Ya Zhou, Jiangxian Chen, Yang Zhou, Yi Liu, Xingyue Yang, Xiaoxiao Wang, Wanyi Chen, Weiping Xu, Hui Cai, Jiaguo Huang
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Renal-Clearable Molecular Reporters for Near-Infrared Fluorescence Imaging and Urinalysis of Pulmonary Metastatic Tumor
Despite approximately 40% of all patients with cancer developing pulmonary metastases in the course of their disease, it remains a diagnostic challenge in clinical practice. Herein, we propose a fluorogenic probe (CPRG) with gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT)-triggered signal turn-on for near-infrared fluorescence imaging (NIRF) and urinalysis of orthotopic pulmonary metastatic tumors in living mice. CPRG comprised four key moieties: a GGT-reactive moiety, a hemicyanine-based signal unit, a polyethylene glycol linker, and an active tumor targeting moiety. Such a tailored probe is intrinsically nonfluorescent and only activates its NIRF signals in the presence of GGT. After intratracheal administration into the lungs of living tumor-bearing mice, CPRG can efficiently accumulate in the pulmonary tumors and sensitively turn-on the NIRF signal for real-time imaging. Relying on the high renal clearance efficiency (∼70% ID), it can be rapidly excreted through kidneys for urinalysis and assessed by the chemotherapeutic efficacy of cisplatin. This study not only reports fluorogenic tracers for imaging of pulmonary metastatic tumors but also provides guidelines for the development of molecular probes for companion diagnosis of metastatic cancer.
期刊介绍:
Analytical Chemistry, a peer-reviewed research journal, focuses on disseminating new and original knowledge across all branches of analytical chemistry. Fundamental articles may explore general principles of chemical measurement science and need not directly address existing or potential analytical methodology. They can be entirely theoretical or report experimental results. Contributions may cover various phases of analytical operations, including sampling, bioanalysis, electrochemistry, mass spectrometry, microscale and nanoscale systems, environmental analysis, separations, spectroscopy, chemical reactions and selectivity, instrumentation, imaging, surface analysis, and data processing. Papers discussing known analytical methods should present a significant, original application of the method, a notable improvement, or results on an important analyte.