Peptidomimetic growth hormone secretagogue derivatives for positron emission tomography imaging of the ghrelin receptor.

Fowkes MM., Lalonde T., Yu L., Dhanvantari S., Kovacs MS., Luyt LG.

The ghrelin receptor is a seven-transmembrane (7-TM) receptor known to have an increased level of expression in human carcinoma and heart failure. Recent work has focused on the synthesis of positron emission tomography (PET) probes designed to target and image this receptor for disease diagnosis and staging. However, these probes have been restricted to small-molecule quinalizonones and peptide derivatives of the endogenous ligand ghrelin. We describe the design, synthesis and biological evaluation of a series of 4-fluorobenzoylated growth hormone secretagogues (GHSs) derived from peptidic (GHRP-1, GHPR-2 and GHRP-6) and peptidomimetic (G-7039, [1-Nal4]G-7039 and ipamorelin) families in order to test locations for the insertion of fluorine-18 for PET imaging. The peptidomimetic G-7039 was found to be the most suitable for 18F-radiolabelling as its non-radioactive 4-fluorobenzoylated analogue ([1-Nal4,Lys5(4-FB)]G-7039), had both a high binding affinity (IC50 = 69 nM) and promising in vitro efficacy (EC50 = 1.1 nM). Prosthetic group radiolabelling of the precursor compound [1-Nal4]G-7039 using N-succinimidyl-4-[18F]fluorobenzoate ([18F]SFB) delivered the PET probe [1-Nal4,Lys5(4-[18F]-FB)]G-7039 in an average decay-corrected radiochemical yield of 48%, a radio-purity ≥ 99% and an average molar activity of >34 GBq/μmol. This compound could be investigated as a PET probe for the detection of diseases that are characterised by overexpression of the ghrelin receptor.

DOI

10.1016/j.ejmech.2018.08.062

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2018-09-05T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

157

Pages

1500 - 1511

Total pages

11

Keywords

(18)F-radiochemistry, Ghrelin receptor, Growth hormone secretagogues, Peptidomimetics, Positron emission tomography, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Drug Design, Growth Hormone, HEK293 Cells, Humans, Molecular Structure, Peptidomimetics, Positron-Emission Tomography, Receptors, Ghrelin, Structure-Activity Relationship

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