Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Birgitta Kullgren is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Birgitta Kullgren.


Health Physics | 1997

New agents for in vivo chelation of uranium(VI): efficacy and toxicity in mice of multidentate catecholate and hydroxypyridinonate ligands.

Patricia W. Durbin; Birgitta Kullgren; Jide Xu; Kenneth N. Raymond

Soluble uranyl ion [UO2(2+), U(VI)] is a kidney poison. Uranyl ion accumulates in bone, and the high specific activity uranium isotopes induce bone cancer. Although sought since the 1940s, no multidentate ligand was identified, until now, that efficiently and stably binds U(VI) at physiological pH, promotes its excretion, and reduces deposits in kidneys and bone. Ten multidentate ligands patterned after natural siderophores and composed of sulfocatechol [CAM(S)], carboxy-catechol [CAM(C)], or hydroxypyridinone [Me-3,2-HOPO] metal-binding units have been tested for in vivo chelation of U(VI). Ligands were injected intraperitoneally (i.p.) into mice 3 min after intravenous (i.v.) injection of 233U or (232+235)U as UO2Cl2 [ligand-to-metal molar ratio 75 to 92]. Regardless of backbone structure, denticity, or binding unit, all 10 ligands significantly reduced kidney U(VI) compared with controls or with mice given CaNa3-DTPA, and four CAM(S) or CAM(C) ligands also significantly reduced skeleton U(VI). Several ligands removed U(VI) from kidneys, when injected at 1 or 24 h. Injected at molar ratios > or = 300, 5-LIO(Me-3,2-HOPO) and TREN-(Me-3,2-HOPO) reduced kidney U(VI) to about 10% of control. Given orally to fasted mice at molar ratios > or = 300, those ligands significantly reduced kidney U(VI). In mice injected i.v. with 0.42 micromol kg(-1) of 235U and given 100 micromol kg(-1) of one of those Me-3,2-HOPO ligands i.p. daily for 10 d starting at 1 h after the U(VI)) loss of kidney U(VI) was greatly accelerated, and the kidneys of treated mice showed no microscopic evidence of renal injury. Crystals of uranyl chelates with linear tetradentate ligands containing bidentate Me-3,2-HOPO groups demonstrate a 1:1 structure. Considering low toxicity, effectiveness, and reasonable cost, the structurally simple linear tetradentate ligands based on the 5-LI backbone (diaminopentane) offer the most promising approach to a clinically acceptable therapeutic agent for U(VI). Work is in progress to identify the most suitable CAM or HOPO binding unit(s).


Health Physics | 2000

Chelating agents for uranium(VI) : 2. efficacy and toxicity of tetradentate catecholate and hydroxypyridinonate ligands in mice

Patricia W. Durbin; Birgitta Kullgren; Shirley N. Ebbe; Jide Xu; Kenneth N. Raymond

Uranium(VI) (UO22+, uranyl) is nephrotoxic. Depending on isotopic composition and dosage, U(VI) is also chemically toxic and carcinogenic in bone. Several ligands containing two, three, or four bidentate catecholate or hydroxypyridinonate metal binding groups, developed for in vivo chelation of other actinides, were found, on evaluation in mice, to be effective for in vivo chelation of U(VI). The most promising ligands contained two bidentate groups per chelator molecule (tetradentate) attached to linear 4- or 5-carbon backbones (4-LI, butylene; 5-LI, pentylene; 5-LIO, diethyl ether). New ligands were then prepared to optimize ligand affinity for U(VI) in vivo and low acute toxicity. Five bidentate binding groups—sulfocatechol [CAM(S)], carboxycatechol [CAM(C)], methylterephthalamide (MeTAM), 1,2-hydroxypyridinone (1,2-HOPO), or 3,2-hydroxypyridinone (Me-3,2-HOPO)—were each attached to two linear backbones (4-LI and 5-LI or 5-LIO). Those ten tetradentate ligands and octadentate 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO), an effective actinide chelator, were evaluated in mice for in vivo chelation of 233U(VI) (injection at 3 min, 1 h, or 24 h or oral administration at 3 min after intravenous injection of 233UO2Cl2) and for acute toxicity (100 &mgr;mol kg−1 injected daily for 10 d). The combined efficacy and toxicity screening identified 5-LIO(Me-3,2-HOPO) and 5-LICAM(S) as the most effective low-toxicity agents. They chelate circulating U(VI) efficiently at ligand:uranium molar ratios ≥ 20, remove useful amounts of newly deposited U(VI) from kidney and bone at molar ratios ≥ 100, and reduce kidney U(VI) levels significantly when given orally at molar ratios ≥ 100. 5-LIO(Me-3,2-HOPO) has greater affinity for kidney U(VI) while 5-LICAM(S) has greater affinity for bone U(VI), and a 1:1 mixture (total molar ratio = 91) reduced kidney and bone U(VI) to 15 and 58% of control, respectively—more than an equimolar amount of either ligand alone.


Health Physics | 2010

Biomimetic Actinide Chelators: An Update on the Preclinical Development of the Orally Active Hydroxypyridonate Decorporation Agents 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) and 5-LIO(Me-3,2-HOPO)

Rebecca J. Abergel; Patricia W. Durbin; Birgitta Kullgren; Shirley N. Ebbe; Jide Xu; Polly Y. Chang; Deborah I. Bunin; Eleanor A. Blakely; Kathleen A. Bjornstad; Chris J. Rosen; David K. Shuh; Kenneth N. Raymond

The threat of a dirty bomb or other major radiological contamination presents a danger of large-scale radiation exposure of the population. Because major components of such contamination are likely to be actinides, actinide decorporation treatments that will reduce radiation exposure must be a priority. Current therapies for the treatment of radionuclide contamination are limited and extensive efforts must be dedicated to the development of therapeutic, orally bioavailable, actinide chelators for emergency medical use. Using a biomimetic approach based on the similar biochemical properties of plutonium(IV) and iron(III), siderophore-inspired multidentate hydroxypyridonate ligands have been designed and are unrivaled in terms of actinide-affinity, selectivity, and efficiency. A perspective on the preclinical development of two hydroxypyridonate actinide decorporation agents, 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) and 5-LIO(Me-3,2-HOPO), is presented. The chemical syntheses of both candidate compounds have been optimized for scale-up. Baseline preparation and analytical methods suitable for manufacturing large amounts have been established. Both ligands show much higher actinide-removal efficacy than the currently approved agent, diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA), with different selectivity for the tested isotopes of plutonium, americium, uranium and neptunium. No toxicity is observed in cells derived from three different human tissue sources treated in vitro up to ligand concentrations of 1 mM, and both ligands were well tolerated in rats when orally administered daily at high doses (>100 micromol kg d) over 28 d under good laboratory practice guidelines. Both compounds are on an accelerated development pathway towards clinical use.


Radiation Research | 2013

Dose-dependent efficacy and safety toxicology of hydroxypyridinonate actinide decorporation agents in rodents: towards a safe and effective human dosing regimen.

Deborah I. Bunin; Polly Y. Chang; Rupa S. Doppalapudi; Edward S. Riccio; Dahlia An; Erin E. Jarvis; Birgitta Kullgren; Rebecca J. Abergel

Two hydroxypyridinone-containing actinide decorporation agents, 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) and 5-LIO(Me-3,2-HOPO), are being developed for the treatment of internal actinide contamination by chelation therapy. Dose-response efficacy profiles in mice were established for the removal of intravenously injected 238Pu and 241Am after parenteral and oral treatment with these chelators. In both cases, presumed efficacious doses promoted substantially greater actinide elimination rates than the currently approved agent, diethylenetriamine-pentaacetic acid, considering two different interspecies scaling methods for the conversion of human doses to equivalent rodent dose levels. In addition, genotoxicity of both ligands was assessed using the Salmonella/Escherichia coli/microsome plate incorporation test and the Chinese hamster ovary cell chromosome aberration assay, showing that neither ligand is genotoxic, in the presence and absence of metabolic activation. Finally, maximum tolerated dose studies were performed in rats for seven consecutive daily oral administrations with the chelators, confirming the safety of the presumed efficacious doses for 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) and 5-LIO(Me-3,2-HOPO). The results of these studies add to the growing body of evidence that both decorporation agents have remarkable decorporation efficacy properties and promising safety toxicology profiles. These results are necessary components of the regulatory approval process and will help determine the optimal human dosing regimens for the treatment of internal radionuclide contamination.


Health Physics | 1997

Circulatory kinetics of intravenously injected 238Pu(IV) citrate and 14C-CaNa3-DTPA in mice : Comparison with rat, dog, and reference man

Patricia W. Durbin; Birgitta Kullgren; Charles T. Schmidt

New ligands for in vivo chelation of Pu(IV) are being synthesized and evaluated in mice for efficacy and toxicity. Biokinetic studies of the new ligands, CaNa3-DTPA, and Pu(IV) are major components of those investigations. Young adult female mice were injected intravenously (iv) with 3H-inulin, 14C-CaNa3-DTPA, or 238Pu(IV) citrate to provide baseline data for plasma clearance, tissue uptake, and excretion rates and to determine the dilution volume (VOD) and renal clearance rate (RC) of filterable substances. Published plasma clearance data for iv-injected 14C-CaNa3-DTPA and Pu(IV) citrate in Reference Man, dog, and rat were collected. Based on combined data for 3H-inulin and 14C-CaNa3-DTPA, VOD = 17% of body weight and RC = 18 mL kg(-1) min(-1) for mice. Retention of 14C-CaNa3-DTPA in the four species is proportional to body weight and inversely proportional to RC: Integrals of the retention of 14C-CaNa3-DTPA from R(t) = 1.0 to R(t) = 0.05 are 108, 43, 28, and 10 DF min, respectively, for Reference Man, dog, rat, and mouse. Clearances of iv-injected Pu(IV) citrate from plasma are in the same order: The plasma curve integrals from injection to 1440 min are 840, 640, 280, and 67 DF min, respectively, for Reference Man, dog, rat, and mouse. In mice, a large fraction of newly injected Pu(IV) is rapidly transferred to the interstitial water of bulk soft tissue (excluding liver and kidneys), from which it is cleared at the same rate as from the plasma. Rapid plasma clearance, escape into interstitial water (22%ID at 20 min), significant early urinary excretion (8%ID in 12 h), and prompt deposition in liver and skeleton (complete in 12 h) are evidence of inefficient binding to plasma protein (mainly transferrin) of newly injected Pu(IV) in mice. Conversely, slow plasma clearance, little early urinary excretion, and delayed deposition in liver and skeleton reflect more efficient binding by transferrin of newly injected Pu(IV) in Reference Man and dog. Pharmacokinetic parameters (effective dosage, effective concentration) of CaNa3-DTPA, alone or combined with plasma Pu(IV) integrals, yielded only qualitative predictions of the relative efficacies of CaNa3-DTPA therapy in four species. The need for improved models of Pu(IV) and ligand biokinetics and the suitability of the three animals for predicting chelation therapy outcomes in humans are discussed.


Dalton Transactions | 2011

3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO): in vitro formation of highly stable lanthanide complexes translates into efficacious in vivo europium decorporation.

Manuel Sturzbecher-Hoehne; Clara Ng Pak Leung; Anthony D'Aléo; Birgitta Kullgren; Anne-Laure Prigent; David K. Shuh; Kenneth N. Raymond; Rebecca J. Abergel

The spermine-based hydroxypyridonate octadentate chelator 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) was investigated for its ability to act as an antenna that sensitizes the emission of Sm(III), Eu(III), and Tb(III) in the Visible range (Φ(tot) = 0.2-7%) and the emission of Pr(III), Nd(III), Sm(III), and Yb(III) in the Near Infra-Red range, with decay times varying from 1.78 μs to 805 μs at room temperature. The particular luminescence spectroscopic properties of these lanthanide complexes formed with 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) were used to characterize their respective solution thermodynamic stabilities as well as those of the corresponding La(III), Gd(III), Dy(III), Ho(III), Er(III), Tm(III), and Lu(III) complexes. The remarkably high affinity of 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) for lanthanide metal ions and the resulting high complex stabilities (pM values ranging from 17.2 for La(III) to 23.1 for Yb(III)) constitute a necessary but not sufficient criterion to consider this octadentate ligand an optimal candidate for in vivo metal decorporation. The in vivo lanthanide complex stability and decorporation capacity of the ligand were assessed, using the radioactive isotope (152)Eu as a tracer in a rodent model, which provided a direct comparison with the in vitro thermodynamic results and demonstrated the great potential of 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) as a therapeutic metal chelating agent.


Health Physics | 1998

237Np: Oxidation State in Vivo and Chelation by Multidentate Catecholate and Hydroxypyridinonate Ligands

Patricia W. Durbin; Birgitta Kullgren; Jide Xu; Kenneth N. Raymond; P.G. Allen; Jerome J. Bucher; Norman M. Edelstein; David K. Shuh

Chemically, 237Np(V) is as toxic as U(VI), and radiologically, about as toxic as 239Pu. Depending on redox conditions in vivo, 237Np exists as weakly complexing Np(V) (NpO2+) or as Np(IV), which forms complexes as stable as those of Pu(IV). Ten multidentate catecholate (CAM) and hydroxypyridinonate (HOPO) ligands with great affinity for Pu(IV) were compared with CaNa3-DTPA for in vivo chelation of 237Np. Mice were injected intravenously with 237NpO2Cl: those in a kinetic study were killed 1 to 2880 min; in ligand studies, fed mice were injected intraperitoneally with a ligand 5, 60, or 1440 min after 237Np(V) (molar ratio 5.6 to 73), mice fasted for 16 h were gastrically intubated with a ligand 3 min after 237Np(V) (molar ratio 5.6 to 274), and all were killed 24 h after ligand administration; tissues and excreta were radioanalyzed. Rapid plasma clearance and urinary excretion of 237Np(V) resemble U(VI); deposition and early retention in skeleton and liver resemble Pu(IV). The x-ray absorption near edge structure spectroscopy (XANES) spectra of femora of 237Np(V)-injected mice, compared with spectra of Np(V) and Np(IV) from reference solids, showed predominantly Np(IV). Significant in vivo 237Np chelation was obtained with all of the HOPO and CAM ligands injected at molar ratio 22; the HOPO ligands reduced 237Np in skeleton, liver, and other soft tissue, on average, to 72, 25, and 25% of control, respectively, while CaNa3-DTPA was ineffective. Two HOPO ligands injected 60 min after 237Np (molar ratio 5.6) significantly reduced body and liver 237Np, and three HOPO ligands given orally (molar ratio > or = 73) significantly reduced body and liver 237Np, compared with controls. Combined with earlier work, these results indicate that: the dominant neptunium species circulating and excreted in urine is Np(V), while that in bone and liver deposits is Np(IV); Np(V) must be reduced to Np(IV) before it can be stably chelated; efficient decorporation of neptunium requires multidentate ligands that form exceptionally stable actinide(IV) chelates and facilitate Np(V) reduction.


Toxicology Mechanisms and Methods | 2013

Actinide chelation: biodistribution and in vivo complex stability of the targeted metal ions.

Birgitta Kullgren; Erin E. Jarvis; Dahlia D. An; Rebecca J. Abergel

Because of the continuing use of nuclear fuel sources and heightened threats of nuclear weapon use, the amount of produced and released radionuclides is increasing daily, as is the risk of larger human exposure to fission product actinides. A rodent model was used to follow the in vivo distribution of representative actinides, administered as free metal ions or complexed with chelating agents including diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid (DTPA) and the hydroxypyridinonate ligands 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) and 5-LIO(Me-3,2-HOPO). Different metabolic pathways for the different metal ions were evidenced, resulting in intricate ligand- and metal-dependent decorporation mechanisms. While the three studied chelators are known for their unrivaled actinide decorporation efficiency, the corresponding metal complexes may undergo in vivo decomposition and release metal ions in various biological pools. This study sets the basis to further explore the metabolism and in vivo coordination properties of internalized actinides for the future development of viable therapeutic chelating agents.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Highly Luminescent and Stable Hydroxypyridinonate Complexes: A Step Towards New Curium Decontamination Strategies

Manuel Sturzbecher-Hoehne; Birgitta Kullgren; Erin E. Jarvis; Dahlia D. An; Rebecca J. Abergel

The photophysical properties, solution thermodynamics, and in vivo complex stabilities of Cm(III) complexes formed with multidentate hydroxypyridinonate ligands, 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) and 5-LIO(Me-3,2-HOPO), are reported. Both chelators were investigated for their ability to act as antenna chromophores for Cm(III), leading to highly sensitized luminescence emission of the metal upon complexation, with long lifetimes (383 and 196 μs for 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) and 5-LIO(Me-3,2-HOPO), respectively) and remarkable quantum yields (45 % and 16 %, respectively) in aqueous solution. The bright emission peaks were used to probe the electronic structure of the 5f complexes and gain insight into ligand field effects; they were also exploited to determine the high (and proton-independent) stabilities of the corresponding Cm(III) complexes (log β110 = 21.8(4) for 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) and log β120 = 24.5(5) for 5-LIO(Me-3,2-HOPO)). The in vivo complex stability for both ligands was assessed by using (248) Cm as a tracer in a rodent model, which provided a direct comparison with the in vitro thermodynamic results and demonstrated the great potential of 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) as a therapeutic Cm(III) decontamination agent.


Drug Development Research | 2012

Significance of Single Variables in Defining Adequate Animal Models to Assess the Efficacy of New Radionuclide Decorporation Agents: Using the Contamination Dose as an Example

Erin E. Jarvis; Dahlia D. An; Birgitta Kullgren; Rebecca J. Abergel

Strategy, Management and Health Policy Enabling Technology, Genomics, Proteomics Preclinical Research Preclinical Development Toxicology, Formulation Drug Delivery, Pharmacokinetics Clinical Development Phases I‐III Regulatory, Quality, Manufacturing Postmarketing Phase IV

Collaboration


Dive into the Birgitta Kullgren's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jide Xu

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rebecca J. Abergel

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Erin E. Jarvis

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dahlia D. An

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David K. Shuh

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

P. W. Durbin

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Manuel Sturzbecher-Hoehne

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge