| Literature DB >> 29255160 |
Ruogu Qi1, Yongheng Wang1, Peter M Bruno1, Haihua Xiao1, Yingjie Yu1, Ting Li1,2, Sam Lauffer2, Wei Wei2, Qixian Chen1, Xiang Kang1, Haiqin Song1, Xi Yang1, Xing Huang1, Alexandre Detappe1,3,4, Ursula Matulonis3,4, David Pepin2,4, Michael T Hemann1, Michael J Birrer5,6, P Peter Ghoroghchian7,8,9.
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29255160 PMCID: PMC5735131 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-02390-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1MMAE-conjugated nanoparticles enable intracellular release within cancer cells. a Structures of the biodegradable and cationically-charged polymer of methoxy-poly(ethylene glycol)-block-poly(carbobenzyloxy-L-lysine)-block-poly{N-[N-(2-aminoethyl)-2-aminoethyl]aspartamide} (mPEG-b-PZLL-b-PASP(DET)), the highly potent microtubule inhibitor monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE), and a reductive-sensitive linker. b Aqueous dissolution of MMAE-conjugated polymer (MMAE-P) leads to the spontaneous self-assembly of MMAE-conjugated nanoparticles (NP(MMAE)); further complexation of the water-soluble and polyanionic diblock copolymer of methoxy-poly(ethylene glycol)-block-poly(glutamic acid) (mPEG-b-PGA) aids to stabilize these coated nanoparticles (CNP(MMAE)). c Intracellular uptake and release of MMAE from CNP(MMAE). d Mechanism of the release of free MMAE from MMAE-P, which is driven by high intracellular concentrations of reducing agents such as glutathione (GSH; 5 mM intracellular vs. 25–50 µM in the extracellular milieu)
Fig. 2In situ kinetics for release for MMAE from the reductive-sensitive linker. a UV–Vis detection of different elution bands corresponding to the products formed from the reaction of the MMAE-bound and reductive-sensitive linker with 5 mM glutathione (GSH) as determined by LC–MS. b Retention times, mass-to-charge ratios (m/z), chemical structures, and the calculated masses of the isolated products from each of the different elution bands corresponding to the traces in a. c Rates of release of MMAE from the reductive-sensitive linker in phosphate saline buffer (PBS; pH 7.4, 37 °C; blue) and after the addition of GSH (5 mM; red)
Fig. 3Therapeutic classification of MMAE-conjugated nanoparticles using an shRNA screen. a Heat maps and RNAi signature classifications of conventional microtubule stabilizers (paclitaxel, docetaxel) and microtubule destabilizers (vincristine, vinblastine), the highly potent toxin MMAE, and its nanoparticle conjugate (NP(MMAE)). b Principal component analysis of RNAi signatures from each of these aforementioned agents as well as in relation to known transcription/translation inhibitors, topoisomerase II (topII) poisons, and the DNA cross-linkers reference sets
Fig. 4In vitro activity of MMAE-conjugated nanoparticles. a Relative cellular viability of OVCAR8 ovarian cancer cells after 72 h of incubation with free MMAE, uncoated and MMAE-conjugated nanoparticles (NP(MMAE)), or coated and MMAE-conjugated nanoparticles (CNP(MMAE)). b Relative efficiency of colony formation for OVCAR8 cells at 7 days after cellular exposure to free MMAE, NP(MMAE), or CNP(MMAE) and in comparison to various control treatments (PBS, empty nanoparticles (NP), and empty coated nanoparticles (CNP)). Flow cytometry measurements were performed to determine c the percentages of cells undergoing apoptosis and d the cell-cycle distribution of OVCAR8 cells at 48 h after continuous exposure to different MMAE-containing formulations or various controls. e α-Tubulin immuno-detection by confocal microscopy, confirming the preserved ability of MMAE-conjugated nanoparticles (NP(MMAE) and CNP(MMAE)) to enable destabilization of tubulin within the cytoskeleton of OVCAR8 cells and as compared to the cellular responses to free MMAE. Scale bar = 40 μm (***p-value < 0.001, unpaired t-test)
Fig. 5On-target activity and therapeutic efficacy of MMAE-conjugated nanoparticles in an orthotopic cell-line xenograft model of disseminated ovarian cancer. a Representative in vivo images of a single LUC+/RFP+ OVCAR8 tumor-bearing nude mouse at 72 h after IP administration of coated, Cy7.5-labeled, and MMAE-conjugated nanoparticles (CNP(MMAE/Cy7.5)). b Ex vivo signal intensities in each organ at the time of animal sacrifice (n = 3 mice/group). Signal intensity was normalized to the value measured from the intestines of each animal, which had high burdens of micrometastatic tumor foci. c Immunofluorescence staining for α-tubulin in OVCAR8 tumor implants excised from nude mice at 72 h after IP administration of CNP(MMAE) or PBS (control). d Changes in the body weights as compared to baseline. e Tumor burden over time as determined by changes from the baseline radiant flux associated with the BLI signal intensity. f Survival of OVCAR8 tumor-bearing nude mice that received ×4 weekly IP injections of CNP(MMAE) (at an equivalent dose of 3 mg/kg MMAE), free MMAE (at 0.25 mg/kg), or PBS (control treatment). The black arrows indicate the timing of each dose of treatment. The CNP(MMAE) group demonstrated a statistically significant improvement in survival as compared to mice that received either PBS and free MMAE (***p-value < 0.001, Log-rank test)
Fig. 6Therapeutic activity of MMAE-conjugated nanoparticles against platinum-resistant and high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC). a Primary HGSOC cells were cultured and treated with either cisplatin, free MMAE, or coated and MMAE-conjugated nanoparticles (CNP(MMAE)) for 72 h prior to cellular viability measurements by the colorimetric CCK8 assay; the results were compared to those obtained from untreated cells. b Representative in vivo images of a single C.B-17/Icr-SCID/Sed mouse implanted with LUC+ primary HGSOC cells (LUC+ PDX model) at 72 h after IP administration of coated, Cy7.5-labeled, and MMAE-conjugated nanoparticles (CNP(MMAE/Cy7.5)). c Quantification of the relative ex vivo signal intensities in each organ at the time of animal sacrifice (n = 3 identically processed mice). The signal intensity from each reporter channel was normalized to the value measured from the intestines of each animal, which had high burdens of micrometastatic tumor foci. d Changes in the body weights as compared to baseline. e A plot of tumor burden over time as determined by changes from the baseline radiant flux associated with the BLI signal intensity. f Survival of LUC+ PDX-bearing mice that received ×4 weekly IP injections of CNP(MMAE) (at an equivalent dose of either 1 or 3 mg/kg MMAE), free cisplatin (at 3.5 mg/kg platinum), or PBS (control treatment); note that the black arrows indicate the timing of each dose of treatment. Mice that were administered CNP(MMAE) at either 1- or 3-mg/kg dose equivalent of free MMAE demonstrated significant improvements in survival as compared to mice treated with PBS or cisplatin (***p-value < 0.001, Log-rank test)