International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Oct 2023)

Evaluation of an Image-Derived Input Function for Kinetic Modeling of Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor-Binding PET Ligands in Mice

  • Matthew Zammit,
  • Chien-Min Kao,
  • Hannah J. Zhang,
  • Hsiu-Ming Tsai,
  • Nathanial Holderman,
  • Samuel Mitchell,
  • Eve Tanios,
  • Mohammed Bhuiyan,
  • Richard Freifelder,
  • Anna Kucharski,
  • William N. Green,
  • Jogeshwar Mukherjee,
  • Chin-Tu Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242115510
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 21
p. 15510

Abstract

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Positron emission tomography (PET) radioligands that bind with high-affinity to α4β2-type nicotinic receptors (α4β2Rs) allow for in vivo investigations of the mechanisms underlying nicotine addiction and smoking cessation. Here, we investigate the use of an image-derived arterial input function and the cerebellum for kinetic analysis of radioligand binding in mice. Two radioligands were explored: 2-[18F]FA85380 (2-FA), displaying similar pKa and binding affinity to the smoking cessation drug varenicline (Chantix), and [18F]Nifene, displaying similar pKa and binding affinity to nicotine. Time–activity curves of the left ventricle of the heart displayed similar distribution across wild type mice, mice lacking the β2-subunit for ligand binding, and acute nicotine-treated mice, whereas reference tissue binding displayed high variation between groups. Binding potential estimated from a two-tissue compartment model fit of the data with the image-derived input function were higher than estimates from reference tissue-based estimations. Rate constants of radioligand dissociation were very slow for 2-FA and very fast for Nifene. We conclude that using an image-derived input function for kinetic modeling of nicotinic PET ligands provides suitable results compared to reference tissue-based methods and that the chemical properties of 2-FA and Nifene are suitable to study receptor response to nicotine addiction and smoking cessation therapies.

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