Login / Signup

Engineered collagen-binding serum albumin as a drug conjugate carrier for cancer therapy.

Koichi SasakiJun IshiharaAko IshiharaRisako MiuraAslan MansurovKazuto FukunagaJeffrey A Hubbell
Published in: Science advances (2019)
Serum albumin (SA) is used as a carrier to deliver cytotoxic agents to tumors via passive targeting. To further improve SA's tumor targeting capacity, we sought to develop an approach to retain SA-drug conjugates within tumors through a combination of passive and active targeting. SA was recombinantly fused with a collagen-binding domain (CBD) of von Willebrand factor to bind within the tumor stroma after extravasation due to tumor vascular permeability. Doxorubicin (Dox) was conjugated to the CBD-SA via a pH-sensitive linker. Dox-CBD-SA treatment significantly suppressed tumor growth compared to both Dox-SA and aldoxorubicin treatment in a mouse model of breast cancer. Dox-CBD-SA efficiently stimulated host antitumor immunity, resulting in the complete eradication of MC38 colon carcinoma when used in combination with anti-PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor. Dox-CBD-SA decreased adverse events compared to aldoxorubicin. Thus, engineered CBD-SA could be a versatile and clinically relevant drug conjugate carrier protein for treatment of solid tumors.
Keyphrases
  • cancer therapy
  • drug delivery
  • mouse model
  • endothelial cells
  • young adults
  • drug induced
  • amino acid
  • replacement therapy
  • tissue engineering
  • transcription factor
  • helicobacter pylori infection