High-Affinity NIR-Fluorescent Inhibitors for Tumor Imaging via Carbonic Anhydrase IX.
Gediminas ŽvinysAgne PetrosiuteAudrius ZakšauskasAsta ZubrienėAlvilė ŠčerbavičienėZane KalninaEdita ČapkauskaitėVaida JuozapaitienėAurelija Mickevičiu TėKirill ShubinŠvitrigailė GrincevičienėSteponas RaišysKaspars TarsJurgita MatulienėDaumantas MatulisPublished in: Bioconjugate chemistry (2024)
Tumor imaging and delivery of therapeutic agents may be achieved by designing high-affinity and high-selectivity compounds recognizing a tumor cell-expressing biomarker, such as carbonic anhydrase IX (CA IX). The CAIX, overexpressed in many hypoxic solid tumors, helps adjust to the energy requirements of the hypoxic environment, reduces intracellular acidification, and participates in the metastatic invasion of adjacent tissues. Here, we designed a series of sulfonamide compounds bearing CAIX-recognizing, high-affinity, and high-selectivity groups conjugated via a PEG linker to near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent probes used in the clinic for optically guided cancer surgery. We determined compound affinities for CAIX and other 11 catalytically active CA isozymes by the thermal shift assay and showed that the affinity K d value of CAIX was in the subnanomolar range, hundred to thousand-fold higher than those of other CA isozymes. Similar affinities were also observed for CAIX expressed on the cancer cell surface in live HeLa cell cultures, as determined by the competition assay. The NIR-fluorescent compounds showed excellent properties in visualizing CAIX-positive tumors but not CAIX-negative knockout tumors in a nude mice xenograft model. These compounds would therefore be helpful in optically guided cancer surgery and could potentially be developed for anticancer treatment by radiotherapy.
Keyphrases
- living cells
- papillary thyroid
- photodynamic therapy
- fluorescence imaging
- fluorescent probe
- minimally invasive
- quantum dots
- high resolution
- single cell
- coronary artery bypass
- squamous cell carcinoma
- gene expression
- small cell lung cancer
- drug release
- high throughput
- lymph node metastasis
- primary care
- early stage
- adipose tissue
- small molecule
- childhood cancer
- type diabetes
- stem cells
- single molecule
- mass spectrometry
- label free
- surgical site infection
- rectal cancer
- percutaneous coronary intervention