Issue 22, 2019

Development of a carbon-11 PET radiotracer for imaging TRPC5 in the brain

Abstract

The transient receptor potential channel subfamily member 5 (TRPC5) is a calcium permeable cation channel widely expressed in the brain. Accumulating evidence indicates that it plays a crucial role in psychiatric disorders including depression and anxiety. Positron emission tomography (PET) combined with a TRPC5 specific radioligand may provide a unique tool to investigate the functions of TRPC5 in animal disease models to guide drug development targeting TRPC5. To develop a TRPC5 PET radiotracer, the potent TRPC5 inhibitor HC608 was chosen for C-11 radiosynthesis through the N-demethyl amide precursor 7 reacting with [11C]methyl iodide. Under optimized conditions, [11C]HC608 was achieved with good radiochemical yield (25 ± 5%), high chemical and radiochemical purity (>99%), and high specific activity (204–377 GBq μmol−1, decay corrected to the end of bombardment, EOB). The in vitro autoradiography study revealed that [11C]HC608 specifically binds to TRPC5. Moreover, initial in vivo evaluation of [11C]HC608 performed in rodents and the microPET study in the brain of non-human primates further demonstrated that [11C]HC608 was able to penetrate the blood brain barrier and sufficiently accumulate in the brain. These results suggest that [11C]HC608 has the potential to be a PET tracer for imaging TRPC5 in vivo.

Graphical abstract: Development of a carbon-11 PET radiotracer for imaging TRPC5 in the brain

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Apr 2019
Accepted
09 May 2019
First published
09 May 2019

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2019,17, 5586-5594

Development of a carbon-11 PET radiotracer for imaging TRPC5 in the brain

Y. Yu, Q. Liang, H. Liu, Z. Luo, H. Hu, J. S. Perlmutter and Z. Tu, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2019, 17, 5586 DOI: 10.1039/C9OB00893D

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