| Literature DB >> 31695779 |
Cho Rong Park1,2,3, Jung Hwan Jo1,4,3, Myung Geun Song1,5, Ji Yong Park1,2, Young-Hwa Kim1,6, Hyewon Youn1,3,7,8, Sun Ha Paek3,9,10, June-Key Chung1,2,3,7,11, Jae Min Jeong1,2,3,12, Yun-Sang Lee1,12, Keon Wook Kang1,2,3,12.
Abstract
Human serum albumin (HSA) is the most abundant plasma protein. The main reason for using HSA as a versatile tool for drug delivery is based on its ability to accumulate in tumors. However, the mechanism of albumin accumulation in tumors is not yet clear. Many researchers using HSA as a drug-carrier have focused on the passive tumor targeting by enhanced permeability and retention (EPR) effect, while other investigators proposed that albumin binding proteins mediate albumin accumulation in tumors. We investigated whether HSA accumulation in tumors is mediated by the EPR effect or by secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine (SPARC), which is known to be an albumin-binding protein.Entities:
Keywords: SPARC; cancer imaging; glioma; human serum albumin; tumor targeting
Year: 2019 PMID: 31695779 PMCID: PMC6831305 DOI: 10.7150/thno.34883
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
Figure 1SPARC protein expression and FNR648-HSA uptake in U87MG cells expressing different levels of SPARC. SPARC expression in (A) Cell lysates and (B) conditioned serum-free cell media. (C) Representative cell images after FNR648-HSA treatment. To demonstrate the effect of SPARC on intracellular uptake of HSA, SPARC was treated with FNR648-HSA. Scale bar, 50 μm. (D) Quantification of FNR648-HSA uptake in each cell type from confocal images. ***: P < 0.001.
Figure 2Confirmation of binding of HSA and SPARC at the protein and cellular levels. (A) Fluorescence image of immunoprecipitated samples. SPARC antibody was used and SPARC-bound albumin was detected by FNR648. (B-C) Fluorescence imaging of Cy3-SPARC- and FNR648-HSA-treated cells. To visualize the co-localization of SPARC and HSA in cells, FRET methodology was used in U87MG cells (B-C); Cy3-SPARC (λ excitation: 514 nm; λ emission: 540-600 nm) and FNR648-HSA (λ emission: 640-750 nm). (B) Representative FRET images. (C) Representative line ROI analysis of the signal. The green line represents the line ROI in the confocal images. (D) Signal intensity vs. location graph from (C). Line ROI signal graph shows co-localization of Cy3-SPARC and FNR648-HSA in cells. Scale bar, in (B) 5 μm.
Figure 3Distribution of FNR648-HSA in tumor-bearing mice. FNR648-HSA was injected into U87MG (Right-thigh) and U87MG-shSPARC (Left-thigh) xenografted tumor-bearing mice. (A) FNR648-HSA images in tumor-bearing mice. The distribution of FNR648-HSA in mice was acquired at various time points after injection. (B) To monitor FNR648-HSA accumulation in tumors, fluorescence signals from tumors were acquired through ROI analyses (n = 3). The image signal unit was total radiant efficacy in [photons/sec]/[μW/cm2].
Figure 4Distribution of FNR648-HSA and FITC-dextran in U87MG tumor-bearing mice. Time-course images of mice after intravenous injection of FNR648-HSA and FITC-dextran. (A) FNR648-HSA images and (B) FITC-dextran images. (C) Ex vivo images of tumors acquired at indicated time-points after FNR648-HSA and FITC-dextran injections. Tumor images were acquired at each time-point after sacrificing the mice (n = 3 for 0.1, 1, 8, 24 h after injection and n = 4 for 4 h). (D) Fluorescence signal analysis using ex vivo tumors. Mice whole body images for tumor ex-vivo signal analysis are shown in Figure S6.
Figure 5Micro-distribution of FNR648-HSA and FITC-dextran in tumor tissues. Immuno-fluorescence staining and confocal images were obtained using frozen-tumor section. Total tumor immunofluorescence image of (A) U87MGB and (B) U87MG-shSPARC. The blood vessels and cell nuclei were stained with anti-CD31 antibody and DAPI, respectively. All images are merged images. The white square represents the enlarged region for each image (C, D, E, F for each image). Separated fluorescence signal images (DAPI, CD31, HSA, and FITC-dextran) from the white squares are shown in Figure S7. Each image is labeled with its scale bar, 1 mm or 250 μm.