Zirconium 89 and Copper 64 for ImmunoPET: From Antibody Bioconjugation and Radiolabeling to Molecular Imaging.
Laure BadierIsabelle QuelvenPublished in: Pharmaceutics (2024)
Immunotherapy has transformed cancer treatment. Nevertheless, given the heterogeneity of clinical efficacy, the multiplicity of treatment options available and the possibility of serious adverse effects, selecting the most effective treatment has become the greatest challenge. Molecular imaging offers an attractive way for this purpose. ImmunoPET provides specific imaging with positron emission tomography (PET) using monoclonal antibodies (mAb) or its fragments as vector. By combining the high targeting specificity of mAb and the sensitivity of PET technique, immunoPET could noninvasively and dynamically reveal tumor antigens expression and provide theranostic tools of several types of malignancies. Because of their slow kinetics, mAbs require radioelements defined by a consistent half-life. Zirconium 89 ( 89 Zr) and Copper 64 ( 64 Cu) are radiometals with half-lives suitable for mAb labeling. Radiolabeling with a radiometal requires the prior use of a bifunctional chelate agent (BFCA) to functionalize mAb for radiometal chelation, in a second step. There are a number of BFCA available and much research is focused on antibody functionalization techniques or on developing the optimum chelating agent depending the selected radiometal. In this manuscript, we present a critical account of radiochemical techniques with radionuclides 89 Zr and 64 Cu and their applications in preclinical and clinical immuno-PET imaging.
Keyphrases
- pet imaging
- positron emission tomography
- monoclonal antibody
- computed tomography
- single cell
- pet ct
- poor prognosis
- metal organic framework
- high resolution
- aqueous solution
- photodynamic therapy
- dendritic cells
- stem cells
- fluorescence imaging
- binding protein
- drug delivery
- cancer therapy
- cell therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- highly efficient