Literature DB >> 1754729

Synthetic polymers conjugated to monoclonal antibodies: vehicles for tumour-targeted drug delivery.

L W Seymour1, P A Flanagan, A al-Shamkhani, V Subr, K Ulbrich, J Cassidy, R Duncan.   

Abstract

(N-(2-Hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide (HPMA)) copolymers have seen extensive development as sophisticated lysosomotropic drug carriers. They can be used for site-specific drug delivery by incorporation of appropriate targeting groups and here we report their conjugation to antitumour monoclonal antibodies (the murine IgG, antibody B72.3 and its Fab' and Fab'2 fragments) and assessment as vehicles for tumour-specific drug delivery. Conjugates were synthesised containing an average 5 copolymer units (Mw 20kD) per antibody molecule. Kinetics of elimination and body distribution of radiolabelled conjugates in mice were substantially modified compared with native antibody and fragments, showing prolonged circulation in the bloodstream. Notably, the half-time for bloodclearance of the Fab' fragment (35min) was extended ten-fold following conjugation (6h). The conjugates provoked only a low immune response in A/J mice, following three injections in adjuvant (IgG titre-1 less than 100), and were resistant (up to 50%) to proteolytic degradation by preparations of rat liver lysosomal enzymes. The parent antibody targeted efficiently to human colorectal carcinoma (LS174T) xenografts in nude mice (up to 25%/g); the conjugates, however, showed no tumour-targeting, probably due to masking by polymer chains (which are attached by non-specific aminolysis). Conjugates designed to maintain immunoreactivity following linkage through oxidised carbohydrates are currently being synthesised. Nevertheless, the conjugates display increased rates of extravasation, compared with proteins of the same hydrodynamic size, and the decreased charge is anticipated to accelerate diffusion through tumour interstitium.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1754729     DOI: 10.1089/sct.1991.7.59

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sel Cancer Ther        ISSN: 1043-0733


  2 in total

1.  Starlike vs. classic macromolecular prodrugs: two different antibody-targeted HPMA copolymers of doxorubicin studied in vitro and in vivo as potential anticancer drugs.

Authors:  Markéta Jelínková; Jirí Strohalm; Tomás Etrych; Karel Ulbrich; Blanka Ríhová
Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  2003-10       Impact factor: 4.200

2.  Tumour tropism and anti-cancer efficacy of polymer-based doxorubicin prodrugs in the treatment of subcutaneous murine B16F10 melanoma.

Authors:  L W Seymour; K Ulbrich; P S Steyger; M Brereton; V Subr; J Strohalm; R Duncan
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  1994-10       Impact factor: 7.640

  2 in total

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