| Literature DB >> 15653145 |
Amitava Mitra1, Justin Mulholland, Anjan Nan, Edwina McNeill, Hamidreza Ghandehari, Bruce R Line.
Abstract
Sites of neovascular angiogenesis are important chemotherapy targets. In this study, the synthesis, characterization, in-vivo imaging and biodistribution of a technetium-99m labeled, water-soluble, N-(2-hydroxypropyl) methacrylamide (HPMA) copolymer carrying doubly cyclized Arg-Gly-Asp motifs (HPMA copolymer-RGD4C conjugate) are reported. In vitro endothelial cell adhesion assays indicated that HPMA copolymer-RGD4C conjugates inhibited alphaVbeta3-mediated endothelial cell adhesion while HPMA copolymer Arg-Gly-Glu control conjugates (HPMA copolymer-RGE4C conjugate) and hydrolyzed HPMA copolymer precursor (HPMA copolymer) showed no activity. The scintigraphic images of prostate tumor bearing SCID mice obtained 24 h post-i.v. injection indicated greater tumor localization of HPMA copolymer-RGD4C conjugate than the control, HPMA copolymer-RGE4C conjugate. The 24-h necropsy radioactivity data showed that HPMA copolymer-RGD4C conjugate had significantly higher (p<0.001) tumor localization compared to HPMA copolymer-RGE4C conjugate and HPMA copolymer. Also, HPMA copolymer-RGD4C conjugates had sustained tumor retention over 72 h and reasonably efficient clearance from the background organs. These results suggest that specific tumor angiogenesis targeting is possible with HPMA copolymer-RGD4C conjugates. This construct provides a foundation that should support targeted delivery of radionuclides and drugs to solid tumors for diagnostic and therapeutic applications.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15653145 DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2004.09.023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Control Release ISSN: 0168-3659 Impact factor: 9.776