Published June 11, 2013 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Amyloid tracers detect multple binding sites in Alzheimer´s disease brain tissue.

  • 1. Alzheimer Neurobiology Centre, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
  • 2. Alzheimer Neurobiology Centre, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden and Department of Geriatric Medicine, Karolinska University Hospital Huddinge, S-141 86 Stockholm, Sweden

Description

Imaging fibrillar amyloid-β deposition in the human brain in vivo by positron emission tomography has improved our understanding of the time course of amyloid-β pathology in Alzheimer’s disease. The most widely used amyloid-β imaging tracer so far is 11C-Pittsburgh compound B, a thioflavin derivative but other 11C- and 18F-labelled amyloid-β tracers have been studied in patients with Alzheimer's disease and cognitively normal control subjects. However, it has not yet been established whether different amyloid tracers bind to identical sites on amyloid-β fibrils, offering the same ability to detect the regional amyloid-β burden in the brains. In this study, we characterized 3H-Pittsburgh compound B binding in autopsied brain regions from 23 patients with Alzheimer's disease and 20 control subjects (aged 50 to 88 years). The binding properties of the amyloid tracers FDDNP, AV-45, AV-1 and BF-227 were also compared with those of 3H-Pittsburgh compound B in the frontal cortices of patients with Alzheimer's disease. Saturation binding studies revealed the presence of high- and low-affinity 3H-Pittsburgh compound B binding sites in the frontal cortex (Kd1: 3.5 ± 1.6 nM; Kd2: 133 ± 30 nM) and hippocampus (Kd1:5.6 ± 2.2 nM; Kd2: 181 ± 132 nM) of Alzheimer's disease brains. The relative proportion of high-affinity to low-affinity sites was 6:1 in the frontal cortex and 3:1 in the hippocampus. One control showed both high- and low-affinity 3H-Pittsburgh compound B binding sites (Kd1: 1.6 nM; Kd2: 330 nM) in the cortex while the others only had a low-affinity site (Kd2: 191 ± 70 nM). 3H-Pittsburgh compound B binding in Alzheimer's disease brains was higher in the frontal and parietal cortices than in the caudate nucleus and hippocampus, and negligible in the cerebellum. Competitive binding studies with 3H-Pittsburgh compound B in the frontal cortices of Alzheimer's disease brains revealed high- and low-affinity binding sites for BTA-1 (Ki: 0.2 nM, 70 nM), florbetapir (1.8 nM, 53 nM) and florbetaben (1.0 nM, 65 nM). BF-227 displaced 83% of 3H-Pittsburgh compound B binding, mainly at a low-affinity site (311 nM), whereas FDDNP only partly displaced (40%). We propose a multiple binding site model for the amyloid tracers (binding sites 1, 2 and 3), where AV-45 (florbetapir), AV-1 (florbetaben), and Pittsburgh compound B, all show nanomolar affinity for the high-affinity site (binding site 1), as visualized by positron emission tomography. BF-227 shows mainly binding to site 3 and FDDNP shows only some binding to site 2. Different amyloid tracers may provide new insight into the pathophysiological mechanisms in the progression of Alzheimer’s disease.

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Funding

INMIND – Imaging of Neuroinflammation in Neurodegenerative Diseases 278850
European Commission