Gallium-68
(68Ga) is a positron emitter for clinical
positron emission tomography (PET) applications that can be produced
by a 68Ge/68Ga generator without cyclotron.
However, commercially available 68Ge/68Ga generator
systems require multiple steps for the preparation of 68Ga radiopharmaceuticals and are sometimes plagued by metallic impurities
in the 68Ga eluent. We developed a 68Ge/68Ga generator system using polysaccharide-based adsorbents
and direct application of the generator-eluted 68Ga-citrate
to PET imaging of tropical infectious diseases. N-Methylglucamine (MG) as a 68Ge-adsorbing unit (Sepha-MGs)
was introduced to a series of Sephadex G-10, G-15, G-25, G-50, and
G-75. In the batch method, over 97% of the 68Ge in the
solution was adsorbed onto the Sepha-MG series within 15 min. In particular, 68Ge was effectively adsorbed on the Sepha(15)-MG packed columns
and 70–80% of the 68Ga was eluted by 1 mL of 0.1
M trisodium citrate with low 68Ge contamination (<0.001%).
The chemical form of the generator-eluted 68Ga solution
was identified as 68Ga-citrate. In PET studies, affected
regions in mice infected with Leishmania and severe
fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus were clearly visualized
using the 68Ga-citrate. Sepha-MGs are useful adsorbents
for 68Ge/68Ga generator systems with high 68Ga elution efficiency and minimal 68Ge breakthrough.
These results indicated that eluted 68Ga-citrate can be
directly used for PET imaging of infectious sites in mice. This novel
generator system may be useful for straightforward PET imaging of
infection in clinical practice.