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Development and evaluation of 18F-TTCO-Cys40-Exendin-4: a PET probe for imaging transplanted islets.

J Nucl Med · 2013

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers developed a new imaging tool, (18)F-TTCO-Cys40-Exendin-4, to track transplanted islet cells in people with type 1 diabetes. In tests on mice, the tool specifically bound to islet cells and showed lower kidney uptake than other similar tools. The imaging results matched the actual number of transplanted islet cells, suggesting it could help monitor islet transplants over time.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Nucl Med, 2013
Citations85
Relative citation ratio3.12
NIH percentile85
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Because islet transplantation has become a promising treatment option for patients with type 1 diabetes, a noninvasive imaging method is greatly needed to monitor these islets over time. Here, we developed an (18)F-labeled exendin-4 in high specific activity for islet imaging by targeting the glucagonlike peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R). METHODS: Tetrazine ligation was used to radiolabel exendin-4 with (18)F. The receptor binding of (19/18)F-tetrazine trans-cyclooctene (TTCO)-Cys(40)-exendin-4 was evaluated in vitro with INS-1 cell and in vivo on INS-1 tumor (GLP-1R positive) and islet transplantation models. RESULTS: (18)F-TTCO-Cys(40)-exendin-4 was obtained in high specific activity and could specifically bind to GLP-1R in vitro and in vivo. Unlike the radiometal-labeled exendin-4, (18)F-TTCO-Cys(40)-exendin-4 has much lower kidney uptake. (18)F-TTCO-Cys(40)-exendin-4 demonstrated its great potential for transplanted islet imaging: the liver uptake value derived from small-animal PET images correlated well with the transplanted β-cell mass determined by immunostaining. Autoradiography showed that the localizations of radioactive signal indeed corresponded to the distribution of islet grafts in the liver of islet-transplanted mice. CONCLUSION: (18)F-TTCO-Cys(40)-exendin-4 demonstrated specific binding to GLP-1R. This PET probe provides a method to noninvasively image intraportally transplanted islets.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 23297075 ↗