(89)Zr-leukocyte labelling for cell trafficking: In vitro and preclinical investigations Journal Article


Authors: Kahts, M.; Guo, H.; Kommidi, H.; Yang, Y.; Sayman, H. B.; Summers, B.; Ting, R.; Zeevaart, J. R.; Sathekge, M.; Aras, O.
Article Title: (89)Zr-leukocyte labelling for cell trafficking: In vitro and preclinical investigations
Abstract: Background: The non-invasive imaging of leukocyte trafficking to assess inflammatory areas and monitor immunotherapy is currently generating great interest. There is a need to develop more robust cell labelling and imaging approaches to track living cells. Positron emission tomography (PET), a highly sensitive molecular imaging technique, allows precise signals to be produced from radiolabelled moieties. Here, we developed a novel leukocyte labelling approach with the PET radioisotope zirconium-89 (89Zr, half-life of 78.4 h). Experiments were carried out using human leukocytes, freshly isolated from whole human blood. Results: The 89Zr-leukocyte labelling efficiency ranged from 46 to 87% after 30–60 min. Radioactivity concentrations of labelled cells were up to 0.28 MBq/1 million cells. Systemically administered 89Zr-labelled leukocytes produced high-contrast murine PET images at 1 h–5 days post injection. Murine biodistribution data showed that cells primarily distributed to the lung, liver, and spleen at 1 h post injection, and are then gradually trafficked to liver and spleen over 5 days. Histological analysis demonstrated that exogenously 89Zr-labelled human leukocytes were present in the lung, liver, and spleen at 1 h post injection. However, intravenously injected free [89Zr]Zr4+ ion showed retention only in the bone with no radioactivity in the lung at 5 days post injection, which implied good stability of radiolabelled leukocytes in vivo. Conclusions: Our study presents a stable and generic radiolabelling technique to track leukocytes with PET imaging and shows great potential for further applications in inflammatory cell and other types of cell trafficking studies. © 2023, The Author(s).
Keywords: nonhuman; positron emission tomography; mouse; cell viability; spleen; image analysis; inflammation; molecular imaging; immune response; immunotherapy; image quality; radioactivity; cell migration; immunity; immune deficiency; pet; cell separation; leukocyte; zirconium-89; zirconium 89; scintigraphy; leukocyte migration; cervical spine dislocation; cell trafficking; radiolabeling; article; infection imaging; 89zr leukocyte; generic radiolabelling
Journal Title: EJNMMI Radiopharmacy and Chemistry
Volume: 8
ISSN: 2365-421X
Publisher: SpringerOpen  
Date Published: 2023-11-06
Start Page: 36
Language: English
DOI: 10.1186/s41181-023-00223-1
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC10628102
PUBMED: 37930454
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) acknowledged in PubMed and PDF -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Omer Aras
    75 Aras