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Siderocalin fusion proteins enable a new 86 Y/ 90 Y theranostic approach.

Alexia G CosbyTrevor ArinoTyler A BaileyMatthew BuergerJoshua J WoodsLuis M Aguirre QuintanaJennifer V Alvarenga VasquezJennifer N WackerAlyssa N GaiserRoland K StrongRebecca J Abergel
Published in: RSC chemical biology (2023)
The mammalian protein siderocalin binds bacterial siderophores and their iron complexes through cation-π and electrostatic interactions, but also displays high affinity for hydroxypyridinone complexes of trivalent lanthanides and actinides. In order to circumvent synthetic challenges, the use of siderocalin-antibody fusion proteins is explored herein as an alternative targeting approach for precision delivery of trivalent radiometals. We demonstrate the viability of this approach in vivo , using the theranostic pair 90 Y (β - , t 1/2 = 64 h)/ 86 Y (β + , t 1/2 = 14.7 h) in a SKOV-3 xenograft mouse model. Ligand radiolabeling with octadentate hydroxypyridinonate 3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) and subsequent protein binding were achieved at room temperature. The results reported here suggest that the rapid non-covalent binding interaction between siderocalin fusion proteins and the negatively charged Y(iii)-3,4,3-LI(1,2-HOPO) complexes could enable purification-free, cold-kit labeling strategies for the application of therapeutically relevant radiometals in the clinic.
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