Ananth Srinivasan
Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ananth Srinivasan.
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2003
M. de Visser; Paul J. J. M. Janssen; Ananth Srinivasan; Jean Claude Reubi; Beatrice Waser; Jack L. Erion; Michelle A. Schmidt; Eric P. Krenning; M. de Jong
Neurotensin (NT) receptors are overexpressed in exocrine pancreatic cancer and Ewings sarcoma. The potential utility of native NT in cancer diagnosis and therapy is, however, limited by its rapid degradation in vivo. Therefore, NT analogues were synthesised with modified lysine and arginine derivatives to enhance stability and coupled either to DTPA, to enable high specific activity labelling with indium-111 for imaging, or to DOTA, to enable high specific activity labelling with β-emitting radionuclides, such as lutetium-177 and yttrium-90. Based on serum stability (4xa0h incubation at 37°C in human serum) and receptor binding affinity, the five most promising analogues were selected and further evaluated in in vitro internalisation studies in human colorectal adenocarcinoma HT29 cells, which overexpress NT receptors. All five NT analogues bound with high affinity to NT receptors on human exocrine pancreatic tumour sections. The analogues could be labelled with 111In to a high specific activity. The 111In-labelled compounds were found to be very stable in serum. Incubation of HT29 cells with the 111In-labelled analogues at 37°C showed rapid receptor-mediated uptake and internalisation. The most promising analogue, peptide 2530 [DTPA-(Pip)Gly-Pro-(PipAm)Gly-Arg-Pro-Tyr-tBuGly-Leu-OH] was further tested in vivo in a biodistribution study using HT29 tumour-bearing nude mice. The results of this study showed low percentages of injected dose per gram tissue of this 111In-labelled 2530 analogue in receptor-negative organs like blood, spleen, pancreas, liver, muscle and femur. Good uptake was found in the receptor-positive HT29 tumour and high uptake was present in the kidneys. Co-injection of excess unlabelled NT significantly reduced tumour uptake, showing that tumour uptake is a receptor-mediated process. With their enhanced stability, maintained high receptor affinity and rapid receptor-mediated internalisation, the 111In-labelled DTPA- and DOTA-conjugated NT analogues are excellent candidates for imaging and therapy of exocrine pancreatic cancer, peptide 2530 being the most promising analogue.
Archive | 2009
Ananth Srinivasan; Mathias Berndt; Keith Graham; Matthias Friebe; Heribert Schmitt-Willich
Archive | 2009
John E. Cyr; Ananth Srinivasan; Mathias Berndt; Keith Graham; Dae Yoon Chi; Byoung Se Lee; So Young Chu; Song-Yi Lim; Sang Ju Lee; Jin-Sook Ryu; Seung Jun Oh
Archive | 2007
Matthias Friebe; Andrew Stephens; Ananth Srinivasan; Maren Hecht
Cancer Biotherapy and Radiopharmaceuticals | 2007
Paul J. J. M. Janssen; Moniaue de Visser; Suzanne M. Verwijnen; Bert F. Bernard; Ananth Srinivasan; Jack L. Erion; Wouter Breeman; Arnold G. Vulto; Eric P. Krenning; Marion de Jong
Archive | 2007
Ananth Srinivasan; Ulrike Voigtmann; Mathias Berndt; Keith Grahan; Sabine Zitzmann; Lutz Lehmann; Ansgar Dr. Fitzner
Archive | 2007
Ananth Srinivasan; Lutz Lehmann; Ulrike Roehn; Timo Stellfeld; Simon Ametamey; Ulrich Klar; Aileen Hoehne; Linjing Mu
Archive | 2007
Lutz Lehmann; Ananth Srinivasan; Thomas Brumby; Detlef Suelzle; Timo Stellfeld; Keith Graham; Myléne Karramkam; Simon Ametamey
Archive | 2008
Ananth Srinivasan; Ulrich Klar; Lutz Lehmann; Ulrike Voigtmann; Timo Stellfeld; Aileen Höhne; Linjing Mu; Simon Ametamey
Archive | 2007
Ananth Srinivasan; Thomas Brumby; Timo Stellfeld; Keith Graham; Ulrike Voigtmann; Jessica Becaud; Linjing Mu