| Literature DB >> 31069286 |
Nicholas Sobol, Logan Sutherlin, Edyta Cedrowska1, Joshua Schorp2, Cristina Rodríguez-Rodríguez, Vesna Sossi3, Jimmy Lattimer4, Douglas C Miller5, Paul Pevsner6, J David Robertson.
Abstract
Targeted radiotherapies maximize cytotoxicity to cancer cells. In this work, we describe the synthesis, characterization, and biodistribution of antibody conjugated gold-coated lanthanide phosphate nanoparticles containing 177Lu. [177Lu]Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au@PEG800@Ab nanoparticles combine the radiation resistance of crystalline lanthanide phosphate for stability, the magnetic properties of gadolinium for facile separations, and a gold coating that can be readily functionalized for the attachment of targeting moieties. In contrast to current targeted radiotherapeutic pharmaceuticals, the nanoparticle-antibody conjugate can target and deliver multiple beta radiations to a single biologically relevant receptor. Up to 95% of the injected dose was delivered to the lungs using the monoclonal antibody mAb-201b to target the nanoparticles to thrombomodulin receptors. The 208 keV gamma ray from 177Lu decay (11%) can be used for SPECT imaging of the radiotherapeutic agent, while the moderate energy beta emitted in the decay can be highly effective in treating metastatic disease.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 31069286 PMCID: PMC6481741 DOI: 10.1063/1.5018165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: APL Bioeng ISSN: 2473-2877
FIG. 1.(a) TEM image of core Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4) nanoparticles. (b) TEM image of Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au gold-coated nanoparticles. (c) Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au gold-coated nanoparticle size distribution.
Metal composition (mol. %) of nanoparticles.
| Nanoparticle | Lu | Gd | Au |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4) (n = 3) | 47.5 ± 1.0 | 52.5 ± 1.1 | N/A |
| Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au (n = 3) | 43.2 ± 1.7 | 56.7 ± 1.7 | 0.08 ± 0.002 |
| Lu0.25Gd0.75(PO4)@Au | 20.3 | 79.6 | 0.07 |
| Lu0.1Gd0.9(PO4)@Au | 8.5 | 91.4 | 0.07 |
| Lu0.75Gd0.25(PO4)@Au | 71.5 | 28.4 | 0.05 |
| Lu0.9Gd0.1(PO4)@Au | 88.4 | 11.4 | 0.17 |
Hydrodynamic diameter of PEG coated nanoparticles.
| Nanoparticle | Hydrodynamic diameter (nm) |
|---|---|
| Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au@PEG800 | 34.4 |
| Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au@PEG3400 | 40.5 |
| Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au@PEG5000 | 52.2 |
| Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au@PEG800@Ab | 65.5 |
FIG. 2.(a) Biodistribution of [177Lu]Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au@PEGx (x = 800, 3400, or 5000) in mice treated with clodronate liposomes. (b) Biodistribution of [177Lu]Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au@PEGx in untreated mice. (c) Immunohistochemistry results for Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au@PEG800@Ab (Ab= anti-thrombomodulin) at 200× magnification. (left) An immunostain using the anti-thrombomodulin antibody as the primary antibody labels blood vessels in pulmonary alveolar septae (brown reaction product). (center) Anti-thrombomodulin-conjugated nanoparticles used instead of the primary antibody demonstrate identical immunoreactivity. (right) A negative control (no primary antibody) shows no staining in lung tissue.
FIG. 3.(a) Biodistribution of [177Lu]Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au@PEG800@mAb201b at 1 h post-injection in both clodronate and untreated mice. (***p < .001, by 2-way ANOVA) (b) SUV in lungs over time for mAb201b targeted particles. (c) SUV of [177Lu]Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au @PEG800@mAb201b in mice treated with clodronate and (d) untreated mice. (e) SPECT/CT images of [177Lu]Lu0.5Gd0.5(PO4)@Au @PEG800@mAb201b over time in mice treated with clodronate (left) and untreated mice (right).