5'-DMT-dC(Ac)-Suc-CPG; 500 Å (High Load)

5'-DMT-dC(Ac)-Suc-CPG; 500 Å (High Load)

Catalog number: BRL-028

* Please kindly note that our products are not to be used for therapeutic purposes and cannot be sold to patients.
Appearance
White powder
Storage
+2 to +8 °C.
Shipping
Room temperature.
Cleavage Conditions
Use concentrated ammonia for 90 min at 25°C or 30 min at 60°C, or 1:1 ammonia:methylamine (AMA) for 25 min at 25°C when using fast deprotecting amidites.
Deprotection Conditions
When using fast deprotection amidites (such as C-Ac; G-DMF), use concentrated ammonia at 60°C for 1h or AMA for 30 min. When using standard amidites (such as C-Bz; G-iBu), please use concentrated ammonia at 60°C for 5h.

Chemical Structure:

Reference Reading

1. Litiasic acute cholecystitis: application of Tokyo Guidelines in severity grading
Alfredo Escartín , Marta González, Pablo Muriel, Elena Cuello, Ana Pinillos, Maite Santamaría, Helena Salvador, Jorge-Juan Olsina. Observational Study. 2021;89(1):12-21. doi: 10.24875/CIRU.19001616.
Acute calculous cholecystitis (AC) is one of the most frequent surgical emergencies in our field. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is considered the treatment of choice, although not sufficiently widespread. To analyze the application of the Tokyo Guidelines in the management of AC and to determine the influence of the degree of severity on management and prognosis. Prospective, observational study of patients with a primary diagnosis of AC between 2010 and 2015.. Exclusion criteria: AC recurrence; AC as a secondary diagnosis; acalculous cholecystitis; concurrent biliary pathology. Severity was classified according Tokyo 2013 Guidelines. 998 patients were included: 338 (33.9%) mild AC, 567 (56.8%) moderate AC, and 93 (9.3%) severe AC. A total of 582 (58.3%) patients were operated on. Postoperative complications Dindo-Clavien grade ≥ II 12.6%: mild AC 3.6%; moderate AC 12.2%; severe AC 49.0% (p < 0.001). Overall mortality 2%: mild AC 0%; moderate AC 0.5%; severe AC 18.0% (p < 0.001). Urgent laparoscopic cholecystectomy remains the treatment of choice for mild and moderate AC. In patients with severe AC, the risks and benefits of surgery should be assessed, given the high degree of complications and associated mortality.
2. Comparison of Assist/Control Ventilation with and without Volume Guarantee in Term or Near-Term Infants
Handan Bezirganoglu, Nilufer Okur, Mehmet Buyuktiryaki, Serife S Oguz, Evrim A Dizdar, Fatma N Sari. Am J Perinatol. 2022 Jul 5. doi: 10.1055/a-1862-0078.
This study aimed to compare the effects of volume guarantee (VG) combined with assist/control (AC) ventilation to AC alone on hypocarbia episodes and extubation success in infants born at or near term. In this prospective cohort study, infants >34 weeks of gestation at birth, who were born in our hospital supported by synchronized, time-cycled, pressure limited, assist/control ventilation (AC) or assist-controlled VG mechanical ventilation (AC + VG) were included. After admission, infants received either AC or VG + AC using by Leoni Plus ventilator. The ventilation mode was left to the clinician. In the AC group, peak airway pressure was set clinically. In the VG + AC group, desired tidal volume was set at 5 mL/kg, with the ventilator adjusting peak inspiratory pressure to deliver this volume. The study was completed once the patient extubated. There were 35 patients in each group. Incidence of hypocarbia was lower in the VG + AC compared with AC (%17.1 and 22.8%, respectively) but statistically not significant. Out-of-range partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PCO2) levels were lower in the VG + AC group and it reached borderline statistical significance (p = 0.06). The median extubation time was 70 (42-110) hours in the VG + AC group, 89.5 (48.5-115.5) hours in the AC group, and it did not differ between groups (p = 0.47). We found combining AC and VG ventilation compared with AC ventilation alone yielded similar hypocarbia episodes and extubation time for infants of >34 gestational weeks with borderline significance lower out-of-range PCO2 incidence.
3. [225Ac]Ac-SibuDAB for Targeted Alpha Therapy of Prostate Cancer: Preclinical Evaluation and Comparison with [225Ac]Ac-PSMA-617
Sarah D Busslinger, Viviane J Tschan, Olivia K Richard, Zeynep Talip, Roger Schibli, Cristina Müller. Cancers (Basel). 2022 Nov 17;14(22):5651. doi: 10.3390/cancers14225651.
In the present study, SibuDAB, an albumin-binding PSMA ligand, was investigated in combination with actinium-225 and the data were compared with those of [225Ac]Ac-PSMA-617. In vitro, [225Ac]Ac-SibuDAB and [225Ac]Ac-PSMA-617 showed similar tumor cell uptake and PSMA-binding affinities as their 177Lu-labeled counterparts. The in vitro binding to serum albumin in mouse and human blood plasma, respectively, was 2.8-fold and 1.4-fold increased for [225Ac]Ac-SibuDAB as compared to [177Lu]Lu-SibuDAB. In vivo, this characteristic was reflected by the longer retention of [225Ac]Ac-SibuDAB in the blood than previously seen for [177Lu]Lu-SibuDAB. Similar to [225Ac]Ac-PSMA-617, [225Ac]Ac-SibuDAB was well tolerated at 30 kBq per mouse. Differences in blood cell counts were observed between treated mice and untreated controls, but no major variations were observed between values obtained for [225Ac]Ac-SibuDAB and [225Ac]Ac-PSMA-617. [225Ac]Ac-SibuDAB was considerably more effective to treat PSMA-positive tumor xenografts than [225Ac]Ac-PSMA-617. Only 5 kBq per mouse were sufficient to eradicate the tumors, whereas tumor regrowth was observed for mice treated with 5 kBq [225Ac]Ac-PSMA-617 and only one out of six mice survived until the end of the study. The enhanced therapeutic efficacy of [225Ac]Ac-SibuDAB as compared to that of [225Ac]Ac-PSMA-617 and reasonable safety data qualify this novel radioligand as a candidate for targeted α-therapy of prostate cancer.
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