Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Towards the stable chelation of radium for biomedical applications with an 18-membered macrocyclic ligand

82

Citations

43

References

2021

Year

Abstract

Targeted alpha therapy is an emerging strategy for the treatment of disseminated cancer. [<sup>223</sup>Ra]RaCl<sub>2</sub> is the only clinically approved alpha particle-emitting drug, and it is used to treat castrate-resistant prostate cancer bone metastases, to which [<sup>223</sup>Ra]Ra<sup>2+</sup> localizes. To specifically direct [<sup>223</sup>Ra]Ra<sup>2+</sup> to non-osseous disease sites, chelation and conjugation to a cancer-targeting moiety is necessary. Although previous efforts to stably chelate [<sup>223</sup>Ra]Ra<sup>2+</sup> for this purpose have had limited success, here we report a biologically stable radiocomplex with the 18-membered macrocyclic chelator macropa. Quantitative labeling of macropa with [<sup>223</sup>Ra]Ra<sup>2+</sup> was accomplished within 5 min at room temperature with a radiolabeling efficiency of >95%, representing a significant advancement over conventional chelators such as DOTA and EDTA, which were unable to completely complex [<sup>223</sup>Ra]Ra<sup>2+</sup> under these conditions. [<sup>223</sup>Ra][Ra(macropa)] was highly stable in human serum and exhibited dramatically reduced bone and spleen uptake in mice in comparison to bone-targeted [<sup>223</sup>Ra]RaCl<sub>2</sub>, signifying that [<sup>223</sup>Ra][Ra(macropa)] remains intact <i>in vivo</i>. Upon conjugation of macropa to a single amino acid β-alanine as well as to the prostate-specific membrane antigen-targeting peptide DUPA, both constructs retained high affinity for <sup>223</sup>Ra, complexing >95% of Ra<sup>2+</sup> in solution. Furthermore, [<sup>223</sup>Ra][Ra(macropa-β-alanine)] was rapidly cleared from mice and showed low <sup>223</sup>Ra bone absorption, indicating that this conjugate is stable under biological conditions. Unexpectedly, this stability was lost upon conjugation of macropa to DUPA, which suggests a role of targeting vectors in complex stability <i>in vivo</i> for this system. Nonetheless, our successful demonstration of efficient radiolabeling of the β-alanine conjugate with <sup>223</sup>Ra and its subsequent stability <i>in vivo</i> establishes for the first time the possibility of delivering [<sup>223</sup>Ra]Ra<sup>2+</sup> to metastases outside of the bone using functionalized chelators, marking a significant expansion of the therapeutic utility of this radiometal in the clinic.

References

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