Natarajan Arutselvan, Türkcan Silvan, Gambhir Sanjiv S, Pratx Guillem
Department of Radiology, Stanford University School of Medicine , 318 Campus Drive, Stanford, California 94305-5427, United States.
Department of Radiation Oncology, Stanford University School of Medicine 1050 Arastradero Rd, Palo Alto, California 94304-5591, United States.
Mol Pharm. 2015 Dec 7;12(12):4554-60. doi: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.5b00392. Epub 2015 Nov 5.
The resistance of a tumor to a drug is the result of bulk properties of the tumor tissue as well as phenotypic variations displayed by single cells. Here, we show that radioisotopic detection methods, commonly used for tracking the tissue distribution of drug compounds, can be extended to the single-cell level to image the same molecule over a range of physical scales. The anticancer drug rituximab was labeled with short-lived radionuclides ((89)Zr/(64)Cu) and its accumulation at the organ level was imaged using PET in a humanized transgenic mouse model of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. To capture the distribution of the drug at a finer scale, tissue sections and single living cells were imaged using radioluminescence microscopy (RLM), a novel method that can detect radionuclides with single-cell resolution. In vivo PET images (24 h postinjection) showed that [(89)Zr]rituximab targeted the intended site of human CD20 expression, the spleen. Within this organ, RLM was used to resolve radiotracer accumulation in the splenic red pulp. In a separate study, RLM highlighted marked differences between single cells, with binding of the radiolabeled antibody ranging from background levels to 1200 radionuclides per cell. Overall, RLM images demonstrated significantly higher spatial resolution and sensitivity than conventional storage-phosphor autoradiography. In conclusion, this combination of PET and RLM provides a unique opportunity for exploring the molecular mechanism of drugs by tracking the same molecule over multiple physical scales, ranging from single living cells to organs substructures and entire living subjects.
肿瘤对药物的抗性是肿瘤组织整体特性以及单个细胞所表现出的表型变异的结果。在此,我们表明,常用于追踪药物化合物组织分布的放射性同位素检测方法可扩展至单细胞水平,以便在一系列物理尺度上对同一分子进行成像。抗癌药物利妥昔单抗用短寿命放射性核素((89)Zr/(64)Cu)进行标记,并在非霍奇金淋巴瘤的人源化转基因小鼠模型中使用正电子发射断层扫描(PET)对其在器官水平的蓄积情况进行成像。为了在更精细的尺度上捕捉药物的分布,使用放射发光显微镜(RLM)对组织切片和单个活细胞进行成像,RLM是一种能够以单细胞分辨率检测放射性核素的新方法。体内PET图像(注射后24小时)显示,[(89)Zr]利妥昔单抗靶向人CD20表达的预期部位——脾脏。在该器官内,RLM用于分辨放射性示踪剂在脾红髓中的蓄积情况。在另一项研究中,RLM突出显示了单个细胞之间的显著差异,放射性标记抗体的结合量从背景水平到每个细胞1200个放射性核素不等。总体而言,RLM图像显示出比传统的磷屏放射自显影更高的空间分辨率和灵敏度。总之,PET和RLM的这种结合为通过在从单个活细胞到器官亚结构及整个活体受试者的多个物理尺度上追踪同一分子来探索药物的分子机制提供了独特的机会。