Antioxidants (Oct 2024)

PET Imaging with [<sup>18</sup>F]ROStrace Detects Oxidative Stress and Predicts Parkinson’s Disease Progression in Mice

  • Yi Zhu,
  • Neha Kohli,
  • Anthony Young,
  • Malkah Sheldon,
  • Jani Coni,
  • Meera Rajasekaran,
  • Lozen Robinson,
  • Rea Chroneos,
  • Shaipreeah Riley,
  • Joseph W. Guarnieri,
  • Joshua Jose,
  • Nisha Patel,
  • Douglas C. Wallace,
  • Shihong Li,
  • Hsiaoju Lee,
  • Robert H. Mach,
  • Meagan J. McManus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox13101226
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. 1226

Abstract

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Although the precise molecular mechanisms responsible for neuronal death and motor dysfunction in late-onset Parkinson’s disease (PD) are unknown, evidence suggests that mitochondrial dysfunction and neuroinflammation occur early, leading to a collective increase in reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and oxidative stress. However, the lack of methods for tracking oxidative stress in the living brain has precluded its use as a potential biomarker. The goal of the current study is to address this need through the evaluation of the first superoxide (O2•−)-sensitive radioactive tracer, [18F]ROStrace, in a model of late-onset PD. To achieve this goal, MitoPark mice with a dopaminergic (DA) neuron-specific deletion of transcription factor A mitochondrial (Tfam) were imaged with [18F]ROStrace from the prodromal phase to the end-stage of PD-like disease. Our data demonstrate [18F]ROStrace was sensitive to increased oxidative stress during the early stages of PD-like pathology in MitoPark mice, which persisted throughout the disease course. Similarly to PD patients, MitoPark males had the most severe parkinsonian symptoms and metabolic impairment. [18F]ROStrace retention was also highest in MitoPark males, suggesting oxidative stress as a potential mechanism underlying the male sex bias of PD. Furthermore, [18F]ROStrace may provide a method to identify patients at risk of Parkinson’s before irreparable neurodegeneration occurs and enhance clinical trial design by identifying patients most likely to benefit from antioxidant therapies.

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