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      In vivo quantification of monoamine oxidase A in baboon brain: a PET study using [(11)C]befloxatone and the multi-injection approach.

      Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism
      Animals, Binding Sites, Brain, anatomy & histology, enzymology, radionuclide imaging, Brain Mapping, Carbon Radioisotopes, chemistry, metabolism, Cerebrovascular Circulation, physiology, Humans, Isotope Labeling, Male, Monoamine Oxidase, Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors, Oxazoles, administration & dosage, Papio, Positron-Emission Tomography, methods, Radiopharmaceuticals, Regional Blood Flow

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          Abstract

          [(11)C]befloxatone is a high-affinity, reversible, and selective radioligand for the in vivo visualization of the monoamine oxidase A (MAO-A) binding sites using positron emission tomography (PET). The multi-injection approach was used to study in baboons the interactions between the MAO-A binding sites and [(11)C]befloxatone. The model included four compartments and seven parameters. The arterial plasma concentration, corrected for metabolites, was used as input function. The experimental protocol-three injections of labeled and/or unlabeled befloxatone-allowed the evaluation of all the model parameters from a single PET experiment. In particular, the brain regional concentrations of the MAO-A binding sites (B'(max)) and the apparent in vivo befloxatone affinity (K(d)) were estimated in vivo for the first time. A high binding site density was found in almost all the brain structures (170+/-39 and 194+/-26 pmol/mL in the frontal cortex and striata, respectively, n=5). The cerebellum presented the lowest binding site density (66+/-13 pmol/mL). Apparent affinity was found to be similar in all structures (K(d)V(R)=6.4+/-1.5 nmol/L). This study is the first PET-based estimation of the B(max) of an enzyme.

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