| Literature DB >> 32326079 |
Yuko Nishinaga1, Kazuhide Sato1,2,3, Hirotoshi Yasui1, Shunichi Taki1, Kazuomi Takahashi1, Misae Shimizu1,2, Rena Endo1,2, Chiaki Koike1,2, Noriko Kuramoto2, Shota Nakamura4, Takayuki Fukui4, Hiroshi Yukawa2,5,6, Yoshinobu Baba5,6, Mika K Kaneko7, Toyofumi F Chen-Yoshikawa4, Hisataka Kobayashi8, Yukinari Kato7,9, Yoshinori Hasegawa10.
Abstract
Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) has extremely limited treatment despite a poor prognosis. Moreover, molecular targeted therapy for MPM has not yet been implemented; thus, a new targeted therapy is highly desirable. Near-infrared photoimmunotherapy (NIR-PIT) is a recently developed cancer therapy that combines the specificity of antibodies for targeting tumors with toxicity induced by the photoabsorber after exposure to NIR-light. In this study, we developed a new phototherapy targeting podoplanin (PDPN) for MPM with the use of both NIR-PIT and an anti-PDPN antibody, NZ-1. An antibody-photosensitizer conjugate consisting of NZ-1 and phthalocyanine dye was synthesized. In vitro NIR-PIT-induced cytotoxicity was measured with both dead cell staining and luciferase activity on various MPM cell lines. In vivo NIR-PIT was examined in both the flank tumor and orthotopic mouse model with in vivo real-time imaging. In vitro NIR-PIT-induced cytotoxicity was NIR-light dose dependent. In vivo NIR-PIT led to significant reduction in both tumor volume and luciferase activity in a flank model (p < 0.05, NIR-PIT group versus NZ-1-IR700 group). The PDPN-targeted NIR-PIT resulted in a significant antitumor effect in an MPM orthotopic mouse model (p < 0.05, NIR-PIT group versus NZ-1-IR700 group). This study suggests that PDPN-targeted NIR-PIT could be a new promising treatment for MPM.Entities:
Keywords: malignant pleural mesothelioma; near-infrared photoimmunotherapy; podoplanin (PDPN)
Year: 2020 PMID: 32326079 PMCID: PMC7225918 DOI: 10.3390/cells9041019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Immunostaining of surgical specimens of human resected MPM (malignant pleural mesothelioma). (a) Hematoxylin-eosin (HE) and podoplanin (PDPN) staining of epithelioid and biphasic MPM specimens. Representative images of both PDPN-positive and PDPN-negative MPM specimens are shown. The medium column showed the magnified view of the dot frame in left column. The right side column showed the magnified view of the dot frame in the medium column. (b) Number and rate of PDPN-positive specimens in each MPM type.
Figure 2Conjugation of NZ-1-IR700 and its binding capacity. (a) Successful confirmation of conjugated NZ-1-IR700 with SDS-PAGE (left, colloidal blue staining; right, fluorescence at 700 nm channel). Diluted NZ-1 served as a control. (b) Immunoblotting with NZ-1-IR700 in PDPN-overexpressing cell lysates. Specific binding of NZ-1-IR700 to PDPDN was detected. (c) Prior incubation with excess NZ-1 (to block PDPN) inhibited the binding of NZ-1-IR700 to MSTO-211H-PDPN cells, indicating that NA-1-IR700 binds specifically to PDPN. (d) PDPN expression in various MPM cell lines. Examination of PDPN expression in MPM cell lines established from Caucasian and Japanese patients with MPM. Almost all MPM cell lines, except for Y-MESO-12 and MSTO-211H, expressed PDPN and showed IR700 fluorescence. (e) Flow cytometric analysis of NZ-1-IR700 in HBEC (normal bronchial epithelial cells) and mouse fibroblast 3T3 cells. Unspecific binding to normal or mouse fibroblasts was not detected.
Figure 3In vitro effects of NIR-PIT with NZ-1-IR700 on MPM cell lines. (a) Microscopic observations before and after PDPN-targeted NIR-PIT on H2373-luc and PDPN-overexpressing MSTO-211H cells with NIR-light (16 J/cm2). (b) Co-cultured H2373 (PDPN positive) and MSTO-211H (PDPN negative) were used to assess the selective effect of NIR-PIT with NIR-light (16 J/cm2). Only PDPN-expressing H2373 cells ruptured after the therapy. (c) Membrane damage induced by PDPN-targeted NIR-PIT was measured with the dead cell count using PI staining with flow cytometer which increased in a manner dependent on the light dose. Data are presented as means ± SEM (n ≥ 4, * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, Student’s t-test). The cell death effect of PDPN-targeted NIR-PIT was universally demonstrated across the MPM cell lines. (d) Luciferase activity in H2373-luc and MSTO-211H-PDPN-luc-GFP cells was measured as relative light unit (RLU) which also decreased in an NIR-light dose-dependent manner. Data are presented as means ± SEM (n ≥ 4, *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, Student’s t-test).
Figure 4In vivo biodistribution of NZ-1-IR700. (a) Representative images (FLI) before and after intravenous injection of NZ-1-IR700 (fluorescence imager, 700 nm). The yellow arrow indicates the tumor site. (b) Fluorescence intensity measurement of the tumor and liver (left). The target-to-background ratio of the tumor and liver are indicated (right). Data are presented as mean ± SEM (n = 3). Fluorescence quantification showed that the highest accumulation at the tumor site was noted at day 1, while the highest target-to-background ratio (TBR) was observed on days 2 and 3. (c) Characterization of the pleural disseminated MPM model (MSTO-211H-PDPN-luc-GFP). Ex vivo fluorescence imaging of the disseminated pleural model at 1 day after NZ-1-IR700 injection and BLI with the IVIS imaging system (ki, kidney; sp, spleen; pa, pancreas; li, liver; st, stomach; bl, bladder; in, intestine; lu, lung; he, heart). Intravenous injection of NZ-1-IR700 was detected in disseminated tumors.
Figure 5In vivo antitumor effect of PDPN-targeted NIR-PIT. (a) The PDPN-targeted NIR-PIT regimen is shown in a line. (b) In vivo FLI and BLI of subcutaneous bilateral flank xenografted mice model. Arrow showed tumor site. Red Arrow tumor was treated with NIR-PIT. (c) Quantitative RLU demonstrated a significant decrease in PDPN-targeted NIR-PIT-treated tumors (before NIR-PIT = 1) (* p < 0.05 versus control, t-test). PDPN-targeted NIR-PIT also leads to significant reductions in tumor volume (* p < 0.05 versus control, t-test) in a flank model (n = 4 mice in each group). (d) PDPN-targeted NIR-PIT in the pleural disseminated model. FLI and BLI of the pleural disseminated model are shown on the left. Quantitative RLUs showed that PDPN-targeted NIR-PIT led to significant reductions in luciferase activity (* p < 0.05 versus control, t-test, n ≥ 3 mice in each group).