- Glucose concentration.
- What are the values we should expect in the brain, and what is the minimum we can detect?
- Is 2dg going to help? What's is the concentration in this case? (dynamics of 2dg)
- What's the uptake rate difference between tumours and healthy tissue? Is this difference within the range we can detect? (pet 18f-fdg dynamics would help).
- Glucose delivery. Do we really know if IP injections work? Blood tests.
- Anaesthetics.
- What is the best drug to use in relation to the glucose and pH (lactate?) and other metabolic reactions?
- "Lactate levels in the brain are elevated upon exposure to volatile anesthetics: A microdialysis study." HornT, Klein J.
- Is the lactate affecting our CEST measurements by reducing the pH? How much does the pH change? Enough to alter the transfer rate?
- Considerations of threshold values. "Plasma glucose correlated better with ischemic intracellular pH than did brain lactate. However, when brain lactate levels are compared with intracellular pH during ischemia, the relation may be threshold rather than linear. A narrow transition zone, during which ischemic intracellular pH decreased precipitously with increasing brain lactate, was observed between 17 and 22 fimoUg; below 17 fimollg, intracellular pH remained stable at 6.8-6.9, whereas above 22 /imol/g, intracellular pH decreased maximally to about 62. The marked decrease in intracellular pH that occurs when brain lactate surpasses 17 /unol/g suggests that this sudden drop in intracellular pH may account for the "lactate threshold" for increased cerebral ischemic damage. (Stroke 1990^21:936-942)"
Relationship between plasma glucose, brain lactate, and intracellular pH during cerebral ischemia in gerbils. Combs DJ, Dempsey RJ, Maley M, Donaldson D, Smith C.
- Tumour cell type.
- Even if all above works out favourably, having a spread type tumour invalidates the CEST MRI method as a detection tool due to the lack of contrast.
- Is it worth following this technique if solid type tumours are of low clinical interest?
PhD
Thursday, 25 August 2011
List of issues in brain tumour CEST.
Tuesday, 23 August 2011
Back from holidays. 2DG metabolism.
According to the Drug Information of NIH, the full name of 2-DG is 2-Deoxy-D-glucose and it is described there as "An antimetabolite of glucose with antiviral activity". Due to its prominent anti-gucose activity, the 2-DG as a drug has been on several clinical trials concerning anti-metabolic approach to cancer treatment since cancerous cells are extremely dependent on glucose as an energy substrate while most other cell types can adjust their energy use switching to alternative substrates such as ketone bodies. See clinical trials concerning 2-DG at http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/results?recr=Open&intr=2-DEOXYGLUCOSE
2-DEOXY-D-GLUCOSE (2-DG) is a synthetic glucose analogue that competes with glucose for transport into the cells and competitively inhibits the intracellular metabolism of glucose (1) in all tissues studied and especially in the brain (2), is phosphorylated to 2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate (DOG6P) but is not further metabolized (2). 2-DG molecule cannot bemetabolized via the glycolytic pathway so it gradually accumulates within the cell, causing inhibition of glucose-6-phosphate isomerase and the subsequent blockade of the conversion from glucose-6-phosphate to fructose-6-phosphate, a crucial step in this metabolic pathway (1).
By inhibiting glycolysis, 2-DG indirectly helps producing ketone bodies and this way, it can be considered an anti-epileptic drug. However, it also results in a metabolic crisis, which is a known pro-epileptic condition so there's no consensus regarding this aspect of 2-DG as a drug (3).
Sources:
1. R. W. HORTON et al., J Neurochem, 1973, Vol. 21, 5O7-520
2. SOLS A and CRANER K. J. biol. Chem. 1954 210,581-595
3. Gasior et al., Epilepsia, 2010, 1–10,
(doi: 10.1111/j.1528-1167.2010.02593.x)
2-DEOXY-D-GLUCOSE (2-DG) is a synthetic glucose analogue that competes with glucose for transport into the cells and competitively inhibits the intracellular metabolism of glucose (1) in all tissues studied and especially in the brain (2), is phosphorylated to 2-deoxy-D-glucose 6-phosphate (DOG6P) but is not further metabolized (2). 2-DG molecule cannot bemetabolized via the glycolytic pathway so it gradually accumulates within the cell, causing inhibition of glucose-6-phosphate isomerase and the subsequent blockade of the conversion from glucose-6-phosphate to fructose-6-phosphate, a crucial step in this metabolic pathway (1).
By inhibiting glycolysis, 2-DG indirectly helps producing ketone bodies and this way, it can be considered an anti-epileptic drug. However, it also results in a metabolic crisis, which is a known pro-epileptic condition so there's no consensus regarding this aspect of 2-DG as a drug (3).
Sources:
1. R. W. HORTON et al., J Neurochem, 1973, Vol. 21, 5O7-520
2. SOLS A and CRANER K. J. biol. Chem. 1954 210,581-595
3. Gasior et al., Epilepsia, 2010, 1–10,
(doi: 10.1111/j.1528-1167.2010.02593.x)
Carbohydrates synthesized during photosynthesis act as the main storage molecules of solar energy. When ingested, complex carbohydrates are enzymatically hydrolyzed to monosaccharides, such as starch to D(+)-glucose. The catabolism of glucose is the primary energy source for shortterm requirements and begins with the Embden-Meyerhoff-Pathway as illustrated in Figure 1. D(+)-Glucose (1) is phosphorylated in the first reaction with ATP to give glucose-6-phosphate (2). Figure 1. Embden-Meyerhoff-Pathway The isomerization of glucose-6-phosphate (2) in the second reaction to fructose-6-phosphate (3) occurs via ring-opening and subsequent keto-enol-tautomerization. The third reaction is another phosphorylation with ATP, whereby fructose-6-phosphate (3) is converted to fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (4). A key branching reaction is the fourth reaction: a ring-opening reaction of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (4), which is cleaved in a retro-aldol reaction into D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (5), and dihydroxyacetone phosphate (6). The branch via dihydroxyacetonephosphate (6) is channelled back into D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (5) in the fifth reaction by an isomerization. In the sixth reaction the combined D-glyceraldehyde- 3-phosphate from both routes is oxidized at the C1 to a carboxylic acid and then phosphorylated in the 1-position to yield 1,3-bisphospho-D-glycerate (7). This phosphate group in the 1-position is transferred in the seventh reaction from the carboxyl group of (7) to ADP to give 3-phospho-D-glycerate (8). The eighth reaction is an isomerization of 3-phospho-D-glycerate (8) to 2-phospho-D-glycerate (9). The next metabolite phosphoenolpyruvate (10) is formed in a dehydration reaction from 2-phospho-D-glycerate in the ninth reaction. The glycolysis pathway from D(+)-glucose (1) to two molecules of pyruvate (11) is concluded by the tenth reaction, which transfers a phosphate group from phosphoenolpyruvate (10) to ADP, thereby giving ATP and pyruvate (11). Visit the Sigma Metabolomics Resource Center to view the Nicholson-IUBMB animation of glycolysis at http://www.sigma.com/metpath. |
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