) on post-operative Day 4 and subsequently killed. Annexin V avidly binds apoptotic cells in vivo. Region of interest per whole body (WB) data were calculated using the images. The allograft survival study was conducted with n = 11, 6, and 5 in control, CsA, and CsA+Zn groups, respectively. Finally, percentages of allografts that reached tolerance were measured in both CsA-only and CsA+Zn groups (n = 8 each).Zinc chloride had an additive effect with CsA on apoptotic blockade and graft survival. The regions of interest per WB uptake of (99m)Tc-Annexin V were 2.43% +/- 0.37%, 2.08% +/- 0.52%, and 1.49% +/- 0.29%*, and acute survivals were 6.4 +/- 1.7, 7.2 +/- 2.1, and 11.2 +/- 2.5* days for control, CsA, and CsA+Zn groups, respectively (*p < 0.001 vs controls). In addition, 87.5% of allografts became tolerant and survived for 90 days in the CsA+Zn group compared with only 37.5% in the CsA-only group (p = 0.049).Zinc-mediated reduction of apoptosis served as an effective adjunct immunosuppressive therapy to CsA in a rat model of cardiac transplantation.
View details for PubMedID 11897525
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Development of radiocontrast agents for vascular imaging: progress to date.
American journal of cardiovascular drugs
2002; 2 (6): 357-365
Abstract
The revolution in molecular imaging techniques is profoundly changing the understanding of the pathophysiology and treatment of atherosclerosis. With these rapid changes there is an increasing demand for development of sensitive and well tolerated novel imaging agents that can be rapidly translated from small animal models into patients with atherosclerosis. Nuclear medicine and positron emission tomography techniques have the ability to detect and serially monitor a variety of biologic and pathophysiologic processes usually with tracer quantities of radiolabeled peptides, drugs, and other molecules at dosages free of pharmacologic adverse effects unlike the current generation of intravenous agents required for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed axial tomography (CT) scanning. A representative sampling of the wide array of radiopharmaceuticals developed specifically for radionuclide imaging of atherosclerosis, that have been approved for clinical use and those in pre-clinical trials, have been reviewed in this article. The presence of an inflammatory stimulus increases expression of CC (cysteine-cysteine motif) chemokine receptor (CCR)-2 on monocytes and macrophages, and somatostatin receptors on T lymphocytes. Radiolabeled monocyte chemoattractant protein (MCP)-1 binds with high affinity to CCR-2 and can be used to detect subacute and chronic inflammatory lesions. Similarly, radiolabeled octreotide or depreotide can be used to detect activated T lymphocytes which may identify the vulnerable plaque. Animal models indicate that (99m)Tc-annexin V, (125)I-MCP-1 and [(18)F]-fluoro-2-deoxyglucose are effective in identifying apoptotic cell death, macrophage infiltration and metabolic activity in atheromatous lesions, respectively. Expression of alpha(v)beta(3) integrin is increased in activated endothelial cells and vascular smooth muscle cells after vascular injury, and alpha(v)beta(3) integrin is minimally expressed on smooth muscle cells and is not expressed on quiescent epithelial cells. Radiolabeled high-affinity peptides can be used to target the alpha(v)beta(3) integrin and visualize areas of vascular damage. Advances in technology such as the micro-single photon emission computed tomography (microSPECT) have the potential to overcome the drawbacks of older CT and MRI methodologies, such as lack of biologically relevant ligands and compatible blood pool contrast agents for imaging. Despite these advances in imaging technology, the small size of atheromatous lesions makes it difficult to detect using external imaging techniques. Therefore, recently there has been renewed interest in the use of intravascular catheter-based radiation detectors.
View details for PubMedID 14727951
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Detection of early atherosclerosis with radiolabeled monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 in prediabeteic Zucker rats
43rd Annual Meeting of the Society-for-Pediatric-Radiology
SPRINGER. 2001: 827–35
Abstract
Migration of monocytes into the arterial wall is an early finding of atherosclerosis. Monocytes are attracted to sites of vascular endothelial cell injury, the initiating event in the development of atheromatous disease, by a chemokine known as monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1). Injured vascular endothelial and smooth muscle cells selectively secrete MCP-1.This study was performed to determine if radiolabeled MCP-1 would co-localize at sites of monocyte/macrophage concentration in an experimental model of transplant-induced vasculopathy in diabetic animals.Hearts from 3-month-old male Zucker rats, heterozygote (Lean) or homozygote (Fat) for the diabetes-associated gene fa, were transplanted into the abdomens of genetically matched recipients. Lean and Fat animals were then fed normal or high-fat diets for 90 days.At 90 days significant increases (P < 0.013) of MCP-1 graft uptake were seen at imaging and confirmed on scintillation gamma well counting studies in Lean (n = 5) and Fat (n = 12) animals, regardless of diet, 400 % and 40 %, above control values, respectively. MCP-1 uptake of native and grafted hearts correlated with increased numbers of perivascular macrophages (P < 0.02), as seen by immunostaining with an antibody specific for macrophages (ED 2).Radiolabeled MCP-1 can detect abnormally increased numbers of perivascular mononuclear cells in native and grafted hearts in prediabetic rats. MCP-1 may be useful in the screening of diabetic children for early atherosclerotic disease.
View details for Web of Science ID 000172685800001
View details for PubMedID 11727015
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Annexin-V imaging for noninvasive detection of cardiac allograft rejection
NATURE MEDICINE
2001; 7 (12): 1347-1352
Abstract
Heart transplant rejection is characterized pathologically by myocyte necrosis and apoptosis associated with interstitial mononuclear cell infiltration. Any one of these components can be targeted for noninvasive detection of transplant rejection. During apoptotic cell death, phosphatidylserine, a phospholipid that is normally confined to the inner leaflet of cell membrane bilayer, gets exteriorized. Technetium-99m-labeled annexin-V, an endogenous protein that has high affinity for binding to phosphatidylserine, has been administered intravenously for noninvasive identification of apoptotic cell death. In the present study of 18 cardiac allograft recipients, 13 patients had negative and five had positive myocardial uptake of annexin. These latter five demonstrated at least moderate transplant rejection and caspase-3 staining, suggesting apoptosis in their biopsy specimens. This study reveals the clinical feasibility and safety of annexin-V imaging for noninvasive detection of transplant rejection by targeting cell membrane phospholipid alterations that are commonly associated with the process of apoptosis.
View details for Web of Science ID 000172610300041
View details for PubMedID 11726976
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In vivo Imaging of acute cardiac rejection in human patients using (99m)Technetium labeled annexin V
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF TRANSPLANTATION
2001; 1 (3): 270-277
Abstract
Annexin V binds phosphatidylserine moieties on apoptotic cells. This study reports the initial experience at Stanford University Medical Center with 99mTc-labeled annexin V imaging as a noninvasive measure of apoptosis in acute cardiac rejection. Ten cardiac transplant patients had 99mTc Annexin V imaging and endomyocardial biopsy (EMB) performed within 24 h. No complications related to 99mTc annexin V administration occurred. Eight patients had ISHLT grade of acute rejection of 1A or less. Five patients had two or more areas of uptake noted in the right ventricle on imaging studies. Two of these patients had positive biopsies: one patient had grade 2 rejection with two focal uptake areas and another had grade 3A rejection with three foci. An additional five patients had either one or zero hot spot areas and corresponding negative EMBs. 99mTc-annexin V appears to be well tolerated and may identify patients with acute cardiac rejection.
View details for Web of Science ID 000173466800011
View details for PubMedID 12102261
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Imaging macrophages and the apoptosis of granulocytes in a rodent model of subacute and chronic abscesses with radiolabeled monocyte chemotactic peptide-1 and annexin V
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2001; 28 (9): 1384-1393
Abstract
Monocytes/macrophages (Mphis), the predominant cell types in subacute and chronic inflammation, are attracted to and activated by monocyte chemotactic peptide-1 (MCP-1). Mphis promote the resolution of inflammation through the induction of apoptosis and phagocytosis of senescent (spent) and bystander (superfluous) granulocytes. We wished to determine whether MCP-1, which selectively binds to Mphis, could be used to image subacute and chronic inflammation. We also sought to image granulocyte apoptosis within these lesions with technetium-99m labeled annexin V, a marker of apoptotic cells. Sterile inflammation was induced in 45 12-week-old male Sprague-Dawley rats by deep intramuscular injection of turpentine into the right thigh. Groups of four to six animals were then imaged 1 h after tail vein injection of 37-148 MBq (1-4 mCi) of 99mTc-labeled MCP-1 or annexin V 1-14 days after turpentine treatment. Image analysis showed significantly greater activity of both MCP-1 and annexin V in inflamed thighs than in control thighs (165%-290% and 188%-313%, respectively; P<0.01) on days 1-5 after turpentine injection. Dual autoradiography in animals co-injected with iodine-125 labeled bovine serum albumin on days 1 and 4 showed specific location of MCP-1 to infiltrating Mphis while annexin V localized to focal zones of apoptosis within granulocytic infiltrates adjacent to abscess cavities. Scintillation well counting on day 5 demonstrated significantly higher (P<0.005) ratios of abscess to control thigh specific activities for MCP-1 (5.83+/-2.17) and annexin V (9.24 +/- 2.8) as compared to 125I-labeled bovine serum albumin (3.11 +/- 0.65). No significant increases in uptake were noted at imaging or ex vivo analyses on days 13 and 14, when lesions were predominately fibrotic. It is concluded that 99mTc-labeled MCP-1 and 99mTc-labeled annexin V both localize in zones of subacute inflammation, reflecting the density of Mphis and the incidence of apoptotic granulocytes, respectively. These agents may be useful in the characterization of subacute inflammation.
View details for Web of Science ID 000171148900013
View details for PubMedID 11585299
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Apoptosis and allograft rejection in the absence of CD8(+) T cells
TRANSPLANTATION
2001; 71 (12): 1827-1834
Abstract
The requirement for cytotoxic T lymphocytes during allograft rejection is controversial. We previously demonstrated that CD8+ T cells are not necessary for allograft rejection or for the induction of apoptosis in rat small intestinal transplantation. In this study, we examined the mechanisms of apoptosis and rejection after liver transplantation in the absence of CD8+ T cells.Either Lewis or dark agouti rat liver grafts were transplanted into Lewis recipients to create syngeneic and allogeneic combinations. CD8+ T cells were depleted in an additional allogeneic group by treatment with OX-8 mAb on day -1 and day 1 after liver transplant.Apoptosis and rejection were observed in both the CD8+ T cell-depleted allogeneic and allogeneic grafts by hematoxylin and eosin staining, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling staining, and radiolabeled-annexin V in vivo imaging. Granzyme B and FasL were expressed in all allogeneic transplants, including those depleted of CD8+ T cells, indicating that a mononuclear cell other than a CD8+ T cell can be the source of these molecules during allograft rejection. Activation of the caspase cascade was detected in all rejecting allografts. Caspases 3, 8, and 9 were activated at similar significantly elevated levels in both allogeneic and CD8+ T cell-depleted liver grafts.These data indicate that in the absence of CD8+ T cells an alternative pathway, associated with granzyme B and FasL expression and activation of the caspase cascade, can mediate apoptosis and graft rejection.
View details for Web of Science ID 000169753800020
View details for PubMedID 11455265
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Detection of active atheroma in a rabbit model: Evaluation of 8 radiotracers.
SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC. 2001: 45P–45P
View details for Web of Science ID 000168821900169
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Spirometer-triggered high-resolution computed tomography and pulmonary function measurements during an acute exacerbation in patients with cystic fibrosis
JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
2001; 138 (4): 553-559
Abstract
To evaluate a high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) scoring system, clinical parameters, and pulmonary function measurements in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) before and after therapy for a pulmonary exacerbation.Patients (n = 17) were evaluated by spirometer-triggered HRCT imaging, clinical parameters, and pulmonary function tests (PFTs) before and after treatment. HRCT scans were reviewed by 3 radiologists using a modified Bhalla scoring system.Bronchiectasis, bronchial wall thickening, and air trapping were identified in all subjects on initial evaluation. The initial total HRCT score correlated significantly with the Brasfield score (r = -.91, P <.001) and several PFT measures. After treatment, there were improvements in the acute change clinical score (ACCS) (P <.001), most pulmonary function measurements, and total HRCT score (P <.05). Bronchiectasis, bronchial wall thickening, and air trapping did not significantly change. Mucus plugging subcomponent HRCT score, slow vital capacity (SVC), forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV(1)), and forced vital capacity (FVC) (percent predicted) and reversible and total HRCT scores were most sensitive to change by effect size analysis.Improvements occurred with treatment in total and reversible HRCT scores, PFTs, and ACCS. Total and reversible HRCT scores and percent predicted SVC, FEV1, and FVC were the most sensitive to change. The greatest change was seen in the mucus plugging subcomponent HRCT score.
View details for PubMedID 11295720
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Imaging cyclophosphamide-induced intramedullary apoptosis in rats using Tc-99m-radiolabeled annexin V
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2001; 42 (2): 309-316
Abstract
Intramedullary apoptosis of hematopoietic tissue is believed to play a major role in the pathophysiology of myelodysplastic syndrome. Annexin V, a specific marker of the early to intermediate phases of apoptosis, has been applied to the in vitro study of bone marrow aspirates. A noninvasive measure of intramedullary apoptosis in vivo that could serially monitor the clinical progression of myelodysplastic syndrome may be helpful.We used 99mTc-radiolabeled annexin V and radionuclide gamma camera imaging to serially study the sites, extent, and severity of intramedullary apoptosis induced by cyclophosphamide treatment.Intravenously administered radiolabeled annexin V localized preferentially in the femur, pelvis, vertebrae, and spleen; increased uptake in these organs was easily visualized as early as 8 h after injection of 100 mg/kg cyclophosphamide in 8- to 10-wk-old animals. Higher doses of cyclophosphamide (150 mg/kg) in animals of the same age increased annexin V uptake in the bone marrow and splenic tissue and delayed recovery of these organs as seen histologically compared with lower doses. Older animals, 5-6 mo old, showed a slower response to cyclophosphamide treatment and delayed recovery of bone marrow and splenic tissues.Radiolabeled annexin V can be used to detect and directly quantify the degree of intramedullary and splenic apoptosis in a noninvasive fashion using current clinical radionuclide imaging equipment. Annexin V imaging may be useful clinically in the diagnosis and management of myelodysplastic syndrome.
View details for Web of Science ID 000166888300025
View details for PubMedID 11216531
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Will imaging of apoptosis play a role in clinical care? A tale of mice and men
APOPTOSIS
2001; 6 (1-2): 117-123
Abstract
Programmed cell death (apoptosis) plays a role in the pathophysiology of many diseases and in the outcome of treatment. Apoptosis is the likely mechanism behind the cytoreductive effects of standard chemotherapeutic and radiation treatments, rejection of organ transplants, cellular damage in collagen vascular disorders, and delayed cell death due to hypoxic-ischemic injury in myocardial infarction and neonatal hypoxic ischemic injury. Observations about the role of apoptosis have fueled the development of novel agents and treatment strategies specifically aimed at inducing or inhibiting apoptosis. Despite these research developments there are no clinical entities where specific measures of apoptosis are used in either diagnosis or patient management. Part of the difficulty in bridging the gap between the basic science understanding of apoptosis and the clinical application of this information is the lack of a sensitive marker to monitor programmed cell death in association with disease progression or regression. Technetium-99m labeled annexin V localizes at sites of apoptosis in-vivo, due to its nanomolar affinity for membrane bound phosphatidylserine. Radiolabeled annexin V imaging permits identification of the site and extent of apoptosis in experimental animals. Annexin V has been successfully used in animal models to image organ transplant rejection, characterize successful therapy of tumors, pinpoint acute myocardial infarction, and identify hypoxic ischemic brain injury of the newborn and adult. Early studies in human subjects suggest that 99mTc annexin imaging will be also be useful to identify rejection in transplant recipients, localize acute myocardial infarction, and characterize the effectiveness of a single treatment in patients with tumors. This review describes the imaging approaches to detect and monitor apoptosis in-vivo that are presently in early clinical trials. The preliminary data are extrapolated to identify conditions where apoptosis imaging may be valuable in clinical decision making. These conditions include: transplant rejection; hypoxic/ischemic injury of heart and brain; and determining the efficacy of therapy in cancer, heart failure and osteoporosis.
View details for Web of Science ID 000167045800010
View details for PubMedID 11321034
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Noninvasive strategies to image cardiovascular apoptosis.
Cardiology clinics
2001; 19 (1): 165-?
Abstract
Apoptosis consists of a complex set of biochemical events initiated by an array of different stimuli and enzymatic pathways. There is a set of common morphologic and biochemical features of apoptosis that could be exploited as hot or cold targets to image cardiovascular apoptosis. First, the authors review the potential array of targets that can be used to identify apoptosis. Then, the authors examine the history and current status of radiolabeled annexin V, the agent currently used to image apoptosis.
View details for PubMedID 11787810
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TC99M MCP-1 imaging of chronic rejection in rat cardiac allografts.
journal of heart and lung transplantation
2001; 20 (2): 186-?
View details for PubMedID 11250313
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Zinc-mediated reduction of apoptosis in cardiac allografts
CIRCULATION
2000; 102 (19): 228-232
View details for Web of Science ID 000165177300040
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Zinc-mediated reduction of apoptosis in cardiac allografts.
Circulation
2000; 102 (19): III228-32
Abstract
Apoptosis is thought to occur during immune-mediated acute rejection of cardiac allografts. In vitro studies have shown that zinc inhibits the activity of the proapoptotic enzyme caspase-3. We hypothesized that ZnCl(2) would reduce acute cardiac rejection in vivo via the blockade of caspase-3-dependent apoptosis. (99m)Tc-labeled annexin V was used to measure apoptosis in cardiac allografts through nuclear imaging. Annexin V binds to phosphatidylserines, which are externalized to the outer membrane of apoptotic cells.Twenty-seven PVG rat hearts were transplanted heterotopically into the abdomen of untreated ACI rats as controls (group 1). Fifteen were scanned and euthanized on postoperative day 4, and 12 were assessed for graft survival. Group 2 and 3 rats (n=15 each) received 1 and 5 mg/kg ZnCl(2) BID IP, respectively. Nine of each of these groups were scanned and euthanized on postoperative day 4, and 6 were studied for allograft survival. Group 4 rats (n=3) received isografts. Region-of-interest analysis demonstrated a dose-dependent reduction in (99m)Tc annexin uptake in ZnCl(2)-treated allografts: 2.43+/-0.37% for group 1, 1. 97+/-0.41% for group 2, 1.21+/-0.47% for group 3, and 0.55+/-0.19% for group 4 (ANOVA, P:=0.001). Graft survival times of 6.4+/-1.7, 9. 3+/-3.0, and 11.5+/-3.4 days for groups 1, 2, and 3, respectively, were also observed (ANOVA, P:=0.001). Caspase-3 activity in the allografts showed a 3.7-fold reduction in group 3 animals compared with group 1 animals (P:=0.004).Apoptosis that occurs in acute cardiac allograft rejection is reduced with ZnCl(2) in a dose-dependent manner via caspase-3 inhibition.
View details for PubMedID 11082392
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Tc-99m annexin V imaging of neonatal hypoxic brain injury
STROKE
2000; 31 (11): 2692-2699
Abstract
Delayed cell loss in neonates after cerebral hypoxic-ischemic injury (HII) is believed to be a major cause of cerebral palsy. In this study, we used radiolabeled annexin V, a marker of delayed cell loss (apoptosis), to image neonatal rabbits suffering from HII.Twenty-two neonatal New Zealand White rabbits had ligation of the right common carotid artery with reduction of inspired oxygen concentration to induce HII. Experimental animals (n=17) were exposed to hypoxia until an ipsilateral hemispheric decrease in the average diffusion coefficient occurred. After reversal of hypoxia and normalization of average diffusion coefficient values, experimental animals were injected with (99m)Tc annexin V. Radionuclide images were recorded 2 hours later.Experimental animals showed no MR evidence of blood-brain barrier breakdown or perfusion abnormalities after hypoxia. Annexin images demonstrated multifocal brain uptake in both hemispheres of experimental but not control animals. Histology of the brains from experimental animals demonstrated scattered pyknotic cortical and hippocampal neurons with cytoplasmic vacuolization of glial cells without evidence of apoptotic nuclei by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end-labeling (TUNEL) staining. Double staining with markers of cell type and exogenous annexin V revealed that annexin V was localized in the cytoplasm of scattered neurons and astrocytes in experimental and, less commonly, control brains in the presence of an intact blood-brain barrier.Apoptosis may develop after HII even in brains that appear normal on diffusion-weighted and perfusion MR. These data suggest a role of radiolabeled annexin V screening of neonates at risk for the development of cerebral palsy.
View details for PubMedID 11062296
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Development and characterization of annexin V mutants with endogenous chelation sites for Tc-99m
BIOCONJUGATE CHEMISTRY
2000; 11 (6): 918-925
Abstract
[(99m)Tc]Annexin V can be used to image organs undergoing cell death during cancer chemotherapy and organ transplant rejection. To simplify the preparation and labeling of annexin V for nuclear-medicine studies, we have investigated the addition of peptide sequences that will directly form endogenous chelation sites for (99m)Tc. Three mutant molecules of annexin V, called annexin V-116, -117, and -118, were constructed with N-terminal extensions of seven amino acids containing either one or two cysteine residues. These molecules were expressed cytoplasmically in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity with a final yield of 10 mg of protein/L of culture. Analysis in a competitive binding assay showed that all three proteins retained full binding affinity for erythrocyte membranes with exposed phosphatidylserine. Using SnCl(2) as reducing agent and glucoheptonate as exchange agent, all three proteins could be labeled with (99m)Tc to specific activities of at least 50-100 microCi/microg. The proteins retained membrane binding activity after the radiolabeling procedure, and quantitative analysis indicated a dissociation constant (K(d)) of 7 nmol/L for the annexin V-117 mutant. The labeling reaction was rapid, reaching a maximum after 40 min at room temperature. The radiolabeled proteins were stable when incubated with phosphate-buffered saline or serum in vitro. Proteins labeled to a specific activity of 25-100 microCi/microg were injected intravenously in mice at a dose of 100 microg/kg, and biodistribution of radioactivity was determined at 60 min after injection. Uptake of radioactivity was highest in kidney and liver, consistent with previous results obtained with wild-type annexin V. Cyclophosphamide-induced apoptosis in vivo could be imaged with [(99m)Tc]annexin V-117. In conclusion, annexin V can be modified near its N-terminus to incorporate sequences that form specific chelation sites for (99m)Tc without altering its high affinity for cell membranes. These annexin V derivatives may be useful for in vivo imaging of cell death.
View details for Web of Science ID 000165601900024
View details for PubMedID 11087342
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Phase-I (TC)-T-99m-Annexin-V imaging study in heart transplant rejection: Can noninvasive detection of apoptosis in cardiac allografts obviate the need for endomyocardial biopsy?
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS. 2000: 769–69
View details for Web of Science ID 000090072303706
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Role of radionuclide imaging in trials of antiangiogenic therapy
ACADEMIC RADIOLOGY
2000; 7 (10): 851-867
View details for Web of Science ID 000089729500008
View details for PubMedID 11048882
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Radioimaging to identify myocardial cell death and probably injury
LANCET
2000; 356 (9225): 180-181
View details for Web of Science ID 000088179100004
View details for PubMedID 10963191
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Gastrointestinal dysfunction associated with syringomyelia and hydromyelia
JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC GASTROENTEROLOGY AND NUTRITION
2000; 31 (1): 71-75
View details for Web of Science ID 000087924200016
View details for PubMedID 10896075
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Radionuclide imaging of acute lung transplant rejection with annexin V
29th Annual Meeting of the Fleischner-Society
AMER COLL CHEST PHYSICIANS. 2000: 834–40
Abstract
Early detection and treatment of lung transplant rejection is critical for preservation of pulmonary graft function. Damage to pulmonary allografts is mediated by apoptotic cell death induced by the alloreactive T lymphocytes that infiltrate lung grafts. Previous studies demonstrate that acute cardiac allograft rejection can be visualized using radiolabeled annexin V. This study was done to determine whether this technique could visualize acute rejection in a rodent model of unilateral orthotopic lung transplantation.Eighteen Sprague-Dawley ACI rats underwent removal of their left lung followed by orthotopic transplant of either an allogeneic (PVG, immunologically mismatched; N = 10) or a syngeneic (ACI, immunologically matched) pulmonary graft (N = 8). Animals were imaged 1 h after IV injection of 1 mCi (37.0 MBq) of (99m)Tc-annexin V 1 to 7 days after transplantation.Lungs receiving the allograft demonstrated moderate to marked mononuclear infiltration of the perivascular, interstitial, and peribronchial tissues. No mononuclear infiltrates were noted in the native right lungs nor in the syngeneic transplants. Region of interest image analysis revealed significant (p < 0.0005) increases of transplant to normal lung activity ratios 3 to 7 days after allograft surgery. The increased annexin V uptake in these lungs was confirmed at biodistribution assay (allograft 151% greater than isograft activity, p < 0.005).Acute experimental lung transplant rejection can be noninvasively identified using (99m)Tc-annexin V. Radiolabeled annexin V may be a clinically useful noninvasive screening tool for acute rejection.
View details for Web of Science ID 000085884000037
View details for PubMedID 10713014
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Apoptosis: The importance of nuclear medicine
NUCLEAR MEDICINE COMMUNICATIONS
2000; 21 (3): 241-250
Abstract
Apoptosis is a genetically controlled, energy-dependent process which removes unwanted cells from the body. Because of its orderly progression, apoptosis is also known as programmed cell death or cell suicide. Once initiated, apoptosis is characterized by a series of biochemical and morphological changes involving the cytoplasm, nucleus and cell membrane. Cytoplasmic changes include cytoskeletal disruption, cytoplasmic shrinkage and condensation; prominent changes in the nucleus include peripheral chromatin clumping and inter-nucleosomal DNA cleavage (DNA ladder formation); and membrane changes include the expression of phosphatidylserine on the outer surface of the cell membrane and blebbing (resulting in the formation of cell membrane-bound vesicles or apoptotic bodies). These events allow the cell to digest and package itself into membrane-bound packets containing autodigested cytoplasm and DNA, which can then be easily absorbed by adjacent cells or phagocytes. An endogenous human protein, annexin V (molecular weight approximately 35,000), has an affinity of about 10(-9) M for phosphatidylserine exposed on the surface of apoptotic cells. Annexin V can be labelled with radionuclides such as iodine or technetium, or positron emitting agents. Experimental studies in cells confirm that fluorescence and 99Tc(m)-labelled annexin have comparable affinity for apoptotic cells. In vivo studies with 99Tc(m)-labelled annexin confirm that radiolabelled annexin V can be used to image apoptotic cells/tissues in vivo. In this article, we review experimental data using annexin V imaging and discuss its possible future use to identify apoptosis in vivo.
View details for Web of Science ID 000086400800008
View details for PubMedID 10823326
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Radiolabeled annexin V imaging: Diagnosis of allograft rejection in an experimental rodent model of liver transplantation
RADIOLOGY
2000; 214 (3): 795-800
Abstract
To assess the value of imaging rejection-induced apoptosis with technetium 99m and annexin V, a human protein-based radiopharmaceutical used in the diagnosis of acute rejection of a liver transplant, in a well-characterized rodent model of orthotopic liver transplantation.99mTc-radiolabeled annexin V was intravenously administered to six allografted (immunologically mismatched) and five isografted (immunologically matched) recipient rats on days 2, 4, and 7 after orthotopic liver transplantation. Animals were imaged 1 hour after injection of 0.2-2.0 mCi (8.0-74.0 MBq) of radiolabeled annexin V by use of clinical nuclear scintigraphic equipment.All animals in the allografted group demonstrated marked increases of 55% and 97% above the activity in the isografted group in hepatic uptake of annexin V on days 4 and 7, respectively. Severe acute rejection was histologically detected in all allografted livers on day 7. There was no histologic evidence of acute rejection in isografted animals. Dynamic hepatobiliary imaging with 99mTc and mebrofenin, an iminodiacetic acid derivative, demonstrated no correlation with the presence or absence of acute rejection or with annexin V uptake.Noninvasive imaging with radiolabeled annexin V is more sensitive and specific than imaging with 99mTc-mebrofenin in the diagnosis of acute rejection of a liver transplant.
View details for Web of Science ID 000085478800029
View details for PubMedID 10715048
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Apoptotic cell death: its implications for imaging in the next millennium
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
2000; 27 (3): 359-367
Abstract
Apoptosis, also known as programmed cell death, is an indispensable component of normal human growth and development, immunoregulation and homeostasis. Apoptosis is nature's primary opponent of cell proliferation and growth. Strict coordination of these two phenomena is essential not only in normal physiology and regulation but in the prevention of disease. Programmed cell death causes susceptible cells to undergo a series of stereotypical enzymatic and morphologic changes governed by ubiquitous endogenous biologic machinery encoded by the human genome. Many of these changes can be readily exploited to create macroscopic images using existing technologies such as lipid proton magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy, diffusion-weighted MR imaging and radionuclide receptor imaging with radiolabeled annexin V. In this review the cellular phenomenon of apoptotic cell death and the imaging methods which can detect the process in vitro and in vivo are first discussed. Thereafter an outline is provided of the role of apoptosis in the pathophysiology of clinical disorders including stroke, neurodegenerative diseases, pulmonary inflammatory diseases, myocardial ischemia and inflammation, myelodysplastic disorders, organ transplantation, and oncology, in which imaging may play a critical role in diagnosis and patient management. Objective imaging markers of apoptosis may soon become measures of therapeutic success or failure in both current and future treatment paradigms. Since apoptosis is a major factor in many diseases, quantification and monitoring the process could become important in clinical decision making.
View details for Web of Science ID 000086485000014
View details for PubMedID 10774891
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Sonography, CT, and MR imaging: A prospective comparison of neonates with suspected intracranial ischemia and hemorrhage
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF NEURORADIOLOGY
2000; 21 (1): 213-218
Abstract
Sonography, CT, and MR imaging are commonly used to screen for neonatal intracranial ischemia and hemorrhage, yet few studies have attempted to determine which imaging technique is best suited for this purpose. The goals of this study were to compare sonography with CT and MR imaging prospectively for the detection of intracranial ischemia or hemorrhage and to determine the prognostic value(s) of neuroimaging in neonates suspected of having hypoxic-ischemic injury (HII).Forty-seven neonates underwent CT (n = 26) or MR imaging (n = 24) or both (n = 3) within the first month of life for suspected HII. Sonography was performed according to research protocol within an average of 14.4 +/- 9.6 hours of CT or MR imaging. A kappa analysis of interobserver agreement was conducted using three independent observers. Infants underwent neurodevelopmental assessment at ages 2 months (n = 47) and 2 years (n = 26).CT and MR imaging had significantly higher interobserver agreement (P < .001) for cortical HII and germinal matrix hemorrhage (GMH) (Grades I and II) compared with sonography. MR imaging and CT revealed 25 instances of HII compared with 13 identified by sonography. MR imaging and CT also revealed 10 instances of intraparenchymal hemorrhage (>1 cm, including Grade IV GMH) compared with sonography, which depicted five. The negative predictive values of neuroimaging, irrespective of technique used, were 53.3% and 58.8% at the 2-month and 2-year follow-up examinations, respectively.CT and MR imaging have significantly better interobserver agreement for cortical HII and GMH/intraventricular hemorrhage and can reveal more instances of intraparenchymal hemorrhage compared with sonography. The absence of neuroimaging findings on sonograms, CT scans, or MR images does not rule out later neurologic dysfunction.
View details for Web of Science ID 000085055900042
View details for PubMedID 10669253
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Technetium-99m HYNIC-annexin V: a potential radiopharmaceutical for the in-vivo detection of apoptosis
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
1999; 26 (10): 1251-1258
Abstract
Either inadequate or excessive apoptosis (programmed cell death) is associated with many diseases. A method to image apoptosis in vivo, rather than requiring histologic evaluation of tissue, could assist with therapeutic decision making in these disorders. Programmed cell death is associated with a well-choreographed series of events resulting in the cessation of normal cell function, and the ultimate disappearance of the cell. One component of apoptosis is signaling adjacent cells that this cell is committing suicide by externalizing phosphatidylserine to the outer leaflet of the cell membrane. Annexin V, a 32-kDa endogenous human protein, has a high affinity for membrane-bound phosphatidylserine. We have coupled annexin V with the bifunctional hydrazinonicotinamide reagent (HYNIC) to prepare technetium-99m HYNIC-annexin V and demonstrated localization of radioactivity in tissues undergoing apoptosis in vivo. In this report we describe the results of a series of experiments in mice and rats to characterize the biologic behavior of (99m)Tc-HYNIC- annexin V. Biodistribution studies were performed in groups of rats at 10-180 min after intravenous injection of (99m)Tc-HYNIC-annexin V. In order to estimate the degree of apoptosis required for localization of (99m)Tc-annexin V in vivo, mice were treated with dexamethasone at doses ranging from 1 to 20 mg/kg, 5 h prior to (99m)Tc-HYNIC-annexin V administration, to induce thymic apoptosis. Thymus was excised 1 h after radiolabeled HYNIC-annexin V injection; thymocytes were isolated, incubated with Hoechst 33342 followed by propidium iodide, and analyzed on a fluorescence-activated cell sorter. Each sorted cell population was counted in a scintillation counter. To test (99m)Tc-HYNIC-annexin V as a tracer for external radionuclide imaging of apoptotic cell death, radionuclide imaging of Fas-defective mice (lpr/lpr mice) and wild-type mice treated with the antibody to Fas (anti-Fas) was carried out 1 h post injection. Rat biodistribution studies demonstrated a blood clearance half-time of less than 10 min for (99m)Tc-HYNIC-annexin V. The kidneys had the highest concentration of radioactivity at all time points. Studies in the mouse thymus demonstrated a 40-fold increase in (99m)Tc-HYNIC-annexin V concentration in apoptotic thymocytes compared with the viable cell population. A correlation of r=0.78 was found between radioactivity and flow cytometric and histologic evidence of apoptosis. Imaging studies in the lpr/lpr and wild-type mice showed a substantial increase of activity in the liver of wild-type mice treated with anti-Fas, while there was no significant change, irrespective of anti-Fas administration, in lpr/lpr mice. Excellent images of hepatic apoptosis were obtained in wild-type mice 30 min after injection of (99m)Tc-HYNIC-annexin V. The imaging results were consistent with histologic analysis in these animals. In conlusion, these studies confirm the value of (99m)Tc-HYNIC-annexin V uptake as a marker for the detection and quantification of apoptotic cells in vivo.
View details for Web of Science ID 000083142900002
View details for PubMedID 10541822
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In vivo detection of apoptotic cell death: A necessary measurement for evaluating therapy for myocarditis, ischemia, and heart failure
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR CARDIOLOGY
1999; 6 (5): 531-539
Abstract
If life is to continue, cells that have completed their useful function(s) must die in a timely manner. Apoptosis, programmed cell death, is a natural, orderly, energy-dependent process that causes cells to die without inducing an inflammatory response. In the heart, apoptosis plays pivotal roles in the development of myocarditis, cardiomyopathies, transplant rejection, the periinfarct zone in myocardial infarction, and reperfusion injury. Apoptosis is triggered either by a decrease in factors required to maintain the cell in good health or by an increase in factors which cause damage to the cell. When these factors tilt in the direction of death and the cell has sufficient time to respond, a common proteolytic cascade involving cysteine aspartic acid-specific proteases (caspases) is activated to initiate apoptosis. Cells that die by apoptosis autodigest their DNA and nuclear proteins, change the phospholipid composition on the outer surface of their cell membrane, and form lipid enclosed vesicles, which contain noxious intracellular contents, organelles, autodigested cytoplasm, and DNA. The compositional cell membrane phospholipid change that occurs with the onset of apoptosis is marked by the sudden expression of phosphatidylserine (PS), a phospholipid that ordinarily appears on the inner leaflet of the membrane, on the external leaflet of the membrane. The constant exposure of PS during apoptosis makes it an attractive target for radiopharmaceutical imaging. An endogenous human protein, annexin V, has a high affinity (kd = 7 nmol/L) for PS bound to the cell membrane. Fluorescence-labeled annexin V is used for histologic and cell-sorting studies to identify apoptotic cells. Annexin has been radiolabeled and binds to cells undergoing apoptosis in vivo. This review outlines some of the key features of apoptosis as contrasted to necrosis (unregulated cell death) and describes how these processes can be imaged with radionuclide techniques.
View details for Web of Science ID 000083551100009
View details for PubMedID 10548149
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Dying a thousand deaths - Radionuclide imaging of apoptosis
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
1999; 43 (2): 170-176
Abstract
Programmed cell death, apoptosis, is an inducible, organized, energy requiring form of demise that results in the disappearance of a cell without the induction of an inflammatory response. Apoptotic cell death is strikingly different than necrotic death, which is disorderly, does not require energy and results in local inflammation, usually secondary to sudden release of intracellular contents. Apoptosis is induced when cells undergo severe injury to their nucleus, as occurs following exposure to gamma or X-radiation, or mitcochondria, as occurs in a variety of viral illnesses. Apoptosis can also be induced by external signals, such as interaction of fas ligand with fas receptors. Once the cell is committed to apoptosis, the caspase enzyme cascade is activated. An early effect of caspase activation is the rapid expression of phosphatidylserine on the external leaflet of the cell membrane. Membrane bound phosphatidylserine expression serves as a signal to surrounding cells, identifying the expressing cell as undergoing apoptosis. A deficiency or an excess of programmed cell death is an integral component of autoimmune disorders, transplant rejection and cancer. A technique to image programmed cell death would be useful to assist in the development of drugs designed to treat these diseases, and to monitor the effectiveness of therapy. The sudden expression of phosphatidylserine on the cell membrane is a target that could be used for this purpose. A 35 kD physiologic protein, Annexin V lipocortin, binds with nanomolar affinity to membrane bound phosphatidylserine. Annexin V has been radiolabeled with Technetium-99m by direct coupling to free sulfhydryl groups, and through the hydrazinonicatinamide and N2S2 linking agents. The biodistribution of the agents labeled with each of the methods is slightly different. In all cases the radiopharmaceutical binds to cells undergoing apoptosis in vitro, and permits imaging of the process in experimental animals.
View details for Web of Science ID 000082905400009
View details for PubMedID 10429513
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Standardized high-resolution CT of the lung using a spirometer-triggered electron beam CT scanner
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ROENTGENOLOGY
1999; 172 (6): 1636-1638
View details for Web of Science ID 000080427900034
View details for PubMedID 10350305
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Non-invasive diagnosis of acute heart-or lung-transplant rejection using radiolabeled annexin V
41st Annual Meeting of the Society-of-Pediatric-Radiology
SPRINGER. 1999: 299–305
Abstract
Apoptosis is a ubiquitous set of cellular processes by which superfluous or unwanted cells are eliminated in the body without harming adjacent healthy tissues. When apoptosis is inappropriate (too little or too much), a variety of human diseases can occur, including acute heart or lung transplant rejection.Our group has developed a new radiopharmaceutical, radiolabeled annexin V, which can image apoptosis.Here we briefly review the biomolecular basis of apoptosis and its role in acute rejection. We also describe the possible use of radiolabeled annexin V to screen children noninvasively for acute rejection following organ transplantation.
View details for Web of Science ID 000080165700001
View details for PubMedID 10382201
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Spirometer-triggered high resolution computed tomography (HRCT) of the chest, clinical score, and pulmonary function measurements in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients before and after treatment for a pulmonary exacerbation
INT PEDIATRIC RESEARCH FOUNDATION, INC. 1999: 355A
View details for DOI 10.1203/00006450-199904020-02108
View details for Web of Science ID 000079476702092
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Comparison between neuroimaging and neurobehavioral assessments of the very low birthweight preterm infant
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP. 1999: 191A–191A
View details for Web of Science ID 000079476701117
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Imaging of apoptosis (programmed cell death) with Tc-99m annexin V
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
1999; 40 (1): 184-191
Abstract
Apoptosis (programmed cell death) is a critical element in normal physiology and in many disease processes. Phosphatidylserine (PS), one component of cell membrane phospholipids, is normally confined to the inner leaflet of the plasma membrane. Early in the course of apoptosis, this phospholipid is rapidly exposed on the cell's outer surface. Annexin V, an endogenous human protein, has a high affinity for membrane-bound PS. This protein has been labeled with fluorescein and has been used to detect apoptosis in vitro. We describe the use of radiolabeled annexin V to detect apoptosis in vivo. The results are compared to histologic and flow cytometric methods to identify cells and tissues undergoing apoptosis.Annexin V was coupled to hydrazinonicotinamide (HYNIC) and radiolabeled with 99mTc. Bioreactivity of 99mTc-HYNIC annexin V was compared with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled annexin V in cultures of Jurkat T-cell lymphoblasts and in ex vivo thymic cell suspensions undergoing apoptosis in response to different stimuli. In addition, the uptake of FITC annexin V and 99mTc-HYNIC annexin V was studied in heat-treated necrotic Jurkat T-cell cultures. In vivo localization of annexin V was studied in Balb/c mice injected with 99mTc-HYNIC annexin V before and after induction of Fas-mediated hepatocyte apoptosis with intravenously administered antiFas antibody.Membrane-bound radiolabeled annexin V activity linearly correlated to total fluorescence as observed by FITC annexin V flow cytometry in Jurkat T-cell cultures induced to undergo apoptosis in response to growth factor deprivation (N = 10, r2 = 0.987), antiFas antibody (N = 8, r2 = 0.836) and doxorubicin (N = 10, r2 = 0.804); and in ex vivo experiments on thymic cell suspensions with dexamethasone-induced apoptosis from Balb/c mice (N = 6, r2 = 0.989). Necrotic Jurkat T-cell cultures also demonstrated marked increases in radiopharmaceutical (4000-5000-fold) above control values. AntiFas antibody-treated Balb/c mice (N = 6) demonstrated a three-fold rise in hepatic uptake of annexin V (P < 0.0005) above control (N = 10), identified both by imaging and scintillation well counting. The increase in hepatic uptake in antiFas antibody-treated mice correlated to histologic evidence of fulminant hepatic apoptosis.These data suggest that 99mTc-HYNIC annexin V can be used to image apoptotic and necrotic cell death in vivo.
View details for Web of Science ID 000078114700043
View details for PubMedID 9935075
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The use of technetium Tc 99m annexin V for in vivo imaging of apoptosis during cardiac allograft rejection
78th Annual Meeting of the American-Association-for-Thoracic-Surgery
MOSBY-ELSEVIER. 1998: 844–52
Abstract
Apoptosis, or programmed cell death, has been suggested as a mechanism of immunologic injury during cardiac allograft rejection. We tested the hypothesis that technetium Tc 99m annexin V, a novel radiopharmaceutical used to detect apoptosis, can be used to detect cardiac allograft rejection by nuclear imaging.Untreated ACI rats served as recipients of allogeneic PVG rat (n = 66) or syngeneic ACI rat (n = 30) cardiac grafts. Untreated recipient animals underwent 99mTc-annexin V imaging daily for 7 days. Region of interest analysis was used to quantify the uptake of 99mTc-annexin V. Immediately after imaging grafts were procured for histopathologic analysis and terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate-biotin nick-end labeling of apoptotic nuclei. One group was treated with 10 mg/kg/d cyclosporine (INN: ciclosporin) commencing on day 4 after transplantation (n = 6).Untreated allografts showed histologic signs of rejection 4 days after transplantation. Apoptotic nuclei could be demonstrated in myocytes, endothelial cells, and graft-infiltrating cells of all rejecting allografts. Nuclear imaging revealed a significantly greater uptake of 99mTc-annexin V in rejecting allogeneic grafts than in syngeneic grafts on day 4 (P = .05), day 5 (P < .001), day 6 (P < .001), and day 7 (P = .013) after transplantation. A correlation between the histologic grade of acute rejection and uptake of 99mTc-annexin V was observed (r2 = 0.87). After treatment of rejection with cyclosporine, no apoptotic nuclei could be identified in allografts and uptake of 99mTc-annexin V decreased to baseline.Apoptosis occurs during acute cardiac allograft rejection and disappears after treatment of rejection. 99mTc-annexin V can be used to detect and monitor cardiac allograft rejection.
View details for Web of Science ID 000076693300031
View details for PubMedID 9806391
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In vivo detection and imaging of phosphatidylserine expression during programmed cell death
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
1998; 95 (11): 6349-6354
Abstract
One of the earliest events in programmed cell death is the externalization of phosphatidylserine, a membrane phospholipid normally restricted to the inner leaflet of the lipid bilayer. Annexin V, an endogenous human protein with a high affinity for membrane bound phosphatidylserine, can be used in vitro to detect apoptosis before other well described morphologic or nuclear changes associated with programmed cell death. We tested the ability of exogenously administered radiolabeled annexin V to concentrate at sites of apoptotic cell death in vivo. After derivatization with hydrazinonicotinamide, annexin V was radiolabeled with technetium 99m. In vivo localization of technetium 99m hydrazinonicotinamide-annexin V was tested in three models: fuminant hepatic apoptosis induced by anti-Fas antibody injection in BALB/c mice; acute rejection in ACI rats with transplanted heterotopic PVG cardiac allografts; and cyclophosphamide treatment of transplanted 38C13 murine B cell lymphomas. External radionuclide imaging showed a two- to sixfold increase in the uptake of radiolabeled annexin V at sites of apoptosis in all three models. Immunohistochemical staining of cardiac allografts for exogenously administered annexin V revealed intense staining of numerous myocytes at the periphery of mononuclear infiltrates of which only a few demonstrated positive apoptotic nuclei by the terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated UTP end labeling method. These results suggest that radiolabeled annexin V can be used in vivo as a noninvasive means to detect and serially image tissues and organs undergoing programmed cell death.
View details for Web of Science ID 000073852600089
View details for PubMedID 9600968
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC27696
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Comparison of MR imaging and neurobehavioral assessment of the preterm infant (NAPI).
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS. 1998: 105A–105A
View details for Web of Science ID 000071684700558
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Impaired cerebrovascular autoregulation after hypoxic-ischemic injury in extremely low-birth-weight neonates: Detection with power and pulsed wave Doppler US
82nd Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting of the Radiological-Society-of-North-America
RADIOLOGICAL SOC NORTH AMER. 1997: 563–68
Abstract
To evaluate regional cerebral blood flow with power and pulsed wave Doppler ultrasound (US) in extremely low-birth-weight neonates with periventricular leukomalacia (PVL), germinal matrix hemorrhage (GMH), or both.The lenticulostriate arteries of 17 preterm neonates (birth weight < or = 1,100 g) were assessed daily with Doppler US during the first 5-6 days of life. The mean arterial pressure and bilateral peak velocity, resistive index, coronal vascular cross-sectional area, and product of the peak velocity and vascular cross-sectional area were measured.Five neonates developed PVL, GMH, or both; results of follow-up examinations in 11 patients were normal. One neonate with severe intrauterine growth retardation and renal tubular acidosis was excluded. Neonates with PVL, GMH, or both showed significantly greater mean values and more variable values of vascular cross-sectional area and product of peak velocity and cross-sectional area than neonates without PVL or GMH (P < .025). Mean resistive index was significantly lower in neonates with PVL, GMH, or both than in neonates without (P < .01). There were no significant differences between mean arterial pressure in neonates with and those without PVL, GMH, or both.By enabling the detection of autoregulatory fluctuations in cerebral blood flow associated with hypoxic-ischemic injury, power and pulsed wave Doppler US may enable identification of preterm neonates who are at risk of developing PVL, GMH, or both during the 1st week of life.
View details for PubMedID 9356646
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Quantitative analysis of apoptotic cell death using proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
BLOOD
1997; 89 (10): 3778-3786
Abstract
Quantification of apoptotic cell death in vivo has become an important area of investigation in patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). We have devised a noninvasive analytical method to estimate the percentage of apoptotic lymphoblasts in doxorubicin-treated Jurkat T-cell ALL cultures, using proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H NMR). We have found that the ratio of the methylene (CH2) resonance (at 1.3 ppm) to the methyl (CH3) resonance (at 0.9 ppm) signal intensity, as observed by 1H NMR, is directly proportional to the percentage of apoptotic lymphoblasts in vitro. The correlation between the CH2/CH3 signal intensity ratio and the percentage of apoptotic lymphoblasts was optimal 24 to 28 hours after doxorubicin treatment (r2 = .947, N = 27 samples). There was also a direct temporal relationship between an increase in the CH2/CH3 signal intensity ratio and the onset of apoptosis as detected by nuclear morphologic analysis, fluorescein-annexin V flow cytometry, and DNA gel electrophoresis. Thin-layer chromatography confirmed that a dynamic and/or compositional change of the plasma membrane, rather than increases in lipase activity or fatty acid production, appears to account for the increase in the CH2/CH3 signal intensity ratio during apoptosis. 1H NMR may have clinical utility for the early noninvasive assessment of chemotherapeutic efficacy in patients with ALL.
View details for PubMedID 9160684
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Clinical image. Lipoblastoma of the thigh: MR appearance.
Journal of computer assisted tomography
1996; 20 (6): 1002-1003
View details for PubMedID 8933809
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Lipoblastoma of the thigh: MR appearance
JOURNAL OF COMPUTER ASSISTED TOMOGRAPHY
1996; 20 (6): 1002-1003
View details for Web of Science ID A1996VT47600027
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Neonatal intracranial ischemia and hemorrhage: Diagnosis with US, CT, and MR imaging
RADIOLOGY
1996; 199 (1): 253-259
Abstract
To assess the usefulness of ultrasound (US), computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in the detection of intracranial hemorrhage and ischemia in newborns.Seventy-six neonates who underwent US within 72 hours of CT or MR examination were studied. Four observers rated images for the presence of germinal matrix hemorrhage (GMH), intraventricular hemorrhage (IPH), extraaxial hemorrhage, and hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy.In 39% of neonates, CT and MR imaging provided greater confidence than US for the diagnosis or exlusion of neonatal ischemia or hemorrhage. Kappa analysis revealed significantly better interobserver agreement with CT than with US for the detection of GMH, IVH, IPH, and cortical infarction or ischemia (P <.005). Interobserver agreement was significantly better with MR imaging than with US for the detection of GMH, IVH, and cortical infarction or ischemia (P < .005).Sensitivity and interobserver agreement are better with MR imaging and CT than with US for the detection of neonatal cortical ischemia or infarction.
View details for PubMedID 8633155
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Detection of apoptotic cell death by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
BLOOD
1996; 87 (5): 1951-1956
Abstract
Cells undergoing apoptosis (programmed cell death) display profound morphologic and biochemical changes in the nucleus, cytoplasm, and plasma membrane. We have shown a direct temporal relationship between the onset of apoptosis in Jurkat T-cell lymphoblast cultures and a greater than two-fold increase in the signal intensity of the methylene resonance (at 1.3 ppm) as observed by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H NMR). The increase in the methylene resonance intensity was seen when apoptosis was induced by serum deprivation, glucocorticoid, and doxorubicin treatment but not in necrotic (nonapoptotic) cell death. We have found similar changes in a variety of other cell lines undergoing apoptosis including the Hut 78 T-cell leukemia, JY natural killer T-cell leukemia, Daudi B-cell lymphoma, HeLa, and 3T3 fibroblast cell lines. Furthermore, this spectral change was diminished in Bcl-2 overexpressing HL-60 cell cultures treated with doxorubicin, which were relatively resistant to apoptosis, as compared to apoptotic HL-60 cultures. 1H NMR spectroscopy therefore may be useful in detecting apoptotic cell death in vivo.
View details for Web of Science ID A1996TY33900034
View details for PubMedID 8634443
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EVOLVING ASYMMETRIC HYPERTROPHIC PYLORIC-STENOSIS ASSOCIATED WITH HISTOLOGIC EVIDENCE OF EOSINOPHILIC GASTROENTERITIS
PEDIATRIC RADIOLOGY
1995; 25 (4): 310-311
Abstract
The most frequently occurring and important cause of gastric outlet obstruction in the neonate and young infant is infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis (IHPS). A reported association of IHPS and eosinophilic gastroenteritis [1] raises interesting questions about the possible etiologic relationship between the two entities. It is plausible that the observed sonographic pyloric muscular wall thickness in IHPS may in part be dependent on the degree and duration of an allergic gastroenteropathy. A recent report suggests that endoscopy may be a more reliable diagnostic method than sonography in the patient with evolving IHPS [2]. Our recent experience with a patient with evolving IHPS supports the findings described in these prior reports.
View details for Web of Science ID A1995RF84300025
View details for PubMedID 7567248
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THE INFLUENCE OF VOLUMETRIC TUMOR DOUBLING TIME, DNA-PLOIDY, AND HISTOLOGIC GRADE ON THE SURVIVAL OF PATIENTS WITH INTRACRANIAL ASTROCYTOMAS
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF NEURORADIOLOGY
1995; 16 (5): 1001-1012
Abstract
To improve the prediction of individual survival in patients with intracranial astrocytomas through the analysis of volumetric tumor doubling time (VDt) and DNA ploidy.A pilot study was retrospectively conducted on a group of 25 patients with intracranial astrocytomas in whom recurrent and/or progressive disease was observed on serial contrast-enhanced CT or MR examinations. VDt was computed using two or more data points from a semilogarithmic plot of tumor volume versus time. Size-adjusted survival was calculated using a method based on VDt and initial tumor volume to decrease the lead time bias attributable to differing tumor sizes at presentation.Slower VDt was associated with significantly longer survival and size-adjusted survival as determined by a univariate Cox proportional hazard analysis. Aneuploidy was a significant indicator of poor survival. Aneuploid and multiclonal astrocytomas had poor size-adjusted survivals compared with diploid astrocytomas. Grade IV astrocytomas had significantly poorer survival and size-adjusted survival compared with lower grades (I to III), which individually were not significantly correlated. However, grade IV histology was not a significant independent predictor of size-adjusted survival in a multivariate Cox model, whereas VDt and DNA ploidy remained significant. VDt also had a significant direct linear correlation to survival and size-adjusted survival.VDt and DNA ploidy were more sensitive than histologic grading as indicators of individual survival. Initial tumor size needs to be considered when staging and assessing survival in patients with intracranial astrocytomas.
View details for Web of Science ID A1995QX57800001
View details for PubMedID 7639120
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PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATION OF ULTRASOUND SCATTERING ANALYSIS TO IDENTIFY WOMEN AT RISK FOR LATER INVASIVE CANCER .1. MOTIVATION AND EXPERIMENTAL-TECHNIQUE FOR CHARACTERIZATION OF ISOLATED BREAST-TISSUE LOBULES
ULTRASOUND IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
1995; 21 (3): 295-303
Abstract
A new experimental technique is described that allows the characterization of the angle-dependent ultrasonic scattering properties of isolated breast tissue lobules. A review of breast tissue micro-architecture is presented as background material. Measured estimates of the scatter angle-dependent differential scatter cross-sections (DSC) from 31 excised lobules (14 cancer in situ, 17 noncancer) were examined, and dominant trends described by statistical factors. Three factors were extracted, using principal component factor analysis, which collectively accounted for over 70% of the scatter angle-dependent variation exhibited by the measured data.
View details for Web of Science ID A1995QU21000002
View details for PubMedID 7645121
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PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATION OF ULTRASOUND SCATTERING ANALYSIS TO IDENTIFY WOMEN AT RISE FOR LATER INVASIVE CANCER .2. EXTRACTION OF DOMINANT SCATTERING ANGLE-DEPENDENT TRENDS FROM EXCISED BREAST-TISSUE
ULTRASOUND IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
1995; 21 (3): 305-311
Abstract
Normalized estimates of the scattering angle-dependent differential scattering cross-section (DSC) at 1.0 MHz were measured from 278 samples of excised breast tissue taken from 66 women. A comparison of results for samples that contained tissue structures previously associated with an increased probability of developing breast cancer to those that did not contain high-risk structures showed that the average magnitude of DSC estimates was insufficient to identify samples with high-risk lesions. Principal component factor analysis (PCFA) was applied to extract scattering angle-dependent trends common to the entire data base. The normalized estimates of the measured DSCs (NDSC) from tissue samples are compared to estimates previously obtained from isolated breast tissue lobules as well as with results from the PCFA. Results are presented that indicate that the dominant angle-dependent trends in the NDSC results are independent of the age of the patient and are similar to trends extracted from isolated breast tissue lobules. The breast tissue structure common to all of these specimens is the terminal duct.
View details for Web of Science ID A1995QU21000003
View details for PubMedID 7645122
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MR IMAGING IN AN EXPERIMENTAL-MODEL OF BRAIN-TUMOR IMMUNOTHERAPY
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF NEURORADIOLOGY
1991; 12 (3): 543-548
Abstract
A murine model of implanted CNS neoplasia was used to study a new form of brain tumor immunotherapy with intralesional Corynebacterium parvum (C. parvum). Assessment of treatment protocols has been limited by the inability to assess, noninvasively, tumor burden and/or the inflammatory reaction induced in the murine brain by treatment with C. parvum. This study demonstrates that contrast-enhanced MR imaging can monitor in vivo tumor burden and the immune response to intracerebral C. parvum. KHT murine sarcoma was stereotaxically implanted into the right frontal lobe of C3H/HeN mice at doses of 10,000 and 50,000 tumor cells. The KHT sarcoma is 100% fatal in untreated mice. Therapy consisted of an intraperitoneal injection of 350 micrograms of killed C. parvum 1 day after tumor implantation followed by 70 micrograms of C. parvum stereotaxically injected into the tumor 5 days after implantation. MR imaging was performed on mice injected with saline only, C parvum only, tumor only, and tumor treated with C. parvum. C. parvum alone elicited an intense transitory mononuclear cell inflammatory reaction in the meninges, ependyma, and to a variable degree at the injection site. The inflammatory response reached a peak 2 weeks after intracerebral injection. Contrast-enhanced MR imaging was able to detect the presence and severity of C. parvum-induced inflammation, which decreased 3 weeks after intracerebral injection. The transitory nature of this type of inflammation should allow its differentiation from tumor in subjects undergoing serial scanning following intracerebral injection of C. parvum as a form of brain tumor immunotherapy.
View details for Web of Science ID A1991FJ90400034
View details for PubMedID 2058511
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COMPUTED-TOMOGRAPHY AS AN ADJUNCT TO ULTRASOUND IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF ACUTE ACALCULOUS CHOLECYSTITIS
GASTROINTESTINAL RADIOLOGY
1991; 16 (2): 149-153
Abstract
The sonographic and computed tomographic (CT) findings were reviewed in 17 patients with acute acalculous cholecystitis (AAC) over a 6-year period from 1984 to 1989. Of the six patients in whom both ultrasound and CT were performed, CT revealed marked gallbladder (GB) wall abnormalities, including perforation, and pericholecystic fluid collections in five patients not demonstrated by sonography. Of the total group, five patients had GB wall thicknesses of less than or equal to 3 mm (normal) at pathologic examination, which demonstrated a spectrum of disease ranging from acute hemorrhagic/necrotizing, to gangrenous acalculous cholecystitis with perforation. Sonography was falsely negative or significantly underestimated the severity of AAC in seven of the 13 patients examined by sonography. CT because of its superior ability to assess pericholecystic inflammation may provide additional diagnostic information even after a thorough sonographic study in cases of AAC.
View details for Web of Science ID A1991EX38300014
View details for PubMedID 2016029
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PRELIMINARY-RESULTS FOR SHEAR-WAVE SPEED OF SOUND AND ATTENUATION COEFFICIENTS FROM EXCISED SPECIMENS OF HUMAN BREAST-TISSUE
ULTRASONIC IMAGING
1990; 12 (2): 99-118
Abstract
A pilot study involving 53 specimens of excised human female breast tissue was performed to provide preliminary estimates of the acoustic shear wave speed of sound and linear attenuation coefficient associated with high risk for development of invasive breast cancer. The measured shear wave properties were studied as a function of: 1. whether the tissue was presented as a 2.0 to 4.0 gram mass biopsy sample or a 2.0 to 4.0 gram mass subsample taken from a larger mastectomy source; 2. the time post-excision prior to shear wave characterization; 3. the risk factor associated with the number and types of lesions found in the specimen; and 4. the percent by volume of fat or collagen present in the sample. The shear speed of sound was found to range between 20 and 900 m/s with a tendency for lower speeds as a function of time post excision. The results for shear attenuation coefficients ranged from 300 to 9000 cm-1 and did not show a marked time dependence. Average results from mastectomy specimens differed from those for biopsies, but the difference may have been due to variations in tissue composition and time post excision before shear wave characterization.
View details for Web of Science ID A1990DH19000003
View details for PubMedID 2193452