GLPwatch

(64)Cu labeled sarcophagine exendin-4 for microPET imaging of glucagon like peptide-1 receptor expression.

Theranostics · 2014

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers created two imaging probes using a stable version of GLP-1 (exendin-4) to target GLP-1 receptors, which are found in pancreatic tumors and other tissues. One probe used a single exendin-4 unit, while the other used two linked units, with the latter showing about three times stronger binding in lab tests. When tested in mice with pancreatic tumors, the two-unit probe showed significantly higher uptake in the tumors, and both probes clearly highlighted the tumors in imaging scans.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalTheranostics, 2014
Citations29
Relative citation ratio1.23
NIH percentile58
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

The Glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor (GLP-1R) has become an important target for imaging due to its elevated expression profile in pancreatic islets, insulinoma, and the cardiovascular system. Because native GLP-1 is degraded rapidly by dipeptidyl peptidase-IV (DPP-IV), several studies have conjugated different chelators to a more stable analog of GLP-1 (such as exendin-4) as PET or SPECT imaging agents with various advantages and disadvantages. Based on the recently developed Sarcophagin chelator, here, we describe the construction of GLP-1R targeted PET probes containing monomeric and dimeric exendin-4 subunit. The in vitro binding affinity of BarMalSar-exendin-4 and Mal2Sar-(exendin-4)2 was evaluated in INS-1 cells, which over-express GLP-1R. Mal2Sar-(exendin-4)2 demonstrated around 3 times higher binding affinity compared with BaMalSar-exendin-4. After (64)Cu labeling, microPET imaging of (64)Cu-BaMalSar-exendin-4 and (64)Cu-Mal2Sar-(exendin-4)2 were performed on subcutaneous INS-1 tumors, which were clearly visualized with both probes. The tumor uptake of (64)Cu-Mal2Sar-(exendin-4)2 was significantly higher than that of (64)Cu-BaMaSarl-exendin-4, which could be caused by polyvalency effect. The receptor specificity of these probes was confirmed by effective blocking of the uptake in both tumor and normal positive organs with 20-fold excess of unlabeled exendin-4. In conclusion, sarcophagine cage conjugated exendin-4 demonstrated persistent and specific uptake in INS-1 insulinoma model. Dimerization of exendin-4 could successfully lead to increased tumor uptake in vivo. Both (64)Cu-BaMalSar-exendin-4 and (64)Cu-Mal2Sar-(exendin-4)2 hold a great potential for GLP-1R targeted imaging.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 24955138 ↗