| Literature DB >> 30621193 |
Yukiya Takayama1, Kosuke Kusamori2, Makiya Nishikawa3.
Abstract
Click chemistry has great potential for use in binding between nucleic acids, lipids, proteins, and other molecules, and has been used in many research fields because of its beneficial characteristics, including high yield, high specificity, and simplicity. The recent development of copper-free and less cytotoxic click chemistry reactions has allowed for the application of click chemistry to the field of medicine. Moreover, metabolic glycoengineering allows for the direct modification of living cells with substrates for click chemistry either in vitro or in vivo. As such, click chemistry has become a powerful tool for cell transplantation and drug delivery. In this review, we describe some applications of click chemistry for cell engineering in cell transplantation and for drug delivery in the diagnosis and treatment of diseases.Entities:
Keywords: cancer therapy; cell surface modification; cell tracking; click chemistry; drug delivery; metabolic glycoengineering
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30621193 PMCID: PMC6337375 DOI: 10.3390/molecules24010172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Scheme 1Reaction schemes of various click chemistry reactions. (A) CuAAC reaction with azide and linear alkyne; (B) SPAAC reaction with azide and cyclooctyne; (C) iEDDA reaction with Tz and TCO.
Non-toxic concentration range of the reagents used in click chemistry and glycoengineering in vitro.
| Compound | Non-Toxic Concentration | Incubation Time | Cell Type | Reference (Year) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ac4ManNAz | 5 μM | 3 days | B16 | [ |
| 10 μM | 3 days | A549 | [ | |
| 20 μM | 3 days | MSC (human) | [ | |
| 50 μM | 3 days | NIH3T3 | [ | |
| 50 μM | 1 day | ASC (human) | [ | |
| 3 days | Jurkat T lymphocyte | [ | ||
| 3 days | Chondrocyte (rabbit) | [ | ||
| 7 days | MSC (human) | [ | ||
| Ac3ManNAz | <5 μM | 2 days | Primary hippocampal neurons (rat) | [ |
| 100 μM | 2 days | U87 | [ | |
| BCN-CNP-Cy5 | 500 μg/mL | 1 day | ASC (human) | [ |
| DBCO-650 | 50 μM | 1 h | Chondrocyte (rabbit) | [ |
| DBCO-Cy5 | 20 μM | 1 h | ASC (human) | [ |
| 100 μM | 48 h | A549 | [ | |
| TCO-DBCO | 100 μM | 30 min | NIH3T3 | [ |
| A549 | ||||
| Jurkat T lymphocyte | ||||
| Tz-DBCO | 100 μM | 30 min | NIH3T3 | [ |
| A549 | ||||
| Jurkat T lymphocyte |
B16, murine melanoma cell line; A549, human lung adenocarcinoma cell line; NIH3T3, murine embryo fibroblast cell line; ASCs, adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells; BCN-CNP-Cy5, Cy5-labeled bicyclo[6.1.0]nonyne modified imageable glycol chitosan nanoparticle; Ac3ManNAz, 1,3,4-tri-O-acetyl-N-azidoacetylmannosamine; DBCO-650, dibenzylcyclooctyne-SETA 650; Tz, tetrazines; TCO, trans-cyclooctene.
Non-toxic dose range of the reagents used in click chemistry and glycoengineering in vivo.
| Compound | Non-Toxic Dose | Administration Route | Animal Type | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ac4ManNAz | 300 mg/kg/day daily for 7 days | ip | Mouse | [ |
| 10 mg/kg/day daily for 3 days | it | Mouse | [ | |
| 40 mg/kg/day daily for 3 days | iv | Mouse | [ | |
| 10 nmol | Oral | Mouse | [ | |
| Ac4ManNAz-LP | 40 mg/kg/day of Ac4ManNAz daily for 4 days | iv | Mouse | [ |
| BCN-Lipo | 10 mg/kg | iv | Mouse | [ |
| DBCO-Cy5 | 5 nmol | iv | Mouse | [ |
| DBCO-Cy5.5 | 5 μg (4.25 nmol) | iv | Mouse | [ |
| DBCO-lipo | 10 mg/kg | iv | Mouse | [ |
| DBCO modified polymeric nanoparticles | 100 μg/body | iv | Mouse | [ |
| DBCO-ZnPc-LP | 2.5 mg/kg | iv | Mouse | [ |
| 3,6-dimethyl-1,2,4,5-Tz | 6 mg/kg | iv | Mouse | [ |
| Tz-Cy5.5 | 8 nmol | iv | Mouse | [ |
| GEBP11-TCO | 4 nmol | iv | Mouse | [ |
Ac4ManNAz-Lp, Ac4ManNAz-loaded liposome; BCN-Lipo, bicyclo[6.1.0]nonyne-modified liposome; DBCO-lipo, dibenzyl cyclooctyne conjugated PEGylated liposome; DBCO-ZnPc-LP, dibenzyl- cyclooctyne-modified zinc (II)-phthalocyanine-loaded liposome; GEBP11-TCO, a vascular-homing peptide (GEBP11)-trans-cyclooctene.
Figure 1Schematic illustration of cell labeling via metabolic glycoengineering. Ac4ManNAz is taken up by cells and incorporated into membrane proteins, resulting in the metabolic labeling of membrane proteins with azide.
Figure 2Schematic illustration of cell engineering using copper-free click chemistry. (A) Azide-modified cells are labeled with DBCO-imageable probes via SPAAC reaction. The modified cells are detected after transplantation; (B) Azide-modified MSCs are labeled with DBCO-coated nanoparticles via SPAAC reaction. The modified MSCs home to tumor tissues after transplantation; (C) Tz-modified cells and TCO-modified cells form two- or multiple-cell pairs via iEDDA reaction.
The application of copper-free click chemistry for cell tracking.
| Reaction Type | Azide Sugar | Probe | Imaging | Cell Type | Transplantation Route | Type of Animals | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SPAAC | Ac4ManNAz | DBCO-Cy5 | FL | A549 | Injection into liver | Nude mice | [ |
| SPAAC | Ac4ManNAz | DBCO-650 | FL | Chondrocyte (rabbit) | sc | Nude mice | [ |
| SPAAC | Ac4ManNAz | DBCO-Cy5.5 | FL | MSC (human) | iv and ip | Nude mice | [ |
| SPAAC | Ac4ManNAz | DBCO-Cy5 | FL | ASC (human) | Injection into hindlimb | Nude mice | [ |
| SPAAC | Ac4ManNAz | BCN-CNPs | FL, MR, CT | MSC (human) | sc | Nude mice | [ |
FL, fluorescence; sc, subcutaneous injection; iv, intravenous injection; ip, intraperitoneal injection; MR, magnetic resonance; CT, computed tomography.
Figure 3Schematic illustration of the application of copper-free click chemistry for drug delivery system. (A) Cancer overexpressing enzyme-cleavable Ac3ManNAz is metabolized to Ac3ManNAz in tumor cells. Azide group specifically presents on the surface of tumor cells; (B) Ac4ManNAz-loaded nanoparticles specifically accumulate in tumor tissue through the EPR effect and are taken up by tumor cells. Azide group presents on the surface of tumor cells; (C) DBCO-coated nanoparticles accumulate in tumor tissue and is conjugated with azide group in tumor cells via SPAAC reaction; (D) TCO-labeled mAb accumulate in tumor tissue. Tz-RI is conjugated with TCO in tumor cells via iEDDA reaction.
The application of copper-free click chemistry for tumor targeting delivery and imaging.
| Reaction Type | Tumor Labeling | Targeting Agent | Tumor Model | Purpose | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Labeling Method | Labeling Agent | Administration Route | Targeting Agent | Administration Route | ||||
| SPAAC | MGE | Ac4ManNAz | it | DBCO-liposome | iv | A549 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| SPAAC | MGE | RR-S-Ac3ManNAz | it | DBCO-Cy5.5 | iv | HT-29 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| SPAAC | MGE | DCL-AAM | iv | DBCO-Cy5 | iv | LS174T subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| DBCO-VC-Dox | LS174T and MDA-MB-231 subcutaneous tumor and4T1 lung metastatic tumor | Therapy | ||||||
| SPAAC | MGE | Ac4ManNAz-loaded CNPs | iv | BCN-Ce6-CNPs | iv | A549 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging and therapy | [ |
| SPAAC | MGE | Ac4ManNAz-liposome | iv | DBCO-ZnPc-liposome | iv | A549 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging andtherapy | [ |
| SPAAC | MGE | Nano-MPs | iv | Cy5.5 labeled BCN-liposome | iv | U87 and MCF7 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| SPAAC | MGE | Ac4ManNAz loaded microbubble | iv | DBCO-Cy5 | iv | 4T1 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| SPAAC | Azide-labeling cells | Azide-labeling MSCs | it | NIR-dye containing DBCO-NPs | iv | A549-Luc subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| ip | Paclitaxel-loaded DBCO-NPs | ip | MA148 metastatic ovarian tumor | Therapy | ||||
| SPAAC | Nanoparticles | DBCO-PEG-MSNs | iv | 18F-azide | iv | U87 MG subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| SPAAC, Staudinger ligation and iEDDA | MGE | Ac4GalNAz | ip | Tz-DyLight | iv | LL2 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| TMDIBO-TCO and PHOS-TCO | iv | |||||||
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | CD49-TCO | iv | 111 In-Tz | iv | Colon carcinoma xenograft | Imaging | [ |
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | A33-TCO | iv | 64Cu-Tz-Bn-NOTA | iv | SW1222 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | mAb-TCO | iv | 18F-Tz | iv | A431 and BT-474 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | A33-TCO | iv | Polymer-modified Tz | iv | LS174 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | CC49-TCO | iv | 177Lu-Tz | iv | LS174T subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | CC49-TCO | iv | 111In-Tz | iv | LS174T subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | TCO-oxymethylacetamide-tagged CC49 | iv | 111In-Tz | iv | LS174T subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | A33-TCO | iv | 68Ga-Tz-DTPA dextran | iv | LS174T subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | TCO-antiVEGFR2 | iv | MBTZ | iv | SKOV-3 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | 5B1-TCO | iv | 64Cu-NOTA-PEG7-TCO | iv | Capan-2 and BxPC3 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | 5B1-TCO | iv | 177Lu-DOTA-PEG7-Tz | iv | BxPC3 subcutaneous tumor | Therapy | [ |
| 89Zr-Tz | Imaging | |||||||
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | Ts29.2-PEG-TCO | iv | Tz-Cy5 | iv | HT29 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| 35A7-PEG-TCO | iv | Tz-Cy5 | ip | A431-CEA-Luc peritoneal carcinomatosis tumor | ||||
| iEDDA | Membrane inserted peptide | pHLIP-Tz | it | 18F-TCO-liposome | iv | SKOV-3 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| iEDDA | Aptamer (peptide) | GEBP11-TCO | iv | Cy5.5-Tz | iv | SGC-7901 subcutaneous tumor | Imaging | [ |
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | CC49-TCO-DOX | iv | Radio-labeled Tz | iv and ip | LS174T subcutaneous tumor | Therapy | [ |
| iEDDA | Antigen-antibody reaction | TAG72-TCO-MMAE | iv | Tz-DOTA | iv | LS174T and OVCAR 3 subcutaneous tumor | Therapy | [ |
MGE, metabolic glycoengineering; it, intratumoral injection; DBCO-liposome, DBCO conjugated PEGylated liposome (PEG = poly[ethylene glycol]); iv, intravenous injection; LST174T, human colon cancer cell line; DBCO-ZnPc-LP, DBCO-modified zinc (II)-phthalocyanine-loaded liposome; U87, human glioblastoma cell line; MCF7, human breast cancer cell line; ip, intraperitoneal injection; DBCO-PEG-MSNs, DBCO-functionalized PEGylated mesoporous silica nanoparticles; Ac4GalNAz, tetraacetylated N-Azidoacetyl-galactosamine; TMDIBO-TCO, tetramethoxydibenzocyclooctyne-TCO; PHOS-TCO, bifunctional TCO-phosphine; Tz-DyLight, fluorescently labeled Tz; LL2, murine small cell lung cancer cell line; SW1222, human colorectal cancer cell line; A431, human epidermoid carcinoma cell line; BT-474, human breast carcinoma cell line; TCO-anti-VEGFR2, TCO-conjugated anti-vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2; MBtz, Tz-labeled gas-filled microbubbles; SKOV-3, human ovarian carcinoma cell line; 5B1-TCO, TCO-modified a human anti-CA19.9 monoclonal antibody 5B1; Capan-2, human pancreas adenocarcinoma cell line Cpan-2; BxPC3, human pancreatic cancer cell line; Ts29.2-PEG-TCO, anti-TSPAN8 monoclonal antibody (Ts29.2)-PEG-TCO; 35A7-PEG-TCO, anti-CEA monoclonal antibody (35A7)-PEG-TCO; A431-CEA-Luc, colon carcinoma transfected with constructs encoding both carcinoembryonic antigen and luciferase; pHLIP-Tz, Tz-conjugated pH (low) insertion peptide; GEBP11-TCO, a vascular-homing peptide (GEBP11)-TCO conjugate; SGC-7901, human gastric carcinoma cell line SGC-7901; MMAE, monomethyl auristatin E.