Increased Tumor Penetration of Single-Domain Antibody-Drug Conjugates Improves In Vivo Efficacy in Prostate Cancer Models.
Cancer Res
; 80(6): 1268-1278, 2020 03 15.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-31941698
Targeted delivery of chemotherapeutics aims to increase efficacy and lower toxicity by concentrating drugs at the site-of-action, a method embodied by the seven current FDA-approved antibody-drug conjugates (ADC). However, a variety of pharmacokinetic challenges result in relatively narrow therapeutic windows for these agents, hampering the development of new drugs. Here, we use a series of prostate-specific membrane antigen-binding single-domain (Humabody) ADC constructs to demonstrate that tissue penetration of protein-drug conjugates plays a major role in therapeutic efficacy. Counterintuitively, a construct with lower in vitro potency resulted in higher in vivo efficacy than other protein-drug conjugates. Biodistribution data, tumor histology images, spheroid experiments, in vivo single-cell measurements, and computational results demonstrate that a smaller size and slower internalization rate enabled higher tissue penetration and more cell killing. The results also illustrate the benefits of linking an albumin-binding domain to the single-domain ADCs. A construct lacking an albumin-binding domain was rapidly cleared, leading to lower tumor uptake (%ID/g) and decreased in vivo efficacy. In conclusion, these results provide evidence that reaching the maximum number of cells with a lethal payload dose correlates more strongly with in vivo efficacy than total tumor uptake or in vitro potency alone for these protein-drug conjugates. Computational modeling and protein engineering can be used to custom design an optimal framework for controlling internalization, clearance, and tissue penetration to maximize cell killing. SIGNIFICANCE: A mechanistic study of protein-drug conjugates demonstrates that a lower potency compound is more effective in vivo than other agents with equal tumor uptake due to improved tissue penetration and cellular distribution.
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Prostatic Neoplasms
/
Immunoconjugates
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Antineoplastic Agents, Alkylating
/
Single-Domain Antibodies
/
Models, Biological
Limits:
Animals
/
Female
/
Humans
/
Male
Language:
En
Journal:
Cancer Res
Year:
2020
Document type:
Article
Country of publication:
Estados Unidos