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Radiolabeling and in vivo evaluation of lanmodulin with biomedically relevant lanthanide isotopes.

Kirsten E MartinJoseph A MattocksDariusz ŚmiłowiczEduardo Aluicio-SarduyJennifer N WhetterJonathan W EngleJoseph A CotruvoEszter Boros
Published in: RSC chemical biology (2023)
Short-lived, radioactive lanthanides comprise an emerging class of radioisotopes attractive for biomedical imaging and therapy applications. To deliver such isotopes to target tissues, they must be appended to entities that target antigens overexpressed on the target cell's surface. However, the thermally sensitive nature of biomolecule-derived targeting vectors requires the incorporation of these isotopes without the use of denaturing temperatures or extreme pH conditions; chelating systems that can capture large radioisotopes under mild conditions are therefore highly desirable. Herein, we demonstrate the successful radiolabeling of the lanthanide-binding protein, lanmodulin (LanM), with medicinally relevant radioisotopes: 177 Lu, 132/135 La and 89 Zr. Radiolabeling of the endogenous metal-binding sites of LanM, as well exogenous labeling of a protein-appended chelator, was successfully conducted at 25 °C and pH 7 with radiochemical yields ranging from 20-82%. The corresponding radiolabeled constructs possess good formulation stability in pH 7 MOPS buffer over 24 hours (>98%) in the presence of 2 equivalents of nat La carrier. In vivo experiments with [ 177 Lu]-LanM, [ 132/135 La]-LanM, and a prostate cancer targeting-vector linked conjugate, [ 132/135 La]-LanM-PSMA, reveal that endogenously labeled constructs produce bone uptake in vivo . Exogenous, chelator-tag mediated radiolabeling to produce [ 89 Zr]-DFO-LanM enables further study of the protein's in vivo behavior, demonstrating low bone and liver uptake, and renal clearance of the protein itself. While these results indicate that additional stabilization of LanM is required, this study establishes precedence for the radiochemical labeling of LanM with medically relevant lanthanide radioisotopes.
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