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- Title
Development of technetium-99m-based CNS receptor ligands: have there been any advances?
- Authors
Johanssen, Bernd; Pietzsch, Hans-Jurgne
- Abstract
By virtue of its ideal nuclear physical characteristics for routine nuclear medicine diagnostics and its ready availability, technetium-99m is of outstanding interest in the development of novel radiopharmaceuticals. The potential for the development of &sup99m;Tc-based radioligands for the study the receptor function in the central nervous system (CNS) is also well recognised despite the difficulties to be overcome. A fundamental challenge is the pharmacologically acceptable integration of the transition metal technetium, with its specific coordination chemistry, into the molecular entity of CNS receptor ligands. Conceptually, the ligand molecule can be assembled by three building blocks: a small neutral chelate unit, an organic linker that may also serve as a pharmacological modifier and a receptor-binding region derived from selective receptor antagonists. The recent introduction of novel technetium chelate units, particularly mixed-ligand complexes and low-valency organometallic compounds of technetium, provides an impetus for the further development of CNS receptor ligands. Moreover, progress in receptor pharmacology and the experience gained with positron emission tomography radiotracers have facilitated the design of numerous &sup99m;Tc-based CNS receptor ligands. The formidable challenge of developing &sup99m;Tc probes as single-photon emission tomography imaging agents targeting CNS receptors can be viewed with optimism given the successful development of [&sup99m;Tc]TRODAT-1 as a &sup99m;Tc complex for imaging dopamine transporters in the brain, although there are a number of receptor-specific imaging agents that have so far resisted all efforts to develop them. This review presents recent advances and discusses the remaining hurdles in the design of &sup99m;Tc-based CNS receptor imaging agents.
- Publication
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine & Molecular Imaging, 2002, Vol 29, Issue 2, p263
- ISSN
1619-7070
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.1007/s002590100652