Dongjian Zhang
Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine
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Featured researches published by Dongjian Zhang.
Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2016
Jindian Li; Jian Zhang; Shengwei Yang; Cuihua Jiang; Dongjian Zhang; Qiaomei Jin; Qin Wang; Cong Wang; Yicheng Ni; Zhiqi Yin; Shaoli Song
Myocardial infarction (MI) leads to substantial morbidity and mortality around the world. Accurate assessment of myocardial viability is essential to assist therapies and improve patient outcomes. (131)I-hypericin dicarboxylic acid ((131)I-HDA) was synthesized and evaluated as a potential diagnostic agent for earlier assessment of myocardium viability compared to its preceding counterpart (131)I-hypericin ((131)I-Hyp) with strong hydrophobic property, long plasma half-life, and high uptake in mononuclear phagocyte system (MPS). Herein, HDA was synthesized and characterized, and self-aggregation constant Kα was analyzed by spectrophotometry. Plasma half-life was determined in healthy rats by γ-counting. (131)I-HDA and (131)I-Hyp were prepared with iodogen as oxidant. In vitro necrosis avidity of (131)I-HDA and (131)I-Hyp was evaluated in necrotic cells induced by hyperthermia. Biodistribution was determined in rat models of induced necrosis using γ-counting, autoradiography, and histopathology. Earlier imaging of necrotic myocardium to assess myocardial viability was performed in rat models of reperfused myocardium infarction using single photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT). As a result, the self-aggregation constant Kα of HDA was lower than that of Hyp (105602 vs 194644, p < 0.01). (131)I-HDA displayed a shorter blood half-life compared with (131)I-Hyp (9.21 vs 31.20 h, p < 0.01). The necrotic-viable ratio in cells was higher with (131)I-HDA relative to that with (131)I-Hyp (5.48 vs 4.63, p < 0.05). (131)I-HDA showed a higher necrotic-viable myocardium ratio (7.32 vs 3.20, p < 0.01), necrotic myocardium-blood ratio (3.34 vs 1.74, p < 0.05), and necrotic myocardium-lung ratio (3.09 vs 0.61, p < 0.01) compared with (131)I-Hyp. (131)I-HDA achieved imaging of necrotic myocardium at 6 h postinjection (p.i.) with SPECT/CT, earlier than what (131)I-Hyp did. Therefore, (131)I-HDA may serve as a promising necrosis-avid diagnostic agent for earlier imaging of necrotic myocardium compared with (131)I-Hyp. This may support further development of radiopharmaceuticals ((123)I and (99m)Tc) based on HDA for SPECT/CT of necrotic myocardium.
Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2018
Jiajia Liang; Ziping Sun; Dongjian Zhang; Qiaomei Jin; Lingqiao Cai; Lin Ma; Wei Liu; Yicheng Ni; Jian Zhang; Zhiqi Yin
A rapid and accurate identification of necrotic tissues is of great importance to define disease severity, predict prognosis, and monitor responses to therapies. To seek necrosis-avid agents with clinically translational potential, we first evaluated the necrosis avidity of flavonoids in rodent models of muscular, myocardial, and tumoral necrosis. In this study, the necrosis avidity of eight radioiodinated 5,7-dihydroxyflavones was tested by ex vivo gamma counting, histochemical staining, and autoradiography in mouse models of ethanol-induced muscular necrosis. The necrosis avidity of a lead tracer, 131I-5, was further assessed in rat models of myocardial infarction and reperfusion. Therapy response was evaluated by 131I-5 single photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography imaging 24 h after combretastatin A-4 disodium phosphate (CA4P) therapy on rats bearing W256 breast carcinomas. The necrosis avidity mechanism for the tracers was studied by in vitro DNA binding experiments of 12 5,7-dihydroxyflavones and in vivo blocking experiments of 131I-5. In the results, all 131I-5,7-dihydroxyflavones showed intense uptake to necrotic muscles, and 131I-5 emerged as the most potential tracer among them. 131I-5 obtained a necrotic-viable myocardium ratio of 5.0 ± 0.9 in post-mortem biodistribution on reperfused myocardial infarction models and achieved necrosis imaging on CA4P-treated W256 tumors 4 h after tracer injection. DNA binding studies suggested that necrosis avidity was related to DNA binding to a certain extent. The uptake of 131I-5 in necrotic muscle was markedly blocked by excessive ethidium bromide and cold 5 with a 51.95% and 64.29% decline at 1 h after coinjection, respectively. In conclusion, flavonoids are necrosis-avid agents. Furthermore, 131I-5 can serve as a promising necrosis-avid diagnostic tracer for the rapid imaging of necrotic tissues, supporting the further molecular design of radiotracer based on 5.
Contrast Media & Molecular Imaging | 2018
Dongjian Zhang; Meng Gao; Nan Yao; Cuihua Jiang; Wei Liu; Tiannv Li; Shaoli Song; Dejian Huang; Zhiqi Yin; Yunliang Qiu; Qiaomei Jin
This study aimed to explore the use of 131I-Hoechst 33258 (131I-H33258) for early prediction of tumor response to vascular-disrupting agents (VDAs) with combretastatin-A4 phosphate (CA4P) as a representative. Necrosis avidity of 131I-H33258 was evaluated in mouse models with muscle necrosis and blocking was used to confirm the tracer specificity. Therapy response was evaluated by 131I-H33258 SPECT/CT imaging 24 h after CA4P therapy in W256 tumor-bearing rats. Radiotracer uptake in tumors was validated ex vivo using γ-counting, autoradiography, and histopathological staining. Results showed that 131I-H33258 had predominant necrosis avidity and could specifically bind to necrotic tissue. SPECT/CT imaging demonstrated that an obvious “hot spot” could be observed in the CA4P-treated tumor. Ex vivo γ-counting revealed 131I-H33258 uptake in tumors was increased 2.8-fold in rats treated with CA4P relative to rats treated with vehicle. Autoradiography and corresponding H&E staining suggested that 131I-H33258 was mainly localized in necrotic tumor area and the higher overall uptake in the treated tumors was attributed to the increased necrosis. These results suggest that 131I-H33258 can be used to image induction of cell necrosis 24 h after CA4P therapy, which support further molecular design of probes based on scaffold H33258 for monitoring of tumor response to VDAs treatment.
European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics | 2017
Xinghua Duan; Zhiqi Yin; Cuihua Jiang; Qiaomei Jin; Dongjian Zhang; Ziping Sun; Wen-Cai Ye; Jian Zhang
Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2016
Cong Wang; Qiaomei Jin; Shengwei Yang; Dongjian Zhang; Qin Wang; Jindian Li; Shaoli Song; Ziping Sun; Yicheng Ni; Jian Zhang; Zhiqi Yin
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2018
Qiaomei Jin; Jian Zhang; Cuihua Jiang; Dongjian Zhang; Meng Gao; Shihe Hu
Analytical Chemistry | 2017
Qi Luo; Qiaomei Jin; Chang Su; Dongjian Zhang; Cuihua Jiang; Anne Folta Fish; Yuanbo Feng; Yicheng Ni; Jian Zhang; Zhiqi Yin
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2018
Qiaomei Jin; Meng Gao; Dongjian Zhang; Cuihua Jiang; Nan Yao; Jian Zhang
Molecular Imaging and Biology | 2018
Chang Su; Dongjian Zhang; Na Bao; Aiyan Ji; Yuanbo Feng; Li Chen; Yicheng Ni; Jian Zhang; Zhiqi Yin
Molecular Imaging and Biology | 2018
Qiaomei Jin; Juanzhi Zhao; Meng Gao; Yuanbo Feng; Wei Liu; Zhiqi Yin; Tiannv Li; Shaoli Song; Yicheng Ni; Jian Zhang; Dejian Huang; Dongjian Zhang