Quantitative whole body biodistribution of fluorescent-labeled agents by non-invasive tomographic imaging.

When small molecules or proteins are injected into live animals, their physical and chemical properties will significantly affect pharmacokinetics, tissue penetration, and the ultimate routes of metabolism and clearance. Fluorescence molecular tomography (FMT) offers the ability to non-invasively im...

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Main Authors: Kristine O Vasquez, Chelsea Casavant, Jeffrey D Peterson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3120766?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f7b7a6cfcbf44f92be94ab12b175fd0f2020-11-25T01:17:58ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0166e2059410.1371/journal.pone.0020594Quantitative whole body biodistribution of fluorescent-labeled agents by non-invasive tomographic imaging.Kristine O VasquezChelsea CasavantJeffrey D PetersonWhen small molecules or proteins are injected into live animals, their physical and chemical properties will significantly affect pharmacokinetics, tissue penetration, and the ultimate routes of metabolism and clearance. Fluorescence molecular tomography (FMT) offers the ability to non-invasively image and quantify temporal changes in fluorescence throughout the major organ systems of living animals, in a manner analogous to traditional approaches with radiolabeled agents. This approach is best used with biotherapeutics (therapeutic antibodies, or other large proteins) or large-scaffold drug-delivery vectors, that are minimally affected by low-level fluorophore conjugation. Application to small molecule drugs should take into account the significant impact of fluorophore labeling on size and physicochemical properties, however, the presents studies show that this technique is readily applied to small molecule agents developed for far-red (FR) or near infrared (NIR) imaging. Quantification by non-invasive FMT correlated well with both fluorescence from tissue homogenates as well as with planar (2D) fluorescence reflectance imaging of excised intact organs (r²  =  0.996 and 0.969, respectively). Dynamic FMT imaging (multiple times from 0 to 24 h) performed in live mice after the injection of four different FR/NIR-labeled agents, including immunoglobulin, 20-50 nm nanoparticles, a large vascular imaging agent, and a small molecule integrin antagonist, showed clear differences in the percentage of injected dose per gram of tissue (%ID/g) in liver, kidney, and bladder signal. Nanoparticles and IgG1 favored liver over kidney signal, the small molecule integrin-binding agent favored rapid kidney and bladder clearance, and the vascular agent, showed both liver and kidney clearance. Further assessment of the volume of distribution of these agents by fluorescent volume added information regarding their biodistribution and highlighted the relatively poor extravasation into tissue by IgG1. These studies demonstrate the ability of quantitative FMT imaging of FR/NIR agents to non-invasively visualize and quantify the biodistribution of different agents over time.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3120766?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kristine O Vasquez
Chelsea Casavant
Jeffrey D Peterson
spellingShingle Kristine O Vasquez
Chelsea Casavant
Jeffrey D Peterson
Quantitative whole body biodistribution of fluorescent-labeled agents by non-invasive tomographic imaging.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Kristine O Vasquez
Chelsea Casavant
Jeffrey D Peterson
author_sort Kristine O Vasquez
title Quantitative whole body biodistribution of fluorescent-labeled agents by non-invasive tomographic imaging.
title_short Quantitative whole body biodistribution of fluorescent-labeled agents by non-invasive tomographic imaging.
title_full Quantitative whole body biodistribution of fluorescent-labeled agents by non-invasive tomographic imaging.
title_fullStr Quantitative whole body biodistribution of fluorescent-labeled agents by non-invasive tomographic imaging.
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative whole body biodistribution of fluorescent-labeled agents by non-invasive tomographic imaging.
title_sort quantitative whole body biodistribution of fluorescent-labeled agents by non-invasive tomographic imaging.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description When small molecules or proteins are injected into live animals, their physical and chemical properties will significantly affect pharmacokinetics, tissue penetration, and the ultimate routes of metabolism and clearance. Fluorescence molecular tomography (FMT) offers the ability to non-invasively image and quantify temporal changes in fluorescence throughout the major organ systems of living animals, in a manner analogous to traditional approaches with radiolabeled agents. This approach is best used with biotherapeutics (therapeutic antibodies, or other large proteins) or large-scaffold drug-delivery vectors, that are minimally affected by low-level fluorophore conjugation. Application to small molecule drugs should take into account the significant impact of fluorophore labeling on size and physicochemical properties, however, the presents studies show that this technique is readily applied to small molecule agents developed for far-red (FR) or near infrared (NIR) imaging. Quantification by non-invasive FMT correlated well with both fluorescence from tissue homogenates as well as with planar (2D) fluorescence reflectance imaging of excised intact organs (r²  =  0.996 and 0.969, respectively). Dynamic FMT imaging (multiple times from 0 to 24 h) performed in live mice after the injection of four different FR/NIR-labeled agents, including immunoglobulin, 20-50 nm nanoparticles, a large vascular imaging agent, and a small molecule integrin antagonist, showed clear differences in the percentage of injected dose per gram of tissue (%ID/g) in liver, kidney, and bladder signal. Nanoparticles and IgG1 favored liver over kidney signal, the small molecule integrin-binding agent favored rapid kidney and bladder clearance, and the vascular agent, showed both liver and kidney clearance. Further assessment of the volume of distribution of these agents by fluorescent volume added information regarding their biodistribution and highlighted the relatively poor extravasation into tissue by IgG1. These studies demonstrate the ability of quantitative FMT imaging of FR/NIR agents to non-invasively visualize and quantify the biodistribution of different agents over time.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3120766?pdf=render
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