The goal of this work was to image the osteolytic component of bone metastasis and its associated inflammation in transgenic Tax
+ mice, a model of HTLV-1 adult T-cell leukemia and osteolytic bone disease (
24) using PET and
64Cu-RGD. This radiotracer is a specific ligand for the α
vβ
3 integrin, which is abundantly expressed on osteoclasts and inflammatory cells in the bone environment (
20). Gao et al. noted that 86% of Tax
+ mice that developed soft-tissue tumors had radiographic evidence of osteolytic bone destruction that was observed before those soft-tissue tumors (
29). Consequently, the Tax transgenic mouse model represents the first animal model of high-penetrance spontaneous osteolytic bone metastasis, which has come to illustrate the critical role of nonmalignant host and inflammatory cells that are recruited by tumor cells in the process of cancer progression and metastasis (
29). Since Tax-induced disease arises spontaneously and occurs with greater frequency with age, biodistribution studies were undertaken using Tax
+ and WT mice in the following age groups: Tax
+ mice 6–12 mo old, Tax
+ mice more than 12 mo old, WT mice 6–12 mo old, and WT mice more than 12 mo old. First, Tax
+ mice between the ages of 6 and 12 mo have significantly higher uptake of the radiopharmaceutical in the tail vertebrae than do the WT mice of the same age range, but this difference in uptake is not observed in tissues that would not suffer from osteolytic bone disease.
Radiotracer uptake is different in Tax
+ mice of different age groups. For example, uptake of the radiopharmaceutical in the tail was significantly greater in Tax
+ mice between the ages of 6 and 12 mo than in Tax
+ mice older than 12 mo, but there were no age-related differences in tail uptake in WT mice. This change in radiopharmaceutical uptake may reflect a difference in the severity of the pathology associated with Tax expression. Increased uptake of radioactivity in Tax
+ mice at 6–12 mo reflects mice with active osteolytic bone disease and its associated inflammation, whereas those mice older than 12 mo that have less radiopharmaceutical uptake in their tails reflect a less severe form of the disease. These observations are in agreement with what has been reported previously by Gao (
29) and resembles the clinical presentation of patients who have radiographic evidence of osteolytic bone metastases but whose lesions are inactive. This condition provides a preclinical example of how this radiopharmaceutical can be used as a diagnostic tool by physicians to stage more accurately the extent of the osteolytic disease and its progression while enabling the clinician to prescribe a more accurate course of treatment based on the results obtained using this tracer.
Small-animal PET/CT was also conducted on the tails of Tax
+ and WT mice and corroborated the results of biodistribution studies but provided more complete data with respect to determining the specific areas of focal tracer uptake. The Tax
+ mice develop osteolytic lesions in their hind limbs and tail. The tail was chosen for imaging for practical reasons, primarily because it is easy to repeat studies and get the tail in approximately the same position. Additionally, the bladder activity does not interfere as much with the tail as do the hind limbs. For example, and show high focal
64Cu-RGD uptake in specific vertebra of the Tax
+ mouse tail, suggesting that there is specific uptake where there is the greatest amount of bone destruction and, hence, tumor-recruited osteoclasts. The overall data from small-animal PET/CT studies show that radiopharmaceutical uptake is higher in the tails of Tax
+ mice than in the tails of WT mice (). This increase in the Tax
+ mouse tail SUV, when compared with that of WT mice, suggests that the radiopharmaceutical is able to distinguish between the osteolytic disease state observed in the Tax
+ mouse tail vertebra and the normal bone physiology occurring in the WT mouse vertebra. Previously, Sprague et al. demonstrated that osteoclasts expressing high levels of α
vβ
3 integrin could be imaged using
64Cu-RGD in a pharmacologically induced model of osteolysis and that the targeting of osteoclasts could be blocked by the coinjection of c(RGDyK), suggesting that uptake of the radiopharmaceutical by osteoclasts is mediated by integrin α
vβ
3 binding (
20). In addition, osteolytic bone lesions of Tax
+ mice are observed to contain neutrophils, which have been shown to express α
vβ
3 (
30). Because osteoclasts, neutrophils, and lymphocytes will express the α
vβ
3 integrin, the radiopharmaceutical is believed to bind to the integrin on all 3 cell types, and this binding is responsible for the selective uptake within the Tax
+ mouse vertebra and results in the enhanced signal when compared with the accumulated activity associated with the tails of WT mice. Interestingly, the soft-tissue tumors observed on the tails of Tax
+ mice were also observed to have tracer uptake. However, because Tax
+ tumor cells lack the β
3 integrin (X. Xu and K. Weilbaecher, unpublished data), the radiopharmaceutical is most likely binding to the inflammatory cells within the tumor in addition to neovasculature associated with the blood supply of the tumor (
30).
Nitrogen-containing bisphosphonates such as ZA have been observed to decrease osteoclast number, osteoclast activation, and bone desorption by induction of osteoclast apoptosis (
31). Bisphosphonates are believed to inhibit the farnesyl diphosphate synthase in the mevalonate pathway and thereby prevent the protein prenylation of small GTPase-signaling proteins required for osteoclast function (
32). Preliminary data using small-animal imaging and SUV analysis suggest that the radiopharmaceutical
64Cu-RGD can be used to monitor bisphosphonate therapy because of the ability of this agent to image osteoclasts by targeting the α
vβ
3 integrin. Radiopharmaceutical uptake was analyzed either by drawing regions of interest on the entire tail portion of the vertebral column or by analyzing specific areas of increased uptake in individual vertebrae. When measured by SUV analysis, activity was seen to decrease in the whole tail or individual vertebrae after bisphosphonate therapy. Because bisphosphonates are believed to induce osteoclast apoptosis, the decrease in uptake is attributed to decreased numbers of osteoclasts within the bone microenvironment. This result suggests that
64Cu-RGD is sensitive enough to detect decreased numbers of osteoclasts. ZA treatment also resulted in a decrease in the tumor SUV from 0.51 before therapy to 0.26 after therapy. This decrease was expected because the pharmacology of bisphosphonates has been demonstrated to induce apoptosis in other cell types besides osteoclasts (
31).
When histology is conducted on tails imaged using small-animal PET/CT, Tax+ tumor cells and nonmalignant inflammatory cell such as neutrophils and lymphocytes are observed within the bone microenvironment. Moreover, at the tumor–bone interface, osteoclasts are present in resorptive pits, indicating active bone resorption. The histologic evidence corroborates results from biodistribution and small-animal imaging experiments and supports the hypothesis that differences in radiopharmaceutical uptake are due to increases in the number of osteoclasts and inflammatory cells within the vertebrae of Tax+ mouse tails.