Design and Synthesis of Cathepsin-K-Activated Osteoadsorptive
Fluorogenic Sentinel (OFS) Probes for Detecting Early Osteoclastic
Bone Resorption in a Multiple Myeloma Mouse Model
posted on 2021-05-06, 18:04authored byEric T. Richard, Kenzo Morinaga, Yiying Zheng, Oskar Sundberg, Akishige Hokugo, Kimberly Hui, Yipin Zhou, Hodaka Sasaki, Boris A. Kashemirov, Ichiro Nishimura, Charles E. McKenna
We
describe the design and synthesis of OFS-1, an Osteoadsorptive
Fluorogenic Sentinel imaging probe that is adsorbed by hydroxyapatite
(HAp) and bone mineral surfaces, where it generates an external fluorescent
signal in response to osteoclast-secreted cathepsin K (Ctsk). The
probe consists of a bone-anchoring bisphosphonate moiety connected
to a Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) internally quenched
fluorescent (IQF) dye pair, linked by a Ctsk peptide substrate, GHPGGPQG.
Key structural features contributing to the effectiveness of OFS-1
were defined by structure–activity relationship (SAR) and modeling
studies comparing OFS-1 with two cognates, OFS-2 and OFS-3. In solution
or when preadsorbed on HAp, OFS-1 exhibited strong fluorescence when
exposed to Ctsk (2.5–20 nM). Time-lapse photomicrographs obtained
after seeding human osteoclasts onto HAp-coated well plates containing
preadsorbed OFS-1 revealed bright fluorescence at the periphery of
resorbing cells. OFS-1 administered systemically detected early osteolysis
colocalized with orthotopic engraftment of RPMI-8226-Luc human multiple
myeloma cells at a metastatic skeletal site in a humanized mouse model.
OFS-1 is thus a promising new imaging tool for detecting abnormal
bone resorption.