Literature DB >> 22671766

Toward intracellular targeted delivery of cancer therapeutics: progress and clinical outlook for brain tumor therapy.

Hetal Pandya1, Waldemar Debinski.   

Abstract

A number of anti-cancer drugs have their targets localized to particular intracellular compartments. These drugs reach the targets mainly through diffusion, dependent on biophysical and biochemical forces that allow cell penetration. This means that both cancer cells and normal cells will be subjected to such diffusion; hence many of these drugs, like chemotherapeutics, are potentially toxic and the concentration achieved at the site of their action is often suboptimal. The same relates to radiation that indiscriminately affects normal and diseased cells. However, nature-designed systems enable compounds present in the extracellular environment to end up inside the cell and even travel to more specific intracellular compartments. For example, viruses and bacterial toxins can more or less specifically recognize eukaryotic cells, enter these cells, and direct some protein portions to designated intracellular areas. These phenomena have led to creative thinking, such as employing viruses or bacterial toxins for cargo delivery to cells and, more specifically, to cancer cells. Proteins can be genetically engineered in order to not only mimic what viruses and bacterial toxins can do, but also to add new functions, extending or changing the intracellular routes. It is possible to make conjugates or, more preferably, single-chain proteins that recognize cancer cells and deliver cargo inside the cells, even to the desired subcellular compartment. These findings offer new opportunities to deliver drugs/labels only to cancer cells and only to their site of action within the cells. The development of such dual-specificity vectors for targeting cancer cells is an attractive and potentially safer and more efficacious way of delivering drugs. We provide examples of this approach for delivering brain cancer therapeutics, using a specific biomarker on glioblastoma tumor cells.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22671766      PMCID: PMC3755874          DOI: 10.2165/11631600-000000000-00000

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BioDrugs        ISSN: 1173-8804            Impact factor:   5.807


  90 in total

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Authors:  Michael R Zalutsky
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 10.057

2.  Nuclear localizing sequences promote nuclear translocation and enhance the radiotoxicity of the anti-CD33 monoclonal antibody HuM195 labeled with 111In in human myeloid leukemia cells.

Authors:  Paul Chen; Judy Wang; Kristin Hope; Liqing Jin; John Dick; Ross Cameron; Joseph Brandwein; Mark Minden; Raymond M Reilly
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2006-05       Impact factor: 10.057

3.  Expression of interleukin 13 receptor in glioma and renal cell carcinoma: IL13Ralpha2 as a decoy receptor for IL13.

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Journal:  Lab Invest       Date:  2001-09       Impact factor: 5.662

Review 4.  Receptor imaging: competitive or complementary to antibody imaging?

Authors:  S J Goldsmith
Journal:  Semin Nucl Med       Date:  1997-04       Impact factor: 4.446

5.  High-linear energy transfer (LET) alpha versus low-LET beta emitters in radioimmunotherapy of solid tumors: therapeutic efficacy and dose-limiting toxicity of 213Bi- versus 90Y-labeled CO17-1A Fab' fragments in a human colonic cancer model.

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Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  1999-06-01       Impact factor: 12.701

6.  Poor drug distribution as a possible explanation for the results of the PRECISE trial.

Authors:  John H Sampson; Gary Archer; Christoph Pedain; Eva Wembacher-Schröder; Manfred Westphal; Sandeep Kunwar; Michael A Vogelbaum; April Coan; James E Herndon; Raghu Raghavan; Martin L Brady; David A Reardon; Allan H Friedman; Henry S Friedman; M Inmaculada Rodríguez-Ponce; Susan M Chang; Stephan Mittermeyer; David Croteau; Raj K Puri
Journal:  J Neurosurg       Date:  2010-08       Impact factor: 5.115

7.  Molecular expression analysis of restrictive receptor for interleukin 13, a brain tumor-associated cancer/testis antigen.

Authors:  W Debinski; D M Gibo
Journal:  Mol Med       Date:  2000-05       Impact factor: 6.354

8.  Cell uptake and radiotoxicity studies of an nuclear localization signal peptide-intercalator conjugate labeled with [99mTc(CO)3]+.

Authors:  Pascal Haefliger; Nikos Agorastos; Annabelle Renard; Guya Giambonini-Brugnoli; Cornelia Marty; Roger Alberto
Journal:  Bioconjug Chem       Date:  2005 May-Jun       Impact factor: 4.774

9.  Functional domains of Pseudomonas exotoxin identified by deletion analysis of the gene expressed in E. coli.

Authors:  J Hwang; D J Fitzgerald; S Adhya; I Pastan
Journal:  Cell       Date:  1987-01-16       Impact factor: 66.850

10.  Furin activates Pseudomonas exotoxin A by specific cleavage in vivo and in vitro.

Authors:  N M Inocencio; J M Moehring; T J Moehring
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1994-12-16       Impact factor: 5.486

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  1 in total

1.  Novel Molecular Multilevel Targeted Antitumor Agents.

Authors:  Poonam Sonawane; Young A Choi; Hetal Pandya; Denise M Herpai; Izabela Fokt; Waldemar Priebe; Waldemar Debinski
Journal:  Cancer Transl Med       Date:  2017-06-08
  1 in total

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