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Synthesis and preclinical characterization of [64Cu]NODAGA-MAL-exendin-4 with a Nε-maleoyl-L-lysyl-glycine linkage.

Nucl Med Biol · 2013

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers tested a modified version of a radioactive exendin-4 peptide, called [(64)Cu]NODAGA-MAL-exendin-4, to see if it would reduce radioactivity in the kidneys of rats compared to the standard version. The new version was successfully created and showed high stability in lab tests, but both versions resulted in high kidney radioactivity levels in the rats. The study concludes that the modification did not achieve its goal and more research is needed.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNucl Med Biol, 2013
Citations24
Relative citation ratio0.93
NIH percentile48
Molecules

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Renal localization of high radioactivity levels during targeted imaging compromises tissue visualization in the kidney region and limits diagnostic accuracy. Radioiodinated antibody fragments with a renal enzyme-cleavable N(ε)-maleoyl-L-lysyl-glycine (MAL) linkage demonstrated low renal radioactivity levels in mice, from early postinjection times. This study tested the hypothesis whether a (64)Cu-labeled NODAGA-exendin-4 peptide with a MAL linkage ([(64)Cu]NODAGA-MAL-exendin-4) could decrease kidney radioactivity levels in rats, compared to a [(64)Cu]NODAGA-exendin-4 reference, without impairing the radioactivity levels in the target tissue. METHODS: NODAGA-MAL-exendin-4 was synthesized in a two-phase approach using solid support to prepare maleoyl-derivatized NODAGA followed by Michael addition to cysteine-derivatized exendin-4 in solution. Radiolabeling was performed in buffered aqua with [(64)Cu]CuCl2, which was produced via the (64)Ni(p,n)(64)Cu nuclear reaction. The in vitro and in vivo stability, lipophilicity, and distribution kinetics in major rat organs for [(64)Cu]NODAGA-MAL-exendin-4 were studied and compared to [(64)Cu]NODAGA-exendin-4. Labeling of pancreatic islets was assessed using autoradiography. RESULTS: NODAGA-MAL-exendin-4 was synthesized, with an overall yield of 9%, and radiolabeled with (64)Cu with high specific radioactivity. Serum incubation studies showed high stability for [(64)Cu]NODAGA-MAL-exendin-4. Similar tissue distribution kinetics was observed for [(64)Cu]NODAGA-MAL-exendin-4 and [(64)Cu]NODAGA-exendin-4, with high kidney radioactivity levels. CONCLUSIONS: The incorporated MAL linkage in [(64)Cu]NODAGA-MAL-exendin-4 was unable to reduce kidney radioactivity levels, compared to [(64)Cu]NODAGA-exendin-4. The applicability of metabolizable linkages in the design of kidney-saving exendin-4 analogs requires further investigation.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 23932646 ↗