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Title: Synthesis and biological evaluation of [11C]MK-912 as an alpha2-adrenergic receptor radioligand for PET studies. Author: Shiue C, Pleus RC, Shiue GG, Rysavy JA, Sunderland JJ, Cornish KG, Young SD, Bylund DB. Journal: Nucl Med Biol; 1998 Feb; 25(2):127-33. PubMed ID: 9468027. Abstract: In vitro studies showed that MK-912 ((2S, 12bS)1',3'-dimethylspiro(1,3,4,5',6,6',7,12b-octahydro -2H-benzo[b]furo[2,3-a]quinolizine)-2,4'-pyrimidin-2'-one) is a potent alpha2-adrenergic receptor antagonist with high affinity (Ki = 0.42, 0.26 and 0.03 nM to alpha2A, alpha2B and alpha2C, respectively) and high selectivity (alpha2A/alpha1A = 240; alpha2A/D-1 = 3600; alpha2A/D-2 = 3500; alpha2A/5-HT1 = 700; alpha2A/5-HT2 = 4100). The compound was labeled with 11C and evaluated in rodents and monkey as a specific radioligand for studying alpha2-adrenergic receptors using PET. [11C]MK-912 was synthesized by methylation of its desmethyl precursor, L-668,929, with [11C]CH3I in (Bu3O)P=O at 85 degrees C for 8 min followed by purification with HPLC in 18% yield in a synthesis time of 45 min from end of bombardment (EOB). The specific activity was 0.83-0.93 Ci/micromol and the radiochemical purity was 97%. The initial uptake of [11C]MK-912 in mouse brain, heart, lung, liver and kidney was high (5%, 4%, 5%, 17% and 8% per gram of organ, respectively, at 5 min postinjection) and the activities were then slowly cleared from these organs. The uptake of [11C]MK-912 in rat olfactory tubercle, a brain region with high density of alpha2-adrenergic receptors, was reduced by 30%, and the ratio of radioactivity in olfactory tubercle/cerebellum was reduced from 2:1 to 1:1 by coinjection of [11C]MK-912 with a potent alpha2-adrenergic receptor antagonist, atipamezole (3 mg/kg), indicating that compound 2 binds to alpha2-adrenergic receptors. However, a PET study in a rhesus monkey revealed that the initial influx of [11C]MK-912 into various brain regions (cerebellum, cortex, olfactory tubercle and striatum) was high (0.02%/cc), and the radioactivity was then washed out slowly and without significantly differential retention in these brain regions. This, coupled with the fact that none of the high-density alpha2-adrenergic receptor brain regions exceeds a few millimeters in diameter, suggests that [11C]MK-912 is probably not an ideal radioligand for studying alpha2-adrenergic receptors in humans using commercially available PET.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]