Monitoring of tumor response to chemotherapy in vivo by a novel small-molecule detector of apoptosis

Utilization of molecular imaging of apoptosis for clinical monitoring of tumor response to anti-cancer treatments in vivo is highly desirable. To address this need, we now present ML-9 (butyl-2-methyl-malonic acid; MW = 173), a rationally designed small-molecule detector of apoptosis, based on a nov...

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Veröffentlicht in:Apoptosis (London) 2009-03, Vol.14 (3), p.257-267
Hauptverfasser: Grimberg, Hagit, Levin, Galit, Shirvan, Anat, Cohen, Avi, Yogev-Falach, Merav, Reshef, Ayelet, Ziv, Ilan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Utilization of molecular imaging of apoptosis for clinical monitoring of tumor response to anti-cancer treatments in vivo is highly desirable. To address this need, we now present ML-9 (butyl-2-methyl-malonic acid; MW = 173), a rationally designed small-molecule detector of apoptosis, based on a novel alkyl-malonate motif. In proof-of-concept studies, induction of apoptosis in tumor cells by various triggers both in vitro and in vivo was associated with marked uptake of ³H-ML-9 administered in vivo, in correlation with the apoptotic hallmarks of DNA fragmentation, caspase-3 activation and membrane phospholipid scrambling, and with correlative tumor regression. ML-9 uptake following chemotherapy was tumor-specific, with rapid clearance of the tracer from the blood and other non-target organs. Excess of non-labeled “cold” compound competitively blocked ML-9 tumor uptake, thus demonstrating the specificity of ML-9 binding. ML-9 may therefore serve as a platform for a novel class of small-molecule imaging agents for apoptosis, useful for assessment of tumor responsiveness to treatment.
ISSN:1360-8185
1573-675X
DOI:10.1007/s10495-008-0293-7