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Radiosynthesis of (R,S)-[18 F]GE387: A Potential PET Radiotracer for Imaging Translocator Protein 18 kDa (TSPO) with Low Binding Sensitivity to the Human Gene Polymorphism rs6971.

Luxi QiaoEmily FisherLindsay McMurraySelena Milicevic SephtonMatthew HirdNisha Kuzhuppilly-RamakrishnanDavid J WilliamsonXiouyun ZhouEryn WerryMichael KassiouSaijinder LuthraWilliam TriggFranklin I Aigbirhio
Published in: ChemMedChem (2019)
Translocator protein (TSPO) is a biomarker of neuroinflammation, which is a hallmark of many neurodegenerative diseases and has been exploited as a positron emission tomography (PET) target. Carbon-11-labelled PK11195 remains the most applied agent for imaging TSPO, despite its short-lived isotope and low brain permeability. Second-generation radiotracers show variance in affinity amongst subjects (low-, mixed-, and high-affinity binders) caused by the genetic polymorphism (rs6971) of the TSPO gene. To overcome these limitations, a new structural scaffold was explored based on the TSPO pharmacophore, and the analogue with a low-affinity binder/high-affinity binder (LAB/HAB) ratio similar (1.2 vs. 1.3) to that of (R)-[11 C]PK11195 was investigated. The synthesis of the reference compound was accomplished in six steps and 9 % overall yield, and the precursor was prepared in eight steps and 8 % overall yield. The chiral separation of the reference and precursor compounds was performed using supercritical fluid chromatography with >95 % ee. The absolute configuration was determined by circular dichroism. Optimisation of reaction conditions for manual radiolabelling revealed acetonitrile as a preferred solvent at 100 °C. Automation of this radiolabelling method provided R and S enantiomers in respective 21.3±16.7 and 25.6±7.1 % decay-corrected yields and molar activities of 55.8±35.6 and 63.5±39.5 GBq μmol-1 (n=3). Injection of the racemic analogue into a healthy rat confirmed passage through the blood-brain barrier.
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