Abstract
PET is a powerful technique for quantifying and visualizing biochemical pathways in vivo. Here, we develop and validate a novel PET probe, [ 18F]-2-deoxy-2-fluoroarabinose ([18F]DFA), for in vivo imaging of ribose salvage. DFA mimics ribose in vivo and accumulates in cells following phosphorylation by ribokinase and further metabolism by transketolase. We use [18F]DFA to show that ribose preferentially accumulates in the liver, suggesting a striking tissue specificity for ribose metabolism. We demonstrate that solute carrier family 2, member 2 (also known as GLUT2), a glucose transporter expressed in the liver, is one ribose transporter, but we do not know if others exist. [18F]DFA accumulation is attenuated in several mouse models of metabolic syndrome, suggesting an association between ribose salvage and glucose and lipid metabolism. These results describe a tool for studying ribose salvage and suggest that plasma ribose is preferentially metabolized in the liver.
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Clark, P. M., Flores, G., Evdokimov, N. M., McCracken, M. N., Chai, T., Nair-Gill, E., … Witte, O. N. (2014). Positron emission tomography probe demonstrates a striking concentration of ribose salvage in the liver. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 111(28). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1410326111
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