Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Imaging of Dysfunctional Elastogenesis in Atherosclerosis Using an Improved Gadolinium-Based Tetrameric MRI Probe Targeted to Tropoelastin.
- Journal:
- Journal of medicinal chemistry
- Year:
- 2021
- Authors:
- Capuana, Federico et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Molecular Biotechnology and Health Sciences · Italy
Abstract
Dysfunctional elastin turnover plays a major role in the progression of atherosclerotic plaques. Failure of tropoelastin cross-linking into mature elastin leads to the accumulation of tropoelastin within the growing plaque, increasing its instability. Here we present Gd-TESMA, an MRI contrast agent specifically designed for molecular imaging of tropoelastin within plaques. Gd-TESMA is a tetrameric probe composed of a tropoelastin-binding peptide (the VVGS-peptide) conjugated with four Gd(III)-DOTA-monoamide chelates. It shows a relaxivity per molecule of 34.0 ± 0.8 mMs(20 MHz, 298 K, pH 7.2), a good binding affinity to tropoelastin (= 41 ± 12 μM), and a serum half-life longer than 2 h. Gd-TESMA accumulates specifically in atherosclerotic plaques in the ApoEmurine model of plaque progression, with 2 h persistence of contrast enhancement. As compared to the monomeric counterpart (Gd-TESMA), the tetrameric Gd-TESMA probe shows a clear advantage regarding both sensitivity and imaging time window, allowing for a better characterization of atherosclerotic plaques.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34661390/