Publication | Closed Access
Development of Candidates for Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Imaging of Ghrelin Receptor in Disease: Design, Synthesis, and Evaluation of Fluorine-Bearing Quinazolinone Derivatives
22
Citations
25
References
2018
Year
Molecular imaging with positron emission tomography (PET) is an attractive platform for noninvasive detection and assessment of disease. The development of a PET imaging agent targeting the ghrelin receptor (growth hormone secretagogue receptor type 1a or GHS-R1a) has the potential to lead to the detection and assessment of the higher than normal expression of GHS-R1a in diseases such as prostate, breast, and ovarian cancer. To enable the development of <sup>18</sup>F radiopharmaceuticals, we have designed and synthesized three series of quinazolinone derivatives, resulting in the identification of two compound (5i, 17) with subnanomolar binding affinity and one fluorine-bearing compound (10b) with picomolar binding affinity (20 pM), representing the highest binding affinity for GHS-R1a reported to date. Two lead compounds (5b, IC<sub>50</sub> = 20.6 nM; 5e, IC<sub>50</sub> = 9.3 nM) were successfully <sup>18</sup>F-radiolabeled with radiochemical purity of greater than 99%. Molecular modeling studies were performed to shed light on ligand-receptor interactions.
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