| Literature DB >> 33149867 |
Nastaran Mohseni1, Reyhaneh Roshan1, Shamsi Naderi1, Mahdi Behdani1, Fatemeh Kazemi-Lomedasht1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Emergence of resistant tumor cells to the current therapeutics is the main hindrance in cancer treatment. Combination therapy, which mixes two or more drugs, is a way to overcome resistant problems of cancer cells to current treatments. Nanobodies are promising tools in cancer therapy due to their high affinity as well as high penetration to tumor sites.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Dual targeting; NRP-1; Nanobody; Single domain antibody; VEGF
Year: 2020 PMID: 33149867 PMCID: PMC7585540 DOI: 10.22038/ijbms.2020.47782.11000
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iran J Basic Med Sci ISSN: 2008-3866 Impact factor: 2.699
Figure 1Cytotoxicity of combination of two nanobodies on human endothelial cell proliferation. Higher concentrations of two drugs result in a lower percentage of viable cells. * : P-value<0.05, **: P-value<0.001 . The experiment was performed in triplicate and represented as mean±SD
Figure 2Tube formation results. As shown, percent of tube-like structures were 60, 45, and 25% in case of anti-NRP-1 nanobody, anti-VEGF nanobody, and mixtures of both nanobodies, respectively. Control well-formed complete tube-like structures on Matrigel assay. * : P-value<0.05, **: P-value<0.001. The assay was performed in triplicate and data presents mean± SD
Figure 3Chick chorioallantoic membrane assay results. A: anti-NRP-1 nanobody, B: anti-VEGF nanobody, C: mixtures of both anti-VEFG/NRP-1 nanobodies, D: control. Anti-VEFG/NRP-1 nanobodies inhibited angiogenesis ex vivo higher than each single nanobody. Chick embryo images represent treatment with two drugs after 48 hr