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In vitro evaluation of [ 3 H]PI-2620 and structural derivatives in non-Alzheimer's tauopathies.

Alzheimer's disease (AD) and non-AD tauopathies such as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), and corticobasal degeneration (CBD) are characterized by the abnormal aggregation of three-repeat (3R) and/or four-repeat (4R) tau isoforms. Several tau-PET tracers have been applied for human imaging of AD and non-AD tauopathies including [18 F]PI-2620. Our objective is to evaluate [3 H]PI-2620 and two promising structural derivatives, [3 H]PI-2014 and [3 H]F-4, using in vitro saturation assays and competitive binding assays against new chemical entities based on this scaffold in human AD tissues for comparison with PSP, CBD and CTE tissues. Thin section autoradiography was employed to assess specific binding and distribution of [3 H]PI-2620 and [3 H]F-4 in fresh-frozen human post-mortem AD, PSP, CBD and CTE tissues. Immunohistochemistry was performed for phospho-tau (AT8) and 4R-tau (RD4). Homogenate filtration binding assays were performed for saturation analysis and competitive binding studies against [3 H]PI-2620. All compounds bound with high affinity in AD tissue. In PSP tissue [3 H]PI-2620 demonstrated the highest affinity (5.3 nM) and in CBD tissue [3 H]F-4 bound with the highest affinity (9.4 nM). Over 40 fluorinated derivatives based on PI-2620 and F-4 were screened in AD and PSP tissue. Notably, compound 2 was the most potent derivative in PSP tissue (Ki  = 7.3 nM). By autoradiography, [3 H]PI-2620 and [3 H]F-4 demonstrated positive signals similar in intensity in AD, PSP and CTE tissues that were displaced by homologous blockade. Binding of both radiotracers aligned with immunostaining for 4R-tau. This work demonstrates that [3 H]PI-2620 and [3 H]F-4 show promise for imaging 4R-tau aggregates in non-AD tauopathies. PI-2620 continues to serve as a structural scaffold for PET radiotracers with higher affinity for non-AD tau over AD tau.

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