Development of an Easily Bioconjugatable Water-Soluble Single-Photon Emission-Computed Tomography/Optical Imaging Bimodal Imaging Probe Based on the aza-BODIPY Fluorophore
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Titre | Development of an Easily Bioconjugatable Water-Soluble Single-Photon Emission-Computed Tomography/Optical Imaging Bimodal Imaging Probe Based on the aza-BODIPY Fluorophore |
Type de publication | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2021 |
Auteurs | Privat M, Bellaye P-S, Lescure R, Massot A, Baffroy O, Moreau M, Racoeur C, Marcion G, Denat F, Bettaieb A, Collin B, Bodio E, Paul C, Goze C |
Journal | JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY |
Volume | 64 |
Pagination | 11063-11073 |
Date Published | AUG 12 |
Type of Article | Article |
ISSN | 0022-2623 |
Résumé | A water-soluble fluorescent aza-BODIPY platform (Wazaby) was prepared and functionalized by a polyazamacrocycle agent and a bioconjugable arm. The resulting fluorescent derivative was characterized and bioconjugated onto a trastuzumab monoclonal antibody as a vector. After bioconjugation, the imaging agent appeared to be stable in serum (>72 h at 37 degrees C) and specifically labeled HER-2-positive breast tumors slices. The bioconjugate was radiolabeled with [In-111] indium and studied in vivo. The developed monomolecular multimodal imaging probe (MOMIP) is water-soluble and chemically and photochemically stable, emits in the near infrared (NIR) region (734 nm in aqueous media), and displays a good quantum yield of fluorescence (around 15%). Single-photon emission-computed tomography and fluorescence imaging have been performed in nude mice bearing HER2-overexpressing HCC1954 human breast cancer xenografts and have evidenced the good tumor targeting of the [In-111] In bimodal agent. Finally, the proof of concept of using it as a new tool for fluorescence-guided surgery has been shown. |
DOI | 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.1c00450 |