| Literature DB >> 15299075 |
Daniel E H Afar1, Vinay Bhaskar, Eric Ibsen, Danna Breinberg, Susan M Henshall, James G Kench, Marija Drobnjak, Rick Powers, Melanie Wong, Ferdinand Evangelista, Chris O'Hara, David Powers, Robert B DuBridge, Ingrid Caras, Ruth Winter, Terri Anderson, Nanette Solvason, Phillip D Stricker, Carlos Cordon-Cardo, Howard I Scher, John J Grygiel, Robert L Sutherland, Richard Murray, Vanitha Ramakrishnan, Debbie A Law.
Abstract
Current treatments for advanced stage, hormone-resistant prostate cancer are largely ineffective, leading to high patient mortality and morbidity. To fulfill this unmet medical need, we used global gene expression profiling to identify new potential antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) targets that showed maximal prostate cancer-specific expression. TMEFF2, a gene encoding a plasma membrane protein with two follistatin-like domains and one epidermal growth factor-like domain, had limited normal tissue distribution and was highly overexpressed in prostate cancer. Immunohistochemistry analysis using a specific monoclonal antibody (mAb) to human TMEFF2 showed significant protein expression in 74% of primary prostate cancers and 42% of metastatic lesions from lymph nodes and bone that represented both hormone-naïve and hormone-resistant disease. To evaluate anti-TMEFF2 mAbs as potential ADCs, one mAb was conjugated to the cytotoxic agent auristatin E via a cathepsin B-sensitive valine-citrulline linker. This ADC, Pr1-vcMMAE, was used to treat male severe combined immunodeficient mice bearing xenografted LNCaP and CWR22 prostate cancers expressing TMEFF2. Doses of 3 to 10 mg/kg of this specific ADC resulted in significant and sustained tumor growth inhibition, whereas an isotype control ADC had no significant effect. Similar efficacy and specificity was shown with huPr1-vcMMAE, a humanized anti-TMEFF2 ADC. No overt in vivo toxicity was observed with either murine or human ADC, despite significant cross-reactivity of anti-TMEFF2 mAb with the murine TMEFF2 protein, implying minimal toxicity to other body tissues. These data support the further evaluation and clinical testing of huPr1-vcMMAE as a novel therapeutic for the treatment of metastatic and hormone-resistant prostate cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15299075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer Ther ISSN: 1535-7163 Impact factor: 6.261