posted on 2016-02-10, 15:51authored byAllison
S. Cohen, Renata Patek, Steven A. Enkemann, Joseph O. Johnson, Tingan Chen, Eric Toloza, Josef Vagner, David L. Morse
In the United States, lung cancer
is the leading cause of cancer
death and ranks second in the number of new cases annually among all
types of cancers. Better methods or tools for diagnosing and treating
this disease are needed to improve patient outcomes. The delta-opioid
receptor (δOR) is reported to be overexpressed in lung cancers
and not expressed in normal lung. Thus, we decided to develop a lung
cancer-specific imaging agent targeting this receptor. We have previously
developed a δOR-targeted fluorescent imaging agent based on
a synthetic peptide antagonist (Dmt-Tic) conjugated to a Cy5 fluorescent
dye. In this work, we describe the synthesis of Dmt-Tic conjugated
to a longer wavelength near-infrared fluorescent (NIRF) dye, Li-cor
IR800CW. Binding affinity of Dmt-Tic-IR800 for the δOR was studied
using lanthanide time-resolved fluorescence (LTRF) competitive binding
assays in cells engineered to overexpress the δOR. In addition,
we identified lung cancer cell lines with high and low endogenous
expression of the δOR. We confirmed protein expression in these
cell lines using confocal fluorescence microscopy imaging and used
this technique to estimate the cell-surface receptor number in the
endogenously expressing lung cancer cell lines. The selectivity of
Dmt-Tic-IR800 for imaging of the δOR in vivo was shown using
both engineered cell lines and endogenously expressing lung cancer
cells in subcutaneous xenograft models in mice. In conclusion, the
δOR-specific fluorescent probe developed in this study displays
excellent potential for imaging of lung cancer.