Stephane Dumas
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by Stephane Dumas.
Investigative Radiology | 2010
Vincent Jacques; Stephane Dumas; Wei-Chuan Sun; Jeffrey S. Troughton; Matthew T. Greenfield; Peter Caravan
Rationale and Objectives:The observed relaxivity of gadolinium-based contrast agents has contributions from the water molecule(s) that bind directly to the gadolinium ion (inner-sphere water), long-lived water molecules and exchangeable protons that make up the second-sphere of coordination, and water molecules that diffuse near the contrast agent (outer-sphere). Inner- and second-sphere relaxivity can both be increased by optimization of the lifetimes of the water molecules and protons in these coordination spheres, the rotational motion of the complex, and the electronic relaxation of the gadolinium ion. We sought to identify new high-relaxivity contrast agents by systematically varying the donor atoms that bind directly to gadolinium to increase inner-sphere relaxivity and concurrently including substituents that influence the second-sphere relaxivity. Methods:Twenty gadolinium-1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclo-dodecane-N,N′,N″,N′″-tetraacetato derivatives were prepared and their relaxivity determined in presence and absence of human serum albumin as a function of temperature and magnetic field. Data was analyzed to extract the underlying molecular parameters influencing relaxivity. Each compound had a common albumin-binding group and an inner-sphere donor set comprising the 4 tertiary amine N atoms from cyclen, an &agr;-substituted acetate oxygen atom, 2 amide oxygen atoms, an inner-sphere water oxygen atom, and a variable donor group. Each amide nitrogen was substituted with different groups to promote hydrogen bonding with second-sphere water molecules. Results:Relativities at 0.47 and 1.4 T, 37°C, in serum albumin ranged from 16.0 to 58.1 mM−1s−1 and from 12.3 to 34.8 mM−1s−1, respectively. The reduction of inner-sphere water exchange typical of amide donor groups could be offset by incorporating a phosphonate or phenolate oxygen atom donor in the first coordination sphere, resulting in higher relaxivity. Amide nitrogen substitution with pendant phosphonate or carboxylate groups increased relaxivity by as much as 88% compared with the N-methyl amide analog. Second-sphere relaxivity contributed as much as 24 and 14 mM−1s−1 at 0.47 and 1.4 T, respectively. Conclusions:Water/proton exchange dynamics in the inner- and second-coordination sphere can be predictably tuned by choice of donor atoms and second-sphere substituents, resulting in high-relaxivity agents.
Investigative Radiology | 2010
Stephane Dumas; Vincent Jacques; Wei-Chuan Sun; Jeffrey S. Troughton; Joel T. Welch; Jaclyn M. Chasse; Heribert Schmitt-Willich; Peter Caravan
Rationale and Objectives:The donor atoms that bind to gadolinium in contrast agents influence inner-sphere water exchange and electronic relaxation, both of which determine observed relaxivity. The effect of these molecular parameters on relaxivity is greatest when the contrast agent is protein bound. We sought to determine an optimal donor atom set to yield high relaxivity compounds. Methods:A total of 38 gadolinium-1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclo-dodecane-N,N′,N′′,N′′′-tetraacetato derivatives were prepared and relaxivity was determined in the presence and absence of human serum albumin as a function of temperature and magnetic field. Each compound had a common albumin-binding group and differed only by substitution of different donor groups at one of the macrocycle nitrogens. Oxygen-17 isotope relaxometry at 7.05 T was performed to estimate water exchange rates. Results:Changing a single donor atom resulted in changes in water exchange rates ranging across 3 orders of magnitude. Donor groups increased water exchange rate in the order: phosphonate ∼ phenolate > &agr;-substituted acetate > acetate > hydroxamate ∼ sulfonamide > amide ∼ pyridyl ∼ imidazole. Relaxivites at 0.47 and 1.4 T, 37°C, ranged from 12.3 to 55.6 mM−1s−1 and from 8.3 to 32.6 mM−1s−1 respectively. Optimal relaxivities were observed when the donor group was an &agr;-substituted acetate. Electronic relaxation was slowest for the acetate derivatives as well. Conclusions:Water exchange dynamics and relaxivity can be predictably tuned by choice of donor atoms.
Australian Journal of Chemistry | 2008
Stephane Dumas; Jeffrey S. Troughton; Normand J. Cloutier; Jaclyn M. Chasse; Thomas J. McMurry; Peter Caravan
EP-647 is a serum albumin-targeted magnetic resonance imaging contrast agent comprising a GdDTPA (DTPA, diethylenetriaminepentaacetate) chelate for magnetic resonance signal generation linked via a phosphodiester to a substituted biphenyl for albumin targeting. Albumin binding and relaxivity are higher than the benchmark magnetic resonance angiographic agent MS-325. EP-647 binds primarily to a unique site on serum albumin that is different from the MS-325 site and the binding sites of other drugs.
Angewandte Chemie | 2007
Peter Caravan; Biplab Kumar Das; Stephane Dumas; Frederick H. Epstein; Patrick A. Helm; Vincent Jacques; Steffi K. Koerner; Andrew Kolodziej; Luhua Shen; Wei-Chuan Sun; Zhaoda Zhang
Inorganic Chemistry | 2004
Jeffrey S. Troughton; Matthew T. Greenfield; Jaclyn M. Greenwood; Stephane Dumas; Andrea J. Wiethoff; Jufeng Wang; Marga Spiller; Thomas J. McMurry; Peter Caravan
Archive | 1997
Randall B. Lauffer; Thomas J. McMurry; Stephen O. Dunham; Daniel M. Scott; David J. Parmelee; Stephane Dumas
Archive | 2000
Randall B. Lauffer; Thomas J. McMurry; Stephane Dumas; Andrew Kolodziej; John C. Amedio; Peter D. Caravan; Zhaoda Zhang
Archive | 2002
Theodore R. West; Thomas J. McMurry; Stephane Dumas; Andrew Kolodziej
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2002
Thomas J. McMurry; David J. Parmelee; Hironao Sajiki; Daniel M. Scott; Hillori S. Ouellet; Richard C. Walovitch; Zoltan Tyeklar; Stephane Dumas; Paul J. Bernard; Samuel T. Nadler; Katarina Midelfort; Matthew T. Greenfield; Jeffrey S. Troughton; Randall B. Lauffer
Archive | 2002
Zhaoda Zhang; John C. Amedio; Peter D. Caravan; Stephane Dumas; Andrew Kolodziej; Thomas J. McMurry