Synthesis of L-[5-11 C]Leucine and L-α-[5-11 C]Methylleucine via Pd0 -mediated 11 C-Methylation and Microfluidic Hydrogenation: Potentiality of Leucine PET Probes for Tumor Imaging.
Shuhei TakataniTsuyoshi TaharaMieko TsujiDaiki OzakiNina ShibataYoshinobu HashizumeMasaaki SuzukiHirotaka OnoeYasuyoshi WatanabeHisashi DoiPublished in: ChemMedChem (2021)
The efficient synthesis of L-[5-11 C]leucine and L-α-[5-11 C]methylleucine has been investigated using a continuous two-step sequence of rapid reactions consisting of Pd0 -mediated 11 C-methylation and microfluidic hydrogenation. The synthesis of L-[5-11 C]leucine and L-α-[5-11 C]methylleucine was accomplished within 40 min with a decay-corrected radiochemical yield of 15-38 % based on [11 C]CH3 I, radiochemical purity of 95-99 %, and chemical purity of 95-99 %. The Pd impurities in the injectable solution measured using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry met the international criteria for human use. Positron emission tomography scanning after an intravenous injection of L-[5-11 C]leucine or L-α-[5-11 C]methyl leucine in A431 tumor-bearing mice was performed. As a result, L-α-[5-11 C]methylleucine was found to be a potentially useful probe for visualizing the tumor. Tissue distribution analysis showed that the accumulation value of L-α-[5-11 C]methylleucine in tumor tissue was high [12±3% injected dose/g tissue (%ID/g)].
Keyphrases
- positron emission tomography
- computed tomography
- mass spectrometry
- high resolution
- endothelial cells
- pet ct
- single cell
- high throughput
- genome wide
- circulating tumor cells
- small molecule
- skeletal muscle
- adipose tissue
- ms ms
- ultrasound guided
- single molecule
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- data analysis
- simultaneous determination