Bis(Disulfide)-Bridged Somatostatin-14 Analogs and Their [111In]In-Radioligands: Synthesis and Preclinical Profile

Tatsi, Aikaterini and Maina, Theodosia and Waser, Beatrice and Krenning, Eric P. and de Jong, Marion and Reubi, Jean Claude and Cordopatis, Paul and Nock, Berthold A. (2024) Bis(Disulfide)-Bridged Somatostatin-14 Analogs and Their [111In]In-Radioligands: Synthesis and Preclinical Profile. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 25 (3). p. 1921. ISSN 1422-0067

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Abstract

The overexpression of one or more somatostatin receptors (SST1–5R) in human tumors has provided an opportunity for diagnosis and therapy with somatostatin-like radionuclide carriers. The application of “pansomatostatin” analogs is expected to broaden the clinical indications and upgrade the diagnostic/therapeutic efficacy of currently applied SST2R-prefering radioligands. In pursuit of this goal, we now introduce two bicyclic somatostatin-14 (SS14) analogs, AT5S (DOTA-Ala1-Gly2-c[Cys3-Lys4-Asn5-c[Cys6-Phe7-DTrp8-Lys9-Thr10-Cys11]-Thr12-Ser13-Cys14]) and AT6S (DOTA-Ala1-Gly2-c[Cys3-Lys4-c[Cys5-Phe6-Phe7-DTrp8-Lys9-Thr10-Phe11-Cys12]-Ser13-Cys14]), suitable for labeling with trivalent radiometals and designed to sustain in vivo degradation. Both AT5S and AT6S and the respective [111In]In-AT5S and [111In]In-AT6S were evaluated in a series of in vitro assays, while radioligand stability and biodistribution were studied in mice. The 8/12-mer bicyclic AT6S showed expanded affinity for all SST1–5R and agonistic properties at the SST2R, whereas AT5S lost all affinity to SST1–5R. Both [111In]In-AT5S and [111In]In-AT6S remained stable in the peripheral blood of mice, while [111In]In-AT6S displayed low, but specific uptake in AR4-2J tumors and higher uptake in HEK293-SST3R tumors in mice. In summary, high radioligand stability was acquired by the two disulfide bridges introduced into the SS14 motif, but only the 8/12-mer ring AT6S retained a pansomatostatin profile. In consequence, [111In]In-AT6S targeted SST2R-/SST3R-positive xenografts in mice. These results call for further research on pansomatostatin-like radioligands for cancer theranostics.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM Open Academic > Multidisciplinary
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email admin@eprint.stmopenacademic.com
Date Deposited: 06 Feb 2024 06:16
Last Modified: 06 Feb 2024 06:16
URI: http://publish.sub7journal.com/id/eprint/1991

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