| Literature DB >> 27146514 |
Bence Kapuvári1, Rózsa Hegedüs2, Ákos Schulcz1, Marilena Manea3, József Tóvári1, Alexandra Gacs1, Borbála Vincze1, Gábor Mező4.
Abstract
Compared to classical chemotherapy, peptide-based drug targeting is a promising therapeutic approach for cancer, which can provide increased selectivity and decreased side effects to anticancer drugs. Among various homing devices, gonadotropin-releasing hormone-III (GnRH-III) peptide represents a suitable targeting moiety, in particular in the treatment of hormone independent tumors that highly express GnRH receptors (e.g. colon carcinoma). We have previously shown that GnRH-III[(4)Lys(Ac),(8)Lys(Dau = Aoa)] bioconjugate, in which daunorubicin was attached via oxime linkage to the (8)Lys of a GnRH-III derivative, exerted significant in vivo antitumor effect on subcutaneously developed HT-29 colon tumor. In contrast, results of the study reported here indicated that this compound was not active on an orthotopically developed tumor. However, if Lys in position 4 was acylated with butyric acid instead of acetic acid, the resulting bioconjugate GnRH-III[(4)Lys(Bu),(8)Lys(Dau = Aoa)] had significant tumor growth inhibitory effect. Furthermore, it prevented tumor neovascularization, without detectable side effects. Nevertheless, the development of metastases could not be inhibited by the bioconjugate; therefore, its application in combination with a metastasis preventive agent might be necessary in order to achieve complete tumor remission. In spite of this result, the treatment with GnRH-III[(4)Lys(Bu),(8)Lys(Dau = Aoa)] bioconjugate proved to have significant benefits over the administration of free daunorubicin, which was used at the maximum tolerated dose.Entities:
Keywords: Colon cancer; Daunorubicin; GnRH-III; In vivo tumor growth inhibition; Short chain fatty acids; Targeted cancer therapy
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27146514 PMCID: PMC4919375 DOI: 10.1007/s10637-016-0354-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Invest New Drugs ISSN: 0167-6997 Impact factor: 3.850
Fig. 1Structure representation of daunorubicin-GnRH-III derivative bioconjugates
Fig. 2Chronic in vivo toxicity of daunorubicin on NGS mice
Fig. 3In vivo antitumor effect of Dau-GnRH-III derivative bioconjugates and free daunorubicin on HT-29 orthotopic primary human colon carcinoma (Mean ± SD, Mann-Whitney test)
Fig. 4Macroscopic liver toxicity of Dau-GnRH-III derivative bioconjugates and free daunorubicin (Mean ± SD)
Metastasis on different organs
| Groups (7 animals in each group) | Liver | Lung | Spleen | Pancreas | Lymph node | Diaphragm |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 7/7 | 6/7 | 1/7 | 2/7 | 5/7 | 2/7 |
| Daunorubicin | 7/7 | 7/7 | 0/7 | 0/7 | 4/7 | 3/7 |
| GnRH-III[4Lys(Ac),8Lys(Dau = Aoa)] | 7/7 | 6/7 | 1/7 | 0/7 | 2/7 | 5/7 |
| GnRH-III[4Lys(Bu),8Lys(Dau = Aoa)] | 7/7 | 7/7 | 1/7 | 0/7 | 3/7 | 3/7 |
Fig. 5Proliferation index of HT-29 orthotopic primary human colon carcinoma treated with Dau-GnRH-III derivative bioconjugates or daunorubicin (Mean ± SD)
Fig. 6Vascularization of HT-29 orthotopic primary human colon carcinoma treated with Dau-GnRH-III derivative bioconjugates or daunorubicin (Mean ± SD, Whitney test)
(Px = free Dau treated group vs. bioconjugate treated group)