| Literature DB >> 18542072 |
L M Smith1, A Nesterova, M C Ryan, S Duniho, M Jonas, M Anderson, R F Zabinski, M K Sutherland, H-P Gerber, K L Van Orden, P A Moore, S M Ruben, P J Carter.
Abstract
CD133/prominin-1 is a pentaspan transmembrane glycoprotein overexpressed in various solid tumours including colorectal and glioblastomas. CD133 was found here to be highly expressed in >or=50% of pancreatic, gastric and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas. Quantitative flow cytometric analysis showed that a panel of established hepatocellular, pancreatic and gastric cancer cell lines expressed CD133 at levels higher than normal epithelial cells or bone marrow progenitor cells. A murine anti-human CD133 antibody (AC133) conjugated to a potent cytotoxic drug, monomethyl auristatin F (MMAF), effectively inhibited the growth of Hep3B hepatocellular and KATO III gastric cancer cells in vitro with IC(50) values of 2-7 ng ml(-1). MMAF induced apoptosis in the cancer cells as measured by caspase activation. The anti-CD133-drug conjugate (AC133-vcMMAF) was shown to internalise and colocalised with the lysosomal marker CD107a in the sensitive cell lines. In contrast, in the resistant cell line Su.86.86, the conjugate internalised and colocalised with the caveolae marker, Cav-1. Addition of ammonium chloride, an inhibitor of lysosomal trafficking and processing, suppressed the cytotoxic effect of AC133-vcMMAF in both Hep3B and KATO III. Anti-CD133-drug conjugate treatment resulted in significant delay of Hep3B tumour growth in SCID mice. Anti-CD133 antibody-drug conjugates warrant further evaluation as a therapeutic strategy to eradicate CD133+ tumours.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18542072 PMCID: PMC2453027 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Immunohistochemical analysis of CD133 expression demonstrating the scoring intensity and expression pattern. Representative images using anti-CD133 MAb ab5558: (A) liver cholangiocarcinoma with multifocal, minimal to mild membranous and cytoplasmic staining, (B) pancreatic adenocarcinoma with mild to moderate membranous (apical) staining of luminal structures, (C) gastric adenocarcinoma with moderate to strong staining in two distinct cell populations: (1) luminal and apical and (2) cytoplasmic and membranous, (D) normal liver with minimal and nonspecific cytoplasmic staining of hepatocytes and apical staining of bile duct, (E) normal pancreas with weak to mild, apical membranous staining of acinar epithelium and ductal epithelium, (F) normal stomach with minimal to mild apical staining of glandular crypt epithelium. The scale bars represent 50 μm.
CD133 expression analysis by immunohistochemistry
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| Gastric adenocarcinomas | 60 | 25, 22 | 2, 6 | 6, 0 | 55, 47 |
| Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas | 31 | 13, 15 | 8, 2 | 0, 0 | 68, 55 |
| Kidney and urothelial carcinomas | 29 | 6, 1 | 5, 2 | 0, 0 | 38, 10 |
| Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas | 12 | 7, 8 | 1, 0 | 0, 0 | 67, 67 |
| Prostatic adenocarcinomas | 39 | 6, 2 | 2, 2 | 0, 0 | 20, 5 |
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| Liver | 30 | 7, 10 | 6, 4 | 1, 5 | 47, 63 |
| Gastric | 20 | 6, 6 | 1, 4 | 3, 0 | 50, 50 |
CD133 expression in solid carcinomas was analysed using tissue microarrays and anti-CD133 MAbs, ab5558 and AC133 and then scored based on the intensity of staining (1–4+, see Figure 1(A–C).
Predominantly colonic in origin.
Tumour and normal cell line expression of CD133 and sensitivity to anti-CD133 antibody-drug conjugate, AC133-vcMMAF
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| Hep3B | 66 000 | 5.2±1.0 | 2.2±0.8 |
| HepG2 | 10 000 | >10 000 | >10 000 |
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| KATO III | 12 000 | 9.5 | 7.0 |
| AGS | 6500 | 10 000 | 10 000 |
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| Su.86.86 | 36 000 | >10 000 | >10 000 |
| Capan-1 | 30 000 | >10 000 | >10 000 |
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| Renal epithelial | 800 | >10 000 | >10 000 |
| Hepatocytes | Not detected | >10 000 | Not tested |
CD133 expression was estimated by quantitative FACS.
IC50 values (mean±s.e.m.) were calculated as described in Materials and methods from ⩾3 or more independent experiments, except for KATO III (n=2).
Figure 2Activity of anti-CD133 ADC against cancer cell lines. (A) ADCs targeting CD133 have potent cytotoxic activity against antigen-positive hepatocellular and gastric carcinoma cell lines. Cytotoxicity was measured by resazurin dye conversion in Hep3B and KATO III cells grown in 96-well plates and exposed to anti-CD133 (AC133-vcMMAF) and control ADCs (IgG-vcMMAF and OKT9-vcMMAF) and crosslinked unconjugated anti-CD133 MAb (AC133) for 96 h. (B) Proliferation was measured using [3H]-thymidine uptake in Hep3B and KATO III cells grown in 96-well plates and exposed to anti-CD133 and control ADCs for 96 h. (C) Induction of apoptosis in Hep3B cells treated with AC133-vcMMAF. Caspase 3/7 activation, a quantitative measurement of apoptotic cells, was monitored using the Caspase Glo assay at various time points (24–72 h) after addition of ADCs. Caspase 3/7 activation relative to untreated cells was detected by 48 h with optimal measurement after 72 h in Hep3B cells treated with increasing concentrations of AC133-vcMMAF and positive control OKT9-vcMMAF. (D) Inhibition of ADC cytotoxicity using internalisation inhibitor, ammonium chloride (NH4Cl) in Hep3B cells. Cells were incubated with increasing concentration of NH4Cl 30 min before treated with anti-CD133 (AC133-vcMMAF) or control ADCs. Cytotoxicity was measured after 72 h using the rezasurin dye conversion as in (A). The percentage inhibition of cytotoxicity relative to control untreated cells at an ADC concentration of 400 ng ml−1 is shown.
Figure 3Subcellular localisation of anti-CD133 ADC, AC133-vcMMAF, in sensitive and resistant cancer cell lines. (A) AC133-vcMMAF, partially colocalises (yellow) with the lysosomal marker, CD107a, in Hep3B and KATO III cells. Subcellular localisation of AC133-vcMMAF (red) and CD107a (green) in Hep3B and KATO III cells after 24 h incubation with the ADC. (B) Subcellular localisation of AC133-vcMMAF, lysosomal marker, CD107a, and caveolin-1 (Cav-1) in Su.86.86 after 24 h incubation with the ADC. AC133-vcMMAF colocalises with Cav-1 (yellow) and not with CD107a in this resistant cell line. Nuclei were stained blue with DAPI. Images were acquired using a × 63 oil immersion objective with Apotome for optical sectioning.
Figure 4In vivo efficacy of an anti-CD133 ADC in Hep3B hepatocellular carcinoma model including IHC analysis of CD133 expression following ADC treatment. (A) In vivo efficacy of AC133-vcMMAF in Hep3B subcutaneous tumours. SCID mice (n=7/group) with established (∼100 mm3) Hep3B tumour xenografts were treated by intraperitoneal injection every 4 days for a total of four doses (red arrows) with the anti-CD133 antibody (AC133) or ADC (AC133-vcMMAF) or isotype control mouse IgG1-vcMMAF. An additional group of mice was left untreated as a control. Median tumour volume plots were continued for each group until one or more animals died or were euthanised (see Materials and methods). Tumours were collected when the tumour volume reached 1000 mm3. Highly concordant data were in an independent replicate of this experiment. (B) CD133 expression in Hep3B xenograft tumours after anti-CD133 drug conjugate treatment. IHC analysis using rabbit anti-CD133 MAb in (a) untreated Hep3B xenograft, (b) treatment with control IgG-vcMMAF (3.0 mg kg−1) and (c) treated with AC133-vcMMAF (3.0 mg kg−1). (d) same tumour as (c) stained with control rabbit IgG as primary antibody. Fast Red chromagen was used to detect CD133 expression.