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1,933 result(s) for "Nelson, Bryce"
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Targeted Alpha Therapy: Progress in Radionuclide Production, Radiochemistry, and Applications
This review outlines the accomplishments and potential developments of targeted alpha (α) particle therapy (TAT). It discusses the therapeutic advantages of the short and highly ionizing path of α-particle emissions; the ability of TAT to complement and provide superior efficacy over existing forms of radiotherapy; the physical decay properties and radiochemistry of common α-emitters, including 225Ac, 213Bi, 224Ra, 212Pb, 227Th, 223Ra, 211At, and 149Tb; the production techniques and proper handling of α-emitters in a radiopharmacy; recent preclinical developments; ongoing and completed clinical trials; and an outlook on the future of TAT.
Theranostic Imaging Surrogates for Targeted Alpha Therapy: Progress in Production, Purification, and Applications
This article highlights recent developments of SPECT and PET diagnostic imaging surrogates for targeted alpha particle therapy (TAT) radiopharmaceuticals. It outlines the rationale for using imaging surrogates to improve diagnostic-scan accuracy and facilitate research, and the properties an imaging-surrogate candidate should possess. It evaluates the strengths and limitations of each potential imaging surrogate. Thirteen surrogates for TAT are explored: 133La, 132La, 134Ce/134La, and 226Ac for 225Ac TAT; 203Pb for 212Pb TAT; 131Ba for 223Ra and 224Ra TAT; 123I, 124I, 131I and 209At for 211At TAT; 134Ce/134La for 227Th TAT; and 155Tb and 152Tb for 149Tb TAT.
High yield cyclotron production of a novel 133/135La theranostic pair for nuclear medicine
This study reports the high-yield production of a novel 133/135 La theranostic pair at a 22 MeV proton beam energy as an attractive alternative to the recently introduced 132/135 La pair, demonstrating over an order of magnitude production increase of 133/135 La (231 ± 8 MBq 133 La and 166 ± 5 MBq 135 La at End of Bombardment (EOB)) compared to 11.9 MeV production of 132/135 La (0.82 ± 0.06 MBq 132 La and 19.0 ± 1.2 MBq 135 La) for 500 µA·min irradiations. A new sealed solid cyclotron target is introduced, which is fast to assemble, easy to handle, storable, and contains reusable components. Radiolabeling with macrocyclic chelators DOTA and macropa achieved full incorporation, with respective apparent 133 La molar activites of 33 ± 5 GBq/µmol and 30 ± 4 GBq/µmol. PET centers with access to a 22 MeV capable cyclotron could produce clinically-relevant doses of 133/135 La, via nat Ba irradiation, as a standalone theranostic agent for PET imaging and Auger electron therapy. With lower positron energies and less energetic and abundant gamma rays than 68 Ga, 44 Sc and 132 La, 133 La appears to be an attractive radiometal candidate for PET applications requiring a higher scanning resolution, a relatively long isotopic half-life, ease of handling, and a low patient dose.
Endothelial Unc5B controls blood-brain barrier integrity
Blood-brain barrier (BBB) integrity is critical for proper function of the central nervous system (CNS). Here, we show that the endothelial Unc5B receptor controls BBB integrity by maintaining Wnt/β-catenin signaling. Inducible endothelial-specific deletion of Unc5B in adult mice leads to BBB leak from brain capillaries that convert to a barrier-incompetent state with reduced Claudin-5 and increased PLVAP expression. Loss of Unc5B decreases BBB Wnt/β-catenin signaling, and β-catenin overexpression rescues Unc5B mutant BBB defects. Mechanistically, the Unc5B ligand Netrin-1 enhances Unc5B interaction with the Wnt co-receptor LRP6, induces its phosphorylation and activates Wnt/β-catenin downstream signaling. Intravenous delivery of antibodies blocking Netrin-1 binding to Unc5B causes a transient BBB breakdown and disruption of Wnt signaling, followed by neurovascular barrier resealing. These data identify Netrin-1-Unc5B signaling as a ligand-receptor pathway that regulates BBB integrity, with implications for CNS diseases. The authors show that Netrin-1-Unc5B signaling controls blood-brain barrier integrity by maintaining Wnt/b-catenin signaling and that delivery of antibodies blocking Netrin-1 binding to Unc5B causes transient and size-selective BBB breakdown.
Bacterial cell surface characterization by phage display coupled to high-throughput sequencing
The remarkable capacity of bacteria to adapt in response to selective pressures drives antimicrobial resistance. Pseudomonas aeruginosa illustrates this point, establishing chronic infections during which it evolves to survive antimicrobials and evade host defenses. Many adaptive changes occur on the P. aeruginosa cell surface but methods to identify these are limited. Here we combine phage display with high-throughput DNA sequencing to create a high throughput, multiplexed technology for surveying bacterial cell surfaces, Phage-seq. By applying phage display panning to hundreds of bacterial genotypes and analyzing the dynamics of the phage display selection process, we capture important biological information about cell surfaces. This approach also yields camelid single-domain antibodies that recognize key P. aeruginosa virulence factors on live cells. These antibodies have numerous potential applications in diagnostics and therapeutics. We propose that Phage-seq establishes a powerful paradigm for studying the bacterial cell surface by identifying and profiling many surface features in parallel. Methods to identify bacterial cell surface adaptations are limited. The authors combine phage display with high-throughput DNA sequencing to create a highly-multiplexed technology for surveying bacterial cell surfaces.
Aspects and prospects of preclinical theranostic radiopharmaceutical development
This article provides an overview of preclinical theranostic radiopharmaceutical development, highlighting aspects of the preclinical development stages that can lead towards a clinical trial. The key stages of theranostic radiopharmaceutical development are outlined, including target selection, tracer development, radiopharmaceutical synthesis, automation and quality control, radiopharmaceutical analysis, selecting a suitable model, preclinical imaging and pharmacokinetic analysis, preclinical therapeutic analysis, dosimetry, toxicity, and preparing for clinical translation. Each stage is described and augmented with examples from the literature. Finally, an outlook on the prospects for the radiopharmaceutical theranostics field is provided.
A Theranostic Approach to Imaging and Treating Melanoma with 203Pb/212Pb-Labeled Antibody Targeting Melanin
Metastatic melanoma is a deadly disease that claims thousands of lives each year despite the introduction of several immunotherapeutic agents into the clinic over the past decade, inspiring the development of novel therapeutics and the exploration of combination therapies. Our investigations target melanin pigment with melanin-specific radiolabeled antibodies as a strategy to treat metastatic melanoma. In this study, a theranostic approach was applied by first labeling a chimeric antibody targeting melanin, c8C3, with the SPECT radionuclide 203Pb for microSPECT/CT imaging of C57Bl6 mice bearing B16-F10 melanoma tumors. Imaging was followed by radioimmunotherapy (RIT), whereby the c8C3 antibody is radiolabeled with a 212Pb/212Bi “in vivo generator”, which emits cytotoxic alpha particles. Using microSPECT/CT, we collected sequential images of B16-F10 murine tumors to investigate antibody biodistribution. Treatment with the 212Pb/212Bi-labeled c8C3 antibody demonstrated a dose-response in tumor growth rate in the 5–10 µCi dose range when compared to the untreated and radiolabeled control antibody and a significant prolongation in survival. No hematologic or systemic toxicity of the treatment was observed. However, administration of higher doses resulted in a biphasic tumor dose response, with the efficacy of treatment decreasing when the administered doses exceeded 10 µCi. These results underline the need for more pre-clinical investigation of targeting melanin with 212Pb-labeled antibodies before the clinical utility of such an approach can be assessed.
Good practices for 68Ga radiopharmaceutical production
BackgroundThe radiometal gallium-68 (68Ga) is increasingly used in diagnostic positron emission tomography (PET), with 68Ga-labeled radiopharmaceuticals developed as potential higher-resolution imaging alternatives to traditional 99mTc agents. In precision medicine, PET applications of 68Ga are widespread, with 68Ga radiolabeled to a variety of radiotracers that evaluate perfusion and organ function, and target specific biomarkers found on tumor lesions such as prostate-specific membrane antigen, somatostatin, fibroblast activation protein, bombesin, and melanocortin.Main bodyThese 68Ga radiopharmaceuticals include agents such as [68Ga]Ga-macroaggregated albumin for myocardial perfusion evaluation, [68Ga]Ga-PLED for assessing renal function, [68Ga]Ga-t-butyl-HBED for assessing liver function, and [68Ga]Ga-PSMA for tumor imaging. The short half-life, favourable nuclear decay properties, ease of radiolabeling, and convenient availability through germanium-68 (68Ge) generators and cyclotron production routes strongly positions 68Ga for continued growth in clinical deployment. This progress motivates the development of a set of common guidelines and standards for the 68Ga radiopharmaceutical community, and recommendations for centers interested in establishing 68Ga radiopharmaceutical production.ConclusionThis review outlines important aspects of 68Ga radiopharmacy, including 68Ga production routes using a 68Ge/68Ga generator or medical cyclotron, standardized 68Ga radiolabeling methods, quality control procedures for clinical 68Ga radiopharmaceuticals, and suggested best practices for centers with established or upcoming 68Ga radiopharmaceutical production. Finally, an outlook on 68Ga radiopharmaceuticals is presented to highlight potential challenges and opportunities facing the community.
A Theranostic Approach to Imaging and Treating Melanoma with sup.203Pb/sup.212Pb-Labeled Antibody Targeting Melanin
Metastatic melanoma is a deadly disease that claims thousands of lives each year despite the introduction of several new drugs into the clinic over the past decade, inspiring the need for novel therapeutics. We investigate targeting melanin pigment, which causes melanoma, with protein molecules called antibodies, which carry a radioactive payload to visualize or treat melanoma tumors. In this study, we imaged and treated melanoma in mice using a c8C3 antibody to melanin and two radioisotopes of lead—Lead-203 for imaging and Lead-212 for therapy. Imaging with Lead-203-bound antibodies allowed for visualization of the tumors in mice, while treatment with Lead-212-bound antibodies slowed down the growth of these aggressive tumors. The treatment was not toxic to mice. We concluded that the melanin-targeting Lead-203/Lead-212-bound c8C3 antibody is a promising agent for imaging and therapy of metastatic melanoma (so-called theranostic), which warrants further investigation. Metastatic melanoma is a deadly disease that claims thousands of lives each year despite the introduction of several immunotherapeutic agents into the clinic over the past decade, inspiring the development of novel therapeutics and the exploration of combination therapies. Our investigations target melanin pigment with melanin-specific radiolabeled antibodies as a strategy to treat metastatic melanoma. In this study, a theranostic approach was applied by first labeling a chimeric antibody targeting melanin, c8C3, with the SPECT radionuclide [sup.203]Pb for microSPECT/CT imaging of C57Bl6 mice bearing B16-F10 melanoma tumors. Imaging was followed by radioimmunotherapy (RIT), whereby the c8C3 antibody is radiolabeled with a [sup.212]Pb/[sup.212]Bi “in vivo generator”, which emits cytotoxic alpha particles. Using microSPECT/CT, we collected sequential images of B16-F10 murine tumors to investigate antibody biodistribution. Treatment with the [sup.212]Pb/[sup.212]Bi-labeled c8C3 antibody demonstrated a dose-response in tumor growth rate in the 5–10 µCi dose range when compared to the untreated and radiolabeled control antibody and a significant prolongation in survival. No hematologic or systemic toxicity of the treatment was observed. However, administration of higher doses resulted in a biphasic tumor dose response, with the efficacy of treatment decreasing when the administered doses exceeded 10 µCi. These results underline the need for more pre-clinical investigation of targeting melanin with [sup.212]Pb-labeled antibodies before the clinical utility of such an approach can be assessed.
Intra-specific diversity of Serratia marcescens in Anopheles mosquito midgut defines Plasmodium transmission capacity
A critical stage in malaria transmission occurs in the Anopheles mosquito midgut, when the malaria parasite, Plasmodium , ingested with blood, first makes contact with the gut epithelial surface. To understand the response mechanisms within the midgut environment, including those influenced by resident microbiota against Plasmodium , we focus on a midgut bacteria species' intra-specific variation that confers diversity to the mosquito's competency for malaria transmission. Serratia marcescens isolated from either laboratory-reared mosquitoes or wild populations in Burkina Faso shows great phenotypic variation in its cellular and structural features. Importantly, this variation is directly correlated with its ability to inhibit Plasmodium development within the mosquito midgut. Furthermore, this anti- Plasmodium function conferred by Serratia marcescens requires increased expression of the flagellum biosynthetic pathway that is modulated by the motility master regulatory operon, flhDC . These findings point to new strategies for controlling malaria through genetic manipulation of midgut bacteria within the mosquito.