Publication | Open Access
Noninvasive Imaging of Cell Death Using an Hsp90 Ligand
61
Citations
20
References
2011
Year
EngineeringApoptosisCell DeathCancer BiologyCell Death MechanismsTumor BiologyImage Cell DeathCancer Cell BiologyHsp90 LigandTherapeutic ImagingRadiation OncologyMolecular ImagingNuclear MedicineBiochemistryPlasma Membrane IntegrityCell BiologyBiomedical ImagingCellular BiochemistryMedicine
Cell death plays a central role in normal physiology and in disease. Common to apoptotic and necrotic cell death is the eventual loss of plasma membrane integrity. We have produced a small organoarsenical compound, 4-(N-(S-glutathionylacetyl)amino)phenylarsonous acid, that rapidly accumulates in the cytosol of dying cells coincident with loss of plasma membrane integrity. The compound is retained in the cytosol predominantly by covalent reaction with the 90 kDa heat shock protein (Hsp90), the most abundant molecular chaperone of the eukaryotic cytoplasm. The organoarsenical was tagged with either optical or radioisotope reporting groups to image cell death in cultured cells and in murine tumors ex vivo and in situ. Tumor cell death in mice was noninvasively imaged by SPECT/CT using an (111)In-tagged compound. This versatile compound should enable the imaging of cell death in most experimental settings.
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