A thiopyrylium salt for PET/NIR-II tumor imaging and image-guided surgery.
Xiao ZhangBingbing DingChunrong QuHuiling LiYu SunYongkang GaiHao ChenHanyi FangKun QianYongxue ZhangZhen ChengXiaoli LanPublished in: Molecular oncology (2020)
All tumor imaging modalities have resolution limits below which deeply situated small metastatic foci may not be identified. Moreover, incomplete lesion excision will affect the outcomes of the patients. Scintigraphy is adept in locating lesions, and second near-infrared window (NIR-II) imaging may allow precise real-time tumor delineation. To achieve complete excision of all lesions, multimodality imaging is a promising method for tumor identification and management. Here, a NIR-II thiopyrylium salt, XB1034, was first synthesized and bound to cetuximab and trans-cyclooctene (TCO) to produce XB1034-cetuximab-TCO. This probe provides excellent sensitivity and high temporal resolution NIR-II imaging in mice bearing tumors developed from human breast cancer cells MDA-MB-231. To enable PET imaging, 68 Ga-NETA-tetrazine is subsequently injected into the mice to undergo a bio-orthogonal reaction with the preinjected XB1034-cetuximab-TCO. PET images achieved in the tumor models using the pretargeting strategy are of much higher quality than those obtained using the direct radiolabeling method. Moreover, real-time NIR-II imaging allows accurate tumor excision and sentinel lymph node mapping. In conclusion, XB1034 is a promising molecular imaging probe for tumor diagnosis and treatment.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- pet imaging
- fluorescence imaging
- pet ct
- photodynamic therapy
- computed tomography
- chronic kidney disease
- end stage renal disease
- squamous cell carcinoma
- fluorescent probe
- lymph node
- endothelial cells
- metabolic syndrome
- ejection fraction
- mass spectrometry
- living cells
- single molecule
- adipose tissue
- insulin resistance
- cell proliferation
- deep learning
- positron emission tomography
- atrial fibrillation
- convolutional neural network
- rectal cancer
- prognostic factors
- high fat diet induced