Andrew V. Mossine
University of Michigan
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Publication
Featured researches published by Andrew V. Mossine.
Organic Letters | 2015
Andrew V. Mossine; Allen F. Brooks; Katarina J. Makaravage; Jason Miller; Naoko Ichiishi; Melanie S. Sanford; Peter Scott
A copper-mediated radiofluorination of aryl- and vinylboronic acids with K18F is described. This method exhibits high functional group tolerance and is effective for the radiofluorination of a range of electron-deficient, -neutral, and -rich aryl-, heteroaryl-, and vinylboronic acids. This method has been applied to the synthesis of [18F]FPEB, a PET radiotracer for quantifying metabotropic glutamate 5 receptors.
Organic Letters | 2016
Katarina J. Makaravage; Allen F. Brooks; Andrew V. Mossine; Melanie S. Sanford; Peter Scott
A copper-mediated nucleophilic radiofluorination of aryl- and vinylstannanes with [18F]KF is described. This method is fast, uses commercially available reagents, and is compatible with both electron-rich and electron-deficient arene substrates. This method has been applied to the manual synthesis of a variety of clinically relevant radiotracers including protected [18F]F-phenylalanine and [18F]F-DOPA. In addition, an automated synthesis of [18F]MPPF is demonstrated that delivers a clinically validated dose of 200 ± 20 mCi with a high specific activity of 2400 ± 900 Ci/mmol.
Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2016
Andrew V. Mossine; Allen F. Brooks; Isaac M. Jackson; Carole A. Quesada; Phillip Sherman; Erin L. Cole; David Donnelly; Peter Scott; Xia Shao
Three new positron emission tomography (PET) radiotracers of interest to our functional neuroimaging and translational oncology programs have been prepared through new developments in [(11)C]CO2 fixation chemistry. [(11)C]QZ (glutaminyl cyclase) was prepared via a tandem trapping of [(11)C]CO2/intramolecular cyclization; [(11)C]tideglusib (glycogen synthase kinase-3) was synthesized through a tandem trapping of [(11)C]CO2 followed by an intermolecular cycloaddition between a [(11)C]isocyanate and an isothiocyanate to form the 1,2,4-thiadiazolidine-3,5-dione core; [(11)C]ibrutinib (Brutons tyrosine kinase) was synthesized through a HATU peptide coupling of an amino precursor with [(11)C]acrylic acid (generated from [(11)C]CO2 fixation with vinylmagnesium bromide). All radiochemical syntheses are fully automated on commercial radiochemical synthesis modules and provide radiotracers in 1-5% radiochemical yield (noncorrected, based upon [(11)C]CO2). All three radiotracers have advanced to rodent imaging studies and preliminary PET imaging results are also reported.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Andrew V. Mossine; Allen F. Brooks; Naoko Ichiishi; Katarina J. Makaravage; Melanie S. Sanford; Peter Scott
In a relatively short period of time, transition metal-mediated radiofluorination reactions have changed the PET radiochemistry landscape. These reactions have enabled the radiofluorination of a wide range of substrates, facilitating access to radiopharmaceuticals that were challenging to synthesize using traditional fluorine-18 radiochemistry. However, the process of adapting these new reactions for automated radiopharmaceutical production has revealed limitations in fitting them into the confines of traditional radiochemistry systems. In particular, the presence of bases (e.g. K2CO3) and/or phase transfer catalysts (PTC) (e.g. kryptofix 2.2.2) associated with fluorine-18 preparation has been found to be detrimental to reaction yields. We hypothesized that these limitations could be addressed through the development of alternate techniques for preparing [18F]fluoride. This approach also opens the possibility that an eluent can be individually tailored to meet the specific needs of a metal-catalyzed reaction of interest. In this communication, we demonstrate that various solutions of copper salts, bases, and ancillary ligands can be utilized to elute [18F]fluoride from ion exchange cartridges. The new procedures are effective for fluorine-18 radiochemistry and, as proof of concept, have been used to optimize an otherwise base-sensitive copper-mediated radiofluorination reaction.
Pharmaceutical patent analyst | 2016
Allen F. Brooks; Lindsey R. Drake; Megan N. Stewart; Brian P. Cary; Isaac M. Jackson; Dale Mallette; Andrew V. Mossine; Peter Scott
The most commonly utilized PET radionuclide is fluorine-18 ((18)F) because of its convenient half-life and excellent imaging properties. In this review, we present the first analysis of patents issued for radiotracers labeled with fluorine-18 (between 2009 and 2015), and provide perspective on current trends and future directions in PET radiotracer development.
Pharmaceutical patent analyst | 2016
Andrew V. Mossine; Stephen Thompson; Allen F. Brooks; Alexandra R Sowa; Jason Miller; Peter Scott
Fluorine-18 ((18)F) is one of the most common positron-emitting radionuclides used in the synthesis of positron emission tomography radiotracers due to its ready availability, convenient half-life and outstanding imaging properties. In Part 1 of this review, we presented the first analysis of patents issued for novel radiotracers labeled with fluorine-18. In Part 2, we follow-up with a focus on patents issued for new radiochemistry methodology using fluorine-18 issued between January 2009 and December 2015.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017
Vadim Bernard-Gauthier; Justin J. Bailey; Andrew V. Mossine; Simon Lindner; Lena Vomacka; Arturo Aliaga; Xia Shao; Carole A. Quesada; Phillip Sherman; Anne Mahringer; Alexey Kostikov; Marilyn Grand’Maison; Pedro Rosa-Neto; Jean-Paul Soucy; Alexander Thiel; David R. Kaplan; Gert Fricker; Björn Wängler; Peter Bartenstein; Ralf Schirrmacher; Peter Scott
The proto-oncogenes NTRK1/2/3 encode the tropomyosin receptor kinases TrkA/B/C which play pivotal roles in neurobiology and cancer. We describe herein the discovery of [11C]-(R)-3 ([11C]-(R)-IPMICF16), a first-in-class positron emission tomography (PET) TrkB/C-targeting radiolabeled kinase inhibitor lead. Relying on extensive human kinome vetting, we show that (R)-3 is the most potent and most selective TrkB/C inhibitor characterized to date. It is demonstrated that [11C]-(R)-3 readily crosses the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in rodents and selectively binds to TrkB/C receptors in vivo, as evidenced by entrectinib blocking studies. Substantial TrkB/C-specific binding in human brain tissue is observed in vitro, with specific reduction in the hippocampus of Alzheimers disease (AD) versus healthy brains. We additionally provide preliminary translational data regarding the brain disposition of [11C]-(R)-3 in primates including first-in-human assessment. These results illustrate for the first time the use of a kinome-wide selective radioactive chemical probe for endogenous kinase PET neuroimaging in human.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018
Vadim Bernard-Gauthier; Andrew V. Mossine; Anne Mahringer; Arturo Aliaga; Justin J. Bailey; Xia Shao; Jenelle Stauff; Janna Arteaga; Phillip Sherman; Marilyn Grand'Maison; Pierre Luc Rochon; Björn Wängler; Carmen Wängler; Peter Bartenstein; Alexey Kostikov; David R. Kaplan; Gert Fricker; Pedro Rosa-Neto; Peter Scott; Ralf Schirrmacher
Changes in expression and dysfunctional signaling of TrkA/B/C receptors and oncogenic Trk fusion proteins are found in neurological diseases and cancers. Here, we describe the development of a first 18F-labeled optimized lead suitable for in vivo imaging of Trk, [18F]TRACK, which is radiosynthesized with ease from a nonactivated aryl precursor concurrently combining largely reduced P-gp liability and improved brain kinetics compared to previous leads while displaying high on-target affinity and human kinome selectivity.
Journal of Labelled Compounds and Radiopharmaceuticals | 2018
Andrew V. Mossine; Allen F. Brooks; Vadim Bernard-Gauthier; Justin J. Bailey; Naoko Ichiishi; Ralf Schirrmacher; Melanie S. Sanford; Peter Scott
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2016
Andrew V. Mossine; Xia Shao; Elizabeth A. Ennis; Jeanette L. Bertron; Jason Miller; Michael R. Kilbourn; Craig W. Lindsley; Randy D. Blakely; Peter Scott