On Demand Bioorthogonal Switching of an Antibody-Conjugated SPECT Probe to a Cytotoxic Payload: from Imaging to Therapy.
Pragya AdhikariGuangmin LiMaryAnn GoDanielle MandikianHanine RafidiCarl NgSagana AnifaKevin JohnsonLinda BaoHilda Hernandez BarryRebecca RowntreeNicholas AgardCong WuKang-Jye ChouDonglu ZhangKatherine R KozakThomas H PillowGail D LewisShang-Fan YuC Andrew BoswellJack D SadowskyPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) for the treatment of cancer aim to achieve selective delivery of a cytotoxic payload to tumor cells while sparing normal tissue. In vivo, multiple tumor-dependent and -independent processes act on ADCs and their released payloads to impact tumor-versus-normal delivery, often resulting in a poor therapeutic window. An ADC with a labeled payload would make synchronous correlations between distribution and tissue-specific pharmacological effects possible, empowering preclinical and clinical efforts to improve tumor-selective delivery; however, few methods to label small molecules without destroying their pharmacological activity exist. Herein, we present a bioorthogonal switch approach that allows a radiolabel attached to an ADC payload to be removed tracelessly at will. We exemplify this approach with a potent DNA-damaging agent, the pyrrolobenzodiazepine (PBD) dimer, delivered as an antibody conjugate targeted to lung tumor cells. The radiometal chelating group, DOTA, was attached via a novel trans -cyclooctene (TCO)-caged self-immolative para -aminobenzyl (PAB) linker to the PBD, stably attenuating payload activity and allowing tracking of biodistribution in tumor-bearing mice via SPECT-CT imaging (live) or gamma counting (post-mortem). Following TCO-PAB-DOTA reaction with tetrazines optimized for extra- and intracellular reactivity, the label was removed to reveal the unmodified PBD dimer capable of inducing potent tumor cell killing in vitro and in mouse xenografts. The switchable antibody radio-drug conjugate (ArDC) we describe integrates, but decouples, the two functions of a theranostic given that it can serve as a diagnostic for payload delivery in the labeled state, but can be switched on demand to a therapeutic agent (an ADC).
Keyphrases
- pet imaging
- pet ct
- high resolution
- cancer therapy
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- emergency department
- dna methylation
- gene expression
- metabolic syndrome
- genome wide
- diffusion weighted imaging
- single molecule
- type diabetes
- drug delivery
- young adults
- contrast enhanced
- smoking cessation
- drug induced
- mass spectrometry
- quality improvement
- insulin resistance
- high fat diet induced
- electronic health record
- fluorescence imaging
- fluorescent probe
- wild type