Litcius/Paper detail

Structure-guided design enables development of a hyperpolarized molecular probe for the detection of aminopeptidase N activity in vivo

Yutaro Saito, Hiroyuki Yatabe, Iori Tamura, Yohei Kondo, Ryo Ishida, Tomohiro Seki, Keita Hiraga, Akihiro Eguchi, Yoichi Takakusagi, Keisuke Saito, Nobu Oshima, Hiroshi Ishikita, Kazutoshi Yamamoto, Murali C. Krishna, Shinsuke Sando

2022Science Advances23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) is a cutting-edge technique that markedly enhances the detection sensitivity of molecules using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)/magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This methodology enables real-time imaging of dynamic metabolic status in vivo using MRI. To expand the targetable metabolic reactions, there is a demand for developing exogenous, i.e., artificially designed, DNP-NMR molecular probes; however, complying with the requirements of practical DNP-NMR molecular probes is challenging because of the lack of established design guidelines. Here, we report Ala-[1- 13 C]Gly- d 2 -NMe 2 as a DNP-NMR molecular probe for in vivo detection of aminopeptidase N activity. We developed this probe rationally through precise structural investigation, calculation, biochemical assessment, and advanced molecular design to achieve rapid and detectable responses to enzyme activity in vivo. With the fabricated probe, we successfully detected enzymatic activity in vivo. This report presents a comprehensive approach for the development of artificially derived, practical DNP-NMR molecular probes through structure-guided molecular design.

Topics & Concepts

In vivoMolecular imagingMolecular probeMagnetic resonance imagingChemistryNuclear magnetic resonanceMaterials scienceBiochemistryBiologyMedicineRadiologyDNABiotechnologyPhysicsAdvanced NMR Techniques and ApplicationsElectron Spin Resonance StudiesPeptidase Inhibition and Analysis