4.5 Article

Optical imaging of apoptosis as a biomarker of tumor response to chemotherapy

Journal

NEOPLASIA
Volume 5, Issue 3, Pages 187-192

Publisher

NEOPLASIA PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/S1476-5586(03)80050-7

Keywords

annexin V; optical imaging; apoptosis; tumor; chemotherapy

Categories

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [P50CA86355, R24 CA92782, R01 CA086782, R33 CA091807, R21 CA091807, R01CA86782, P50 CA086355, CA91807, R24 CA092782] Funding Source: Medline

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A rapid and accurate assessment of the antitumor efficacy of new therapeutic drugs could speed up drug discovery and improve clinical decision making. Based on the hypothesis that most effective antitumor agents induce apoptosis, we developed a near-infrared fluorescent (NIRF) annexin V to be used for optical sensing of tumor environments. To demonstrate probe specificity, we developed both an active (i.e., apoptosis-recognizing) and an inactive form of annexin V with very similar properties (to account for nonspecific tumor accumulation), and tested the agents in nude mice each bearing a cyclophosphamide (CPA) chemosensitive (LLC) and a chemoresistant LLC (CR-LLC). After injection with active annexin V, the tumor-annexin V ratio (TAR; tumor NIRF/background NIRF) for untreated mice was 1.22 +/- 0.34 for LLC and 1.43 +/- 0.53 for CR-LLC (n = 4). The LLC of CPA-treated mice had significant elevations of TAR (2.56 +/- 0.29, P = .001, n = 4), but only a moderate increase was obtained for the CR-LLC (TAR = 1.89 +/- 0.19, P = .183). The in vivo measurements correlated well with terminal deoxyribosyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling indexes. When inactive Cy-annexin V was used, with or without CPA treatment and in both CCL and CR-CCL tumors, tumor NIRF values ranged from 0.91 to 1.17 (i.e., tumor were equal to background). We conclude that active Cy-annexin V and surface reflectance fluorescence imaging provide a nonradioactive, semiquantitative method of determining chemosensitivity in LLC xenografts. The method maybe used to image pharmacologic responses in other animal models and, potentially, may permit the clinical imaging of apoptosis with non-invasive or minimally invasive instrumentation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available