Nuclear Medicine Techniques.
10.5124/jkma.2004.47.2.119
- Author:
Kyung Han LEE
1
Author Information
1. Department of Nuclear Medicine, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Molecular imaging;
Nuclear medicine;
Radiotracer;
Reporter gene
- MeSH:
Biological Processes;
Diagnosis;
Gene Expression;
Genes, Reporter;
Molecular Imaging;
Molecular Probes;
Nuclear Medicine*;
Pharmacokinetics;
Phenotype;
Physiology;
Sensitivity and Specificity
- From:Journal of the Korean Medical Association
2004;47(2):119-126
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
Molecular imaging is emerging as an exciting new discipline that deals with imaging of disease on a cellular or genetic level. Nuclear medicine has tra6 tionally focused on noninvasive imaging of in vivo physiology using radiolabeled tracers. As such, molecular imaging has its roots in nuclear medicine and in many ways is a direct extension of this field. The myriad of biological processes that may be targeted for molecular nuclear imaging can be grouped into direct and indirect strategies, depending on the type of imaging probe. The direct strategy uses de novo synthesis of molecular probes targeted to a specific molecular marker such as a receptor, transporter, or enzyme. For each novel target, new radiolabeled compounds are required as well as characterization of their detection sensitivity, interaction specificity, pharmacokinetics of delivery, and signaltonoise ratio. The indirect strategy entails the use of a pretargeting molecule that is subsequently activated upon occurrence of a specific molecular event, which in turn is targeted by a specific molecular radioprobe. Reporter gene imaging falls into this category and provides a rapid and convenient tool to monitor gene expression by yielding a phenotype that is readily imaged upon expression. The remarkable efforts currently focused on the molecular nuclear technology signify its importance and wide range of application. With continued improvements in instrumentation, identification of novel targets, and design of better radioprobes, molecular nuclear imaging promises to play an increasingly important role in disease diagnosis and therapy.