Litcius/Paper detail

Employing nanobodies for immune landscape profiling by PET imaging in mice

Abraham J. P. Teunissen, Omar Abousaway, Jazz Munitz, Mandy M. T. van Leent, Yohana C. Toner, Bram Priem, Max L. Senders, Carlos Pérez‐Medina, Willem J. M. Mulder, Mohammad Rashidian

2021STAR Protocols11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Noninvasive immunoimaging holds great potential for studying and stratifying disease as well as therapeutic efficacy. Radiolabeled single-domain antibody fragments (i.e., nanobodies) are appealing probes for immune landscape profiling, as they display high stability, rapid targeting, and excellent specificity, while allowing extremely sensitive nuclear readouts. Here, we present a protocol for radiolabeling an anti-CD11b nanobody and studying its uptake in mice by a combination of positron emission tomography imaging, ex vivo gamma counting, and autoradiography. Our protocol is applicable to nanobodies against other antigens. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please see Priem et al. (2020), Senders et al. (2019), or Rashidian et al. (2017).

Topics & Concepts

Ex vivoImmune systemSingle-domain antibodyPositron emission tomographyProfiling (computer programming)AntibodyComputational biologyMolecular imagingIn vivoPreclinical imagingMedicineComputer scienceImmunologyBiologyNuclear medicineOperating systemBiotechnologyMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies ResearchRadiopharmaceutical Chemistry and ApplicationsImmunotherapy and Immune Responses