Korf J, Veenma-van der Duin L, Brinkman-Medema R, Niemarkt A, de Leij L F
Department of Biological Psychiatry, Groningen School of Behaviour and Cognitive Neurosciences, The Netherlands.
J Nucl Med. 1998 May;39(5):836-41.
PET and SPECT allow the study of the distribution of lymphocytes in living humans, provided that these cells are adequately prelabeled ex vivo. Such a labeling technique should not only be nontoxic to lymphocytes but it also should take into consideration that their kinetics are such that radioactivity must be followed for at least 24 hr. We describe the potential of divalent cobalt isotopes (55Co2+, half-life 17.5 hr for PET; 57Co2+, half-life 270 days for SPECT) for labeling lymphocytes.
Isolated rat lymphocytes were incubated with 57CoCl2 with or without unlabeled CoCl2 or CaCl2 carrier or other compounds. In some experiments, the accumulation of radioactive cobalt and calcium in lymphocytes was determined in the presence of phorbol myristate acetate alone, calcimycine alone or in combination. The toxicity of cobalt to lymphocytes was assessed with the trypan blue exclusion test and by assessing their proliferative capacity using radioactive thymidine incorporation as a readout. Biodistribution of cobalt-labeled lymphocytes was determined with postmortem analysis and compared with that of the free (nonlymphocyte-bound) tracer.
At high concentrations (more than 100 x necessary for adequate labeling), cobalt was not cytotoxic. Incubation of labeled lymphocytes in tissue culture medium for 24 hr in vitro showed a loss of less than half of the incorporated cobalt radioactivity. Twenty-four hours after in vitro labeling of lymphocytes and intravenous injection, radioactivity accumulated not only in the liver, kidney and bladder of the rat but in the spleen and lungs, which differed from the distribution of the free tracer. Uptake and binding to rat lymphocytes of Co2+ partly mimicked that of Ca2+. The binding of cobalt, however, was stronger and nonsaturable.
These results warrant further exploration of cobalt as a PET or SPECT label of human lymphocytes.
正电子发射断层扫描(PET)和单光子发射计算机断层扫描(SPECT)能够对活体人类体内淋巴细胞的分布进行研究,前提是这些细胞在体外已被充分预标记。这样一种标记技术不仅应对淋巴细胞无毒,还应考虑到其动力学特性,即放射性必须至少追踪24小时。我们描述了二价钴同位素(55Co2 +,PET半衰期为17.5小时;57Co2 +,SPECT半衰期为270天)标记淋巴细胞的潜力。
将分离的大鼠淋巴细胞与57CoCl2一起孵育,添加或不添加未标记的CoCl2或CaCl2载体或其他化合物。在一些实验中,单独使用佛波酯肉豆蔻酸酯、单独使用钙霉素或两者联合使用的情况下,测定淋巴细胞中放射性钴和钙的积累情况。通过台盼蓝排斥试验评估钴对淋巴细胞的毒性,并使用放射性胸苷掺入作为读数评估其增殖能力。通过死后分析确定钴标记淋巴细胞的生物分布,并与游离(非淋巴细胞结合)示踪剂的生物分布进行比较。
在高浓度(超过充分标记所需浓度的100倍以上)下,钴没有细胞毒性。标记的淋巴细胞在组织培养基中体外孵育24小时后,掺入的钴放射性损失不到一半。淋巴细胞体外标记并静脉注射24小时后,放射性不仅在大鼠的肝脏、肾脏和膀胱中积累,还在脾脏和肺部积累,这与游离示踪剂的分布不同。Co2 +对大鼠淋巴细胞的摄取和结合部分模拟了Ca2 +的情况。然而,钴的结合更强且不饱和。
这些结果值得进一步探索钴作为人类淋巴细胞PET或SPECT标记物的可能性。