4.7 Article

Two-Chain Mature Hepatocyte Growth Factor-Specific Positron Emission Tomography Imaging in Tumors Using 64Cu-Labeled HiP-8, a Nonstandard Macrocyclic Peptide Probe

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 20, Issue 4, Pages 2029-2038

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.2c01020

Keywords

two-chain hepatocyte growth factor; positron emission tomography; nonstandard macrocyclic peptides; cancer molecular imaging; Cu-64

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In this study, Cu-64-labeled HiP-8 molecules were synthesized and used as PET probes in human HGF knock-in humanized mice. The results showed that Cu-64-labeled HiP-8 probes are suitable for tcHGF imaging in vivo, and secretory proteins like tcHGF can be a target for PET imaging.
Two-chain hepatocyte growth factor (tcHGF), the mature form of HGF, is associated with malignancy and anticancer drug resistance; therefore, its quantification is an important indicator for cancer diagnosis. In tumors, activated tcHGF hardly discharges into the systemic circulation, indicating that tcHGF is an excellent target for molecular imaging using positron emission tomography (PET). We recently discovered HGF-inhibitory peptide-8 (HiP-8) that binds specifically to human tcHGF with nanomolar affinity. The purpose of this study was to investigate the usefulness of HiP-8-based PET probes in human HGF knock-in humanized mice. Cu-64-labeled HiP-8 molecules were synthesized using a cross-bridged cyclam chelator, CB-TE1K1P. Radio-high-performance liquid chromatography-based metabolic stability analyses showed that more than 90% of the probes existed in intact form in blood at least for 15 min. In PET studies, significantly selective visualization of hHGF-overexpressing tumors versus hHGF-negative tumors was observed in double-tumor-bearing mice. The accumulation of labeled HiP-8 into the hHGF-overexpressing tumors was significantly reduced by competitive inhibition. In addition, the radioactivity and distribution of phosphorylated MET/HGF receptor were colocalized in tissues. These results demonstrate that the Cu-64-labeled HiP-8 probes are suitable for tcHGF imaging in vivo, and secretory proteins like tcHGF can be a target for PET imaging.

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