Author/Authors :
Ogawa, Kazuma Kanazawa University - Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences - Kakuma-machi - Kanazawa - Ishikawa, Japan , Shiba, Kazuhiro Kanazawa University - Takara-machi - Kanazawa - Ishikawa, Japan
Abstract :
The vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT), a presynaptic cholinergic neuron marker, is a potential internal molecular target
for the development of an imaging agent for early diagnosis of neurodegenerative disorders with cognitive decline such as
Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Since vesamicol has been reported to bind to VAChT with high affinity, many vesamicol analogs have
been studied as VAChT imaging agents for the diagnosis of cholinergic neurodeficit disorder. However, because many vesamicol
analogs, as well as vesamicol, bound to sigma receptors (σ1 and σ2) besides VAChT, almost all the vesamicol analogs have been
shown to be unsuitable for clinical trials. In this report, the relationships between the chemical structure and the biological
characteristics of these developed vesamicol analogs were investigated, especially the in vitro binding profile and the in vivo
regional brain accumulation.