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Featured researches published by Annie Ogasawara.


Cancer Research | 2007

Imaging Tumors with an Albumin-Binding Fab, a Novel Tumor-Targeting Agent

Mark S. Dennis; Hongkui Jin; Debra L. Dugger; Renhui Yang; Leanne McFarland; Annie Ogasawara; Simon C. Williams; Mary J. Cole; Sarajane Ross; Ralph Schwall

Association with albumin as a means to improve biodistribution and tumor deposition of a Fab was investigated using AB.Fab4D5, a bifunctional molecule derived from trastuzumab (HERCEPTIN) capable of binding albumin and tumor antigen HER2 (erbB2) simultaneously. AB.Fab4D5 was compared with trastuzumab and a trastuzumab-derived Fab (Fab4D5) for the ability to target tumors overexpressing HER2 in mouse mammary tumor virus/HER2 allograft models. Biodistribution was monitored using intravital microscopy, histology, and integrated single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography analysis. Fab4D5 tumor deposition was characterized by rapid but transient appearance in tumor at 2 h with little retention, followed by rapid accumulation in kidney by 6 h. Trastuzumab was slow to accumulate in tumors and slow to clear from normal tissues, although significant tumor deposition was achieved by 24 h. In contrast, AB.Fab4D5 was observed at 2 h in tumor and its presence was sustained beyond 24 h similar to trastuzumab. Intravital microscopy revealed that at peak tumor accumulation, tumor cell staining by AB.Fab4D5 was more uniform than for Fab4D5 or trastuzumab. Similar tumor deposition was achieved for both AB.Fab4D5 and trastuzumab at 48 h (35.9 +/- 1.8% and 38.2 +/- 3.1% injected dose/g); however, AB.Fab4D5 targeted tumors more rapidly and quickly cleared from blood, leading to a lower overall normal tissue exposure. Importantly, unlike Fab4D5, AB.Fab4D5 did not accumulate in kidney, suggesting that association with albumin leads to an altered route of clearance and metabolism. Rapid targeting, excellent tumor deposition and retention, coupled with high tumor to blood ratios may make AB.Fab an exceptional molecule for imaging and cancer therapy.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Loss of the Serine/Threonine Kinase Fused Results in Postnatal Growth Defects and Lethality Due to Progressive Hydrocephalus

Mark Merchant; Marie Evangelista; Shiuh-Ming Luoh; Gretchen Frantz; Sreedevi Chalasani; Richard A. D. Carano; Marjie van Hoy; Julio Ramirez; Annie Ogasawara; Leanne McFarland; Ellen Filvaroff; Dorothy French; Frederic J. de Sauvage

ABSTRACT The Drosophila Fused (Fu) kinase is an integral component of the Hedgehog (Hh) pathway that helps promote Hh-dependent gene transcription. Vertebrate homologues of Fu function in the Hh pathway in vitro, suggesting that Fu is evolutionarily conserved. We have generated fused (stk36) knockout mice to address the in vivo function of the mouse Fu (mFu) homologue. fused knockouts develop normally, being born in Mendelian ratios, but fail to thrive within 2 weeks, displaying profound growth retardation with communicating hydrocephalus and early mortality. The fused gene is expressed highly in ependymal cells and the choroid plexus, tissues involved in the production and circulation of cerebral spinal fluid (CSF), suggesting that loss of mFu disrupts CSF homeostasis. Similarly, fused is highly expressed in the nasal epithelium, where fused knockouts display bilateral suppurative rhinitis. No obvious defects were observed in the development of organs where Hh signaling is required (limbs, face, bones, etc.). Specification of neuronal cell fates by Hh in the neural tube was normal in fused knockouts, and induction of Hh target genes in numerous tissues is not affected by the loss of mFu. Furthermore, stimulation of fused knockout cerebellar granule cells to proliferate with Sonic Hh revealed no defect in Hh signal transmission. These results show that the mFu homologue is not required for Hh signaling during embryonic development but is required for proper postnatal development, possibly by regulating the CSF homeostasis or ciliary function.


Nuclear Medicine and Biology | 2010

Site-specifically 89Zr-labeled monoclonal antibodies for ImmunoPET

Jeff N. Tinianow; Herman S. Gill; Annie Ogasawara; Judith E. Flores; Alexander N. Vanderbilt; Elizabeth Luis; Richard Vandlen; Martine Darwish; Jagath R. Junutula; Simon-P. Williams; Jan Marik

UNLABELLED Three thiol reactive reagents were developed for the chemoselective conjugation of desferrioxamine (Df) to a monoclonal antibody via engineered cysteine residues (thio-trastuzumab). The in vitro stability and in vivo imaging properties of site-specifically radiolabeled (89)Zr-Df-thio-trastuzumab conjugates were investigated. METHODS The amino group of desferrioxamine B was acylated by bromoacetyl bromide, N-hydroxysuccinimidyl iodoacetate, or N-hydroxysuccinimidyl 4-[N-maleimidomethyl]cyclohexane-1-carboxylate to obtain thiol reactive reagents bromoacetyl-desferrioxamine (Df-Bac), iodoacetyl-desferrioxamine (Df-Iac) and maleimidocyclohexyl-desferrioxamine (Df-Chx-Mal), respectively. Df-Bac and Df-Iac alkylated the free thiol groups of thio-trastuzumab by nucleophilic substitution forming Df-Ac-thio-trastuzumab, while the maleimide reagent Df-Chx-Mal reacted via Michael addition to provide Df-Chx-Mal-thio-trastuzumab. The conjugates were radiolabeled with (89)Zr and evaluated for serum stability, and their positron emission tomography (PET) imaging properties were investigated in a BT474M1 (HER2-positive) breast tumor mouse model. RESULTS The chemoselective reagents were obtained in 14% (Df-Bac), 53% (Df-Iac) and 45% (Df-Chx-Mal) yields. Site-specific conjugation of Df-Chx-Mal to thio-trastuzumab was complete within 1 h at pH 7.5, while Df-Iac and Df-Bac respectively required 2 and 5 h at pH 9. Each Df modified thio-trastuzumab was chelated with (89)Zr in yields exceeding 75%. (89)Zr-Df-Ac-thio-trastuzumab and (89)Zr-Df-Chx-Mal-thio-trastuzumab were stable in mouse serum and exhibited comparable PET imaging capabilities in a BT474M1 (HER2-positive) breast cancer model reaching 20-25 %ID/g of tumor uptake and a tumor to blood ratio of 6.1-7.1. CONCLUSIONS The new reagents demonstrated good reactivity with engineered thiol groups of trastuzumab and very good chelation properties with (89)Zr. The site-specifically (89)Zr-labeled thio-antibodies were stable in serum and showed PET imaging properties comparable to lysine conjugates.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

A Modular Platform for the Rapid Site-Specific Radiolabeling of Proteins with 18F Exemplified by Quantitative Positron Emission Tomography of Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2

Herman S. Gill; Jeff N. Tinianow; Annie Ogasawara; Judith E. Flores; Alexander N. Vanderbilt; Helga Raab; Justin Scheer; Richard Vandlen; Simon-P. Williams; Jan Marik

Receptor-specific proteins produced by genetic engineering are attractive as PET imaging agents, but labeling with conventional (18)F-based prosthetic groups is problematic due to long synthesis times, poor radiochemical yields, and low specific activities. Therefore, we developed a modular platform for the rapid preparation of water-soluble prosthetic groups capable of efficiently introducing (18)F into proteins. The utility of this platform is demonstrated by the thiol-specific prosthetic group, [(18)F]FPEGMA, which was used to produce site-specifically (18)F-labeled protein ((18)F-trastuzumab-ThioFab) in 82 min with a total radiochemical yield of 13 +/- 3% and a specific activity of 2.2 +/- 0.2 Ci/micromol. (18)F-trastuzumab-ThioFab retained the biological activity of native protein and was successfully validated in vivo with microPET imaging of Her2 expression in a xenograft tumor-bearing murine model modulated by the Hsp90 inhibitor, 17-(allylamino)-17-demethoxygeldanamycin.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2009

PET of Glial Metabolism Using 2-18F-Fluoroacetate

Jan Marik; Annie Ogasawara; Baby Martin-McNulty; Jed Ross; Judith E. Flores; Herman S. Gill; Jeff N. Tinianow; Alexander N. Vanderbilt; Merry Nishimura; Franklin Peale; Cinthia V. Pastuskovas; Joan M. Greve; Nicholas van Bruggen; Simon Williams

Imaging of the glial activation that occurs in response to central nervous system trauma and inflammation could become a powerful technique for the assessment of several neuropathologies. The selective uptake and metabolism of 2-18F-fluoroacetate (18F-FAC) in glia may represent an attractive strategy for imaging glial metabolism. Methods: We have evaluated the use of 18F-FAC as a specific PET tracer of glial cell metabolism in rodent models of glioblastoma, stroke, and ischemia–hypoxia. Results: Enhanced uptake of 18F-FAC was observed (6.98 ± 0.43 percentage injected dose per gram [%ID/g]; tumor-to-normal ratio, 1.40) in orthotopic U87 xenografts, compared with healthy brain tissue. The lesion extent determined by 18F-FAC PET correlated with that determined by MRI (R2 = 0.934, P = 0.007). After transient middle cerebral artery occlusion in the rat brain, elevated uptake of 18F-FAC (1.00 ± 0.03 %ID/g; lesion-to-normal ratio, 1.90) depicted the ischemic territory and correlated with infarct volumes as determined by 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride staining (R2 = 0.692, P = 0.010) and with the presence of activated astrocytes detected by anti–glial fibrillary acidic protein. Ischemia–hypoxia, induced by permanent ligation of the common carotid artery with transient hypoxia, resulted in persistent elevation of 18F-FAC uptake within 30 min of the induction of hypoxia. Conclusion: Our data support the further evaluation of 18F-FAC PET for the assessment of glial cell metabolism associated with neuroinflammation.


Growth Hormone & Igf Research | 2002

Effects of early treatment with growth hormone on infarct size, survival, and cardiac gene expression after acute myocardial infarction

Hongkui Jin; Renhui Yang; Hsienwie Lu; Annie Ogasawara; Wei Li; Anne M. Ryan; Franklin Peale; Nicholas F. Paoni

OBJECTIVE This study examined the effects of growth hormone (GH) on infarct size, survival, and cardiac gene expression in rats with acute myocardial infarction. DESIGN Animals randomly received sc injection of either saline vehicle (n = 98) or GH (2mg/kg/day, n = 105) for 14 days commencing the day of left coronary artery ligation. Infarct size was determined by morphometric analysis at the time of death or at 52 weeks post-surgery. Gene expression was analyzed by real-time RT-PCR after 2-week treatment. RESULTS GH decreased infarct size by 18% (P < 0.01) and increased survival by 36% at 52 weeks. GH also significantly reduced cardiac expression of atrial natriuretic factor, beta-myosin heavy chain, alpha-smooth muscle actin, collagen I, collagen III, fibronectin, and pro-inflammatory cytokines. CONCLUSIONS Treatment with GH for 2 weeks beginning on the day of myocardial infarction produced beneficial effects that were associated with reductions in cardiac gene expression symptomatic of pathological remodeling.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2015

An Anti-B7-H4 Antibody–Drug Conjugate for the Treatment of Breast Cancer

Steven R. Leong; Wei Ching Liang; Yan Wu; Lisa Crocker; Eric Cheng; Deepak Sampath; Rachana Ohri; Helga Raab; Philip E. Hass; Thinh Pham; Ron Firestein; Dongwei Li; Melissa Schutten; Nicola J. Stagg; Annie Ogasawara; Neelima Koppada; Leslie Roth; Simon Williams; Byoung Chul Lee; Cecile Chalouni; Ivan Peng; Jason DeVoss; Jarrod Tremayne; Paul Polakis; Andrew G. Polson

B7-H4 has been implicated in cancers of the female reproductive system and investigated for its possible use as a biomarker for cancer, but there are no preclinical studies to demonstrate that B7-H4 is a molecular target for therapeutic intervention of cancer. We provide evidence that the prevalence and expression levels of B7-H4 are high in different subtypes of breast cancer and that only a few normal tissues express B7-H4 on the cell membrane. These profiles of low normal expression and upregulation in cancer provide an opportunity for the use of antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), cytotoxic drugs chemically linked to antibodies, for the treatment of B7-H4 positive cancers. We have developed an ADC specific to B7-H4 that uses a linker drug consisting of a potent antimitotic, monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE), linked to engineered cysteines (THIOMAB) via a protease labile linker. We will refer to ADCs that use the THIOMAB format as TDCs to help distinguish the format from standard MC-vc-MMAE ADCs that are conjugated to the interchain disulfide bonds. Anti-B7-H4 (h1D11)-MC-vc-PAB-MMAE (h1D11 TDC) produced durable tumor regression in cell line and patient-derived xenograft models of triple-negative breast cancer. It also binds rat B7-H4 with similar affinity to human and allowed us to test for target dependent toxicity in rats. We found that our anti-B7-H4 TDC has toxicity findings similar to untargeted TDC. Our results validate B7-H4 as an ADC target for breast cancer and support the possible use of this TDC in the treatment of B7-H4(+) breast cancer.


Theranostics | 2016

Evaluation of a 3-hydroxypyridin-2-one (2,3-HOPO) Based Macrocyclic Chelator for 89Zr4+ and Its Use for ImmunoPET Imaging of HER2 Positive Model of Ovarian Carcinoma in Mice

Jeff N. Tinianow; Darpan N. Pandya; Sylvie Pailloux; Annie Ogasawara; Alexander N. Vanderbilt; Herman S. Gill; Simon Williams; Thaddeus J. Wadas; Darren Magda; Jan Marik

A novel octadentate 3-hydroxypyridin-2-one (2,3-HOPO) based di-macrocyclic ligand was evaluated for chelation of 89Zr; subsequently, it was used as a bi-functional chelator for preparation of 89Zr-labeled antibodies. Quantitative chelation of 89Zr4+ with the octadentate ligand forming 89ZrL complex was achieved under mild conditions within 15 minutes. The 89Zr-complex was stable in vitro in presence of DTPA, but a slow degradation was observed in serum. In vivo, the hydrophilic 89Zr-complex showed prevalently renal excretion; and an elevated bone uptake of radioactivity suggested a partial release of 89Zr4+ from the complex. The 2,3-HOPO based ligand was conjugated to the monoclonal antibodies, HER2-specific trastuzumab and an isotypic anti-gD antibody, using a p-phenylene bis-isothiocyanate linker to yield products with an average loading of less than 2 chelates per antibody. Conjugated antibodies were labeled with 89Zr under mild conditions providing the PET tracers in 60-69% yield. Despite the limited stability in mouse serum; the PET tracers performed very well in vivo. The PET imaging in mouse model of HER2 positive ovarian carcinoma showed tumor uptake of 89Zr-trastuzumab (29.2 ± 12.9 %ID/g) indistinguishable (p = 0.488) from the uptake of positive control 89Zr-DFO-trastuzumab (26.1 ± 3.3 %ID/g). In conclusion, the newly developed 3-hydroxypyridin-2-one based di-macrocyclic chelator provides a viable alternative to DFO-based heterobifunctional ligands for preparation of 89Zr-labeled monoclonal antibodies for immunoPET studies.


Nuclear Medicine and Biology | 2013

ImmunoPET imaging of phosphatidylserine in pro-apoptotic therapy treated tumor models

Annie Ogasawara; Jeff N. Tinianow; Alexander N. Vanderbilt; Herman S. Gill; Sharon Yee; Judith E. Flores; Simon-Peter Williams; Avi Ashkenazi; Jan Marik

UNLABELLED An immunoPET imaging probe for the detection of phosphatidylserine was developed and tested in animal models of human cancer treated with pro-apoptotic therapy. We hypothesized that the relatively long plasma half-life of a probe based on a full-length antibody coupled with a residualizing radionuclide would be able to catch the wave of drug-induced apoptosis and lead to a specific accumulation in apoptotic tumor tissue. METHODS The imaging probe is based on a ⁸⁹Zr-labeled monoclonal antibody PGN635 targeting phosphatidylserine. The probe was evaluated pre-clinically in four tumor xenograft models: one studied treatment with paclitaxel to trigger the intrinsic apoptotic pathway, and three others interrogated treatment with an agonistic death-receptor monoclonal antibody to engage the extrinsic apoptotic pathway. RESULTS High accumulation of ⁸⁹Zr-PGN635 was observed in treated tumors undergoing apoptosis reaching 30 %ID/g and tumor-to-blood ratios up to 13. The tumor uptake in control groups treated with vehicle or imaged with a non-binding antibody probe was significantly lower. CONCLUSIONS The results demonstrate the ability of ⁸⁹Zr-PGN635 to image drug-induced apoptosis in animal models and corroborate our hypothesis that radiolabeled antibodies binding to intracellular targets transiently exposed on the cell surface during apoptosis can be employed for detection of tumor response to therapy.


Nuclear Medicine and Biology | 2017

Preparation and evaluation of L- and D-5-[18F]fluorotryptophan as PET imaging probes for indoleamine and tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenases

Tang Tang; Herman S. Gill; Annie Ogasawara; Jeff N. Tinianow; Alexander N. Vanderbilt; Simon-Peter Williams; Georgia Hatzivassiliou; Sharla White; Wendy Sandoval; Kevin DeMent; Mengling Wong; Jan Marik

Indoleamine and tryptophan 2,3-dioxygenases (IDO1 and TDO2) are pyrrolases catalyzing the oxidative cleavage of the 2,3-double bond of L-tryptophan in kynurenine pathway. In the tumor microenvironment, their increased activity prevents normal immune function, i.e. tumor cell recognition and elimination by cytotoxic T-cells. Consequently, inhibition of the kynurenine pathway may enhance the activity of cancer immunotherapeutics by reversing immune dysfunction. We sought to investigate the properties of radiolabeled 5-[18F]fluorotryptophan with respect to its ability for measuring IDO1 and TDO2 activity by positron emission tomography (PET). RESULTS L-5-[18F]fluorotryptophan and D-5-[18F]fluorotryptophan were synthesized by Cu(I) catalyzed [18F]fluorodeboronylation of Boc/tBu protected precursors in moderate yields (1.5±0.6%) sufficient for pre-clinical studies. The specific activity of the product was 407-740GBq/μmol, radiochemical purity >99% and enantiomeric excess 90-99%. Enzymatic assay confirmed that L-5-fluorotryptophan is an IDO1 and TDO2 substrate whereas the D-isomer is not. In-vitro cell uptake experiments using CT26 cells with doxycycline-induced overexpression of human-IDO1 and human-TDO2 revealed an elevated cell uptake of L-5-[18F]fluorotryptophan upon induction of IDO1 or TDO2 enzymes compared to baseline; however, the uptake was observed only in the presence of low L-tryptophan levels in media. PET imaging experiments performed using tumor bearing mouse models expressing IDO1 at various levels (CT26, CT26-hIDO1, 17082A, 17095A) showed tumor uptake of the tracer elevated up to 8%ID/g; however, the observed tumor uptake could not be attributed to IDO1 activity in the tumor tissue. The metabolism of L- and D- isomers was markedly different in vivo, the D-isomer was excreted by a combination of hepatobiliary and renal routes, the L-isomer underwent extensive metabolism to [18F]fluoride. CONCLUSION The observed in vivo tumor uptake of the tracer could not be attributed to IDO1 or TDO2 enzyme activity in the tumor, presumably due to competition with endogenous tryptophan as well as rapid tracer metabolism.

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