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Synthesis and Biological Evaluation of a Carbamate-Containing Tubulysin Antibody-Drug Conjugate.

Heng ChengQiang CongDan DervinAlice StevensKavitha VemuriMary HuberJennifer JulianoSeverino CuisonJanette SungDavid PassmoreColin ChongMeghan GreenbaumEilene KwokJerry JiangChin PanChetana Rao-NaikVangipuram RanganTom KempeAndrea TatumShrikant DeshpandePina CardarelliGregory ViteSanjeev Gangwar
Published in: Bioconjugate chemistry (2020)
Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) use antibodies to deliver cytotoxic payloads directly into tumor cells via specifically binding to the target cell surface antigens. ADCs can enhance the anti-tumor effects of antibodies, and increase the delivery of cytotoxic payloads to cancer cells with a better therapeutic index. An ADC was prepared with a potent carbamate-containing tubulysin analogue attached to an anti-mesothelin antibody via a Cit-Val dipeptide linker. An aniline functionality in the tubulysin analogue was created to provide a site of linker attachment via an amide bond that would be stable in systemic circulation. Upon ADC internalization into antigen-positive cancer cells, the Cit-Val dipeptide linker was cleaved by lysosomal proteases, and the drug was released inside the tumor cells. The naturally occurring acetate of tubulysin was modified to a carbamate to reduce acetate hydrolysis of the ADC in circulation and to increase the hydrophilicity of the drug. The ADC bearing the monoclonal anti-mesothelin antibody and the carbamate-containing tubulysin was highly potent and immunologically specific to H226 human lung carcinoma cells in vitro, and efficacious at well-tolerated doses in a mesothelin-positive OVCAR3 ovarian cancer xenograft mouse model.
Keyphrases
  • diffusion weighted imaging
  • diffusion weighted
  • cell surface
  • mouse model
  • contrast enhanced
  • cancer therapy
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • anti inflammatory
  • drug induced
  • dendritic cells
  • adverse drug
  • magnetic resonance