| Literature DB >> 32152502 |
Takahiko Nishigaki1,2, Tsuyoshi Takahashi3, Satoshi Serada2,4, Minoru Fujimoto2,4, Tomoharu Ohkawara2,4, Hisashi Hara1,2, Takahito Sugase1,2,4, Toru Otsuru1,2, Yurina Saito1,2, Shigehiro Tsujii5, Taisei Nomura6, Koji Tanaka1, Yasuhiro Miyazaki1, Tomoki Makino1, Yukinori Kurokawa1, Kiyokazu Nakajima1, Hidetoshi Eguchi1, Makoto Yamasaki1, Masaki Mori7, Yuichiro Doki1, Tetsuji Naka8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pancreatic cancer (PDAC) is the most lethal malignancy. New treatment options for it are urgently required. The aim was to develop an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) targeting glypican-1 (GPC-1) as a new therapy for PDAC.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32152502 PMCID: PMC7189381 DOI: 10.1038/s41416-020-0781-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Fig. 1GPC-1 expression in clinical pancreatic cancer specimens.
a Representative images of IHC staining for GPC in pancreatic cancer specimens. GPC-1 expression in cell membranes of human pancreatic cancer. Left panel: the high GPC-1 expression group (HG); right panel: the low GPC-1 expression group (LG). Scale bar: 50 μm. b The distribution of GPC-1 scores in LG and HG. c Kaplan–Meier analyses of OS. The black line represents LG and the grey line represents HG. d Kaplan–Meier analyses of RFS.
Fig. 2In vitro cell growth inhibition by ADC and internalisation of GPC-1 ADC.
a Flow cytometry of GPC-1 expression in BxPC-3, T3M-4 and SUIT-2 using anti-GPC-1 monoclonal antibody. b BxPC-3, T3M-4 and SUIT-2 cells were treated with anti-GPC-1 monoclonal antibody (clone 01a033) or control IgG antibody for 144 h. Neither antibody inhibited the growth of any cell line. c Cells were treated with GPC-1-ADC or mouse IgG2a-ADC (a control ADC) for 144 h. Relative to control ADC, GPC-1-ADC significantly inhibited the growth of GPC-1-positive BxPC-3 and T3M-4 cell lines. Neither treatment inhibited the growth of the GPC-1-negative SUIT-2 cell line. d Time course of the internalisation activity of GPC-1-ADC in BxPC-3 and T3M-4 cells. e GPC-1-ADC internalises and locates in the lysosomes of BxPC-3 cells. Plasma membrane and intracellular GPC-1 were visualised by confocal fluorescence microscopy. Green indicates GPC-1-ADC, red indicates the lysosomal marker LAMP-1 and blue indicates DAPI (4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole)-stained DNA. Scale bar: 10 μm. GPC-1-ADC was found in the lysosomes. GPC-1-ADC and the lysosomal marker LAMP-1 overlapped (arrow).
IC50 of MMAF and anti-glypican-1 ADC in human pancreatic cancer cell lines.
| Cell lines | Glypican-1 expression (ABC cell−1) | MMAF (nM) | MMAF in anti-glypican-1 ADC (nM) |
|---|---|---|---|
| BxPC-3 | 93290 | 31.3 | 0.063 |
| T3M-4 | 76850 | 24.4 | 0.24 |
| SUIT-2 | 25444 | 459.5 | N/A |
ABC antibody-binding capacity.
Fig. 3Cytotoxicity studies with GPC-1 knockdown cell line.
a Flow cytometry of GPC-1 expression in a GPC-1-knockdown cell line (BxPC-3 KD-2-23) and a control cell line (BxPC-3 NC-11) using anti-GPC-1 monoclonal antibody. b Quantitative reverse transcription-PCR analysis of GPC-1 mRNA levels relative to β-actin in a GPC-1-knockdown cell line (BxPC-3 KD-2-23) and control cell lines (BxPC-3 and BxPC-3 NC-11). c BxPC-3, BxPC-3 NC-11 and BxPC-3 KD-2-23 were treated with GPC-1-ADC for 144 h. GPC-1-ADC had a lower growth inhibition effect of the GPC-1-knockdown cell line (BxPC-3 KD-2-23) than the parent BxPC-3 and the negative control cell line (BxPC-3 NC-11).
Fig. 4Antitumour activity of GPC-1-ADC in BxPC-3 xenograft.
a Antitumour efficacy of GPC-1-ADC in BxPC-3 xenograft models (n = 8 or 9). Representative images of IHC staining for GPC-1 in xenografted tumour tissues from untreated mice. Tumour-bearing mice were intravenously administered PBS, control ADC (10 mg kg–1) or GPC-1-ADC (1 mg kg–1, 3 mg kg–1 or 10 mg kg–1) on days 0, 4, 8 and 12. Each point on the graph represents the average tumour volume. b Thirty-six days after the first treatment, the tumour weights were calculated. c. Changes in body weight are represented. d GPC-1-ADC causes mitotic arrest in vivo. Animals with BxPC-3 tumour xenografts were administered a single dose of PBS, control ADC (10 mg kg–1) or GPC-1-ADC (1 mg kg–1, 3 mg kg–1 or 10 mg kg–1). After 24 h, the tumours were harvested and stained with anti-phospho-histone H3 (Ser10) antibody to detect mitotic cells. Scale bar: 200 μm. e. Phospho-histone H3 (Ser10) staining was recorded as the ratio of positively stained cells to all tumour cells in five fields (×200 magnification).
Fig. 5Antitumour activity of GPC-1-ADC in patient-derived xenograft.
a Antitumour efficacy of GPC-1-ADC in patient-derived xenograft models (n = 6). Representative images of IHC staining for GPC-1 in xenografted tumour tissues from untreated mice. Tumour-bearing mice were intravenously administered PBS, control ADC (10 mg kg–1) or GPC-1-ADC (1 mg kg–1, 3 mg kg–1 or 10 mg kg–1) on days 0, 4, 8 and 12. Each point on the graph represents the average tumour volume. b Twenty-eight days after the first treatment, the tumour weights were calculated. c Changes in body weight are represented. d GPC-1-ADC causes mitotic arrest in vivo. Animals with patient-derived xenografts were administered a single dose of PBS, control ADC (10 mg kg–1) or GPC-1-ADC (10 mg kg–1). After 24 h, tumours were harvested and stained with anti-phospho-histone H3 (Ser10) antibody to detect mitotic cells. Scale bar: 200 μm. e Phospho-histone H3 (Ser10) staining was recorded as the ratio of positively stained cells to all tumour cells in five fields (×200 magnification).