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An activatable PET imaging radioprobe is a dynamic reporter of myeloperoxidase activity in vivo.

Cuihua WangEdmund KeliherMatthias W G ZellerGregory R WojtkiewiczAaron D AguirreLeonard BuckbinderHye-Yeong KimJianqing ChenKevin MarescaMaaz S AhmedNegin Jalali MotlaghMatthias NahrendorfJohn W Chen
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2019)
Myeloperoxidase (MPO) is a critical proinflammatory enzyme implicated in cardiovascular, neurological, and rheumatological diseases. Emerging therapies targeting inflammation have raised interest in tracking MPO activity in patients. We describe 18F-MAPP, an activatable MPO activity radioprobe for positron emission tomography (PET) imaging. The activated radioprobe binds to proteins and accumulates at sites of MPO activity. The radioprobe 18F-MAPP has a short blood half-life, remains stable in plasma, does not demonstrate cytotoxicity, and crosses the intact blood-brain barrier. The 18F-MAPP imaging detected sites of elevated MPO activity in living mice embedded with human MPO and in mice induced with chemical inflammation or myocardial infarction. The 18F-MAPP PET imaging noninvasively differentiated varying amounts of MPO activity, competitive inhibition, and MPO deficiency in living animals, confirming specificity and showing that the radioprobe can quantify changes in in vivo MPO activity. The radiosynthesis has been optimized and automated, an important step in translation. These data indicate that 18F-MAPP is a promising translational candidate to noninvasively monitor MPO activity and inflammation in patients.
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