| Literature DB >> 35109860 |
Iris M Hagemans1,2, Peter J Wierstra3, Sandra Heskamp4, Martijn Verdoes5,6, Kas Steuten1,2, Janneke D M Molkenboer-Kuenen3, Duco van Dalen1,2, Martin Ter Beest1, Johan M S van der Schoot1, Olga Ilina1,2, Martin Gotthardt3, Carl G Figdor1,2,7, Ferenc A Scheeren8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While immune checkpoint inhibitors such as anti-PD-L1 antibodies have revolutionized cancer treatment, only subgroups of patients show durable responses. Insight in the relation between clinical response, PD-L1 expression and intratumoral localization of PD-L1 therapeutics could improve patient stratification. Therefore, we present the modular synthesis of multimodal antibody-based imaging tools for multiscale imaging of PD-L1 to study intratumoral distribution of PD-L1 therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody; Cancer; Fluorescence imaging; Immune checkpoints; Nuclear imaging
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35109860 PMCID: PMC8811974 DOI: 10.1186/s12951-022-01272-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nanobiotechnology ISSN: 1477-3155 Impact factor: 10.435
Fig. 1Molecular toolbox of site-specific functionalizable anti-PD-L1 antibody formats and imaging peptides. A Application of the CRISPR/HDR strategy to anti-PD-L1 hybridoma MIH5 created a sortaggable Fab fragment and chimeric mouse IgG1 monoclonal antibody against PD-L1. B Molecular structure of imaging peptides IH20 and IH18
Fig. 2Biodistribution of anti-PD-L1 monoclonal antibody panel. A WT MIH5 antibody and mouse (mIgG1) anti-PD-L1 antibodies were labeled non-site-specifically with DTPA. mIgG1 was labeled site-specifically with IH20 and IH18, where IH20 contains DTPA alone and IH18 contains an additional sulfo-Cy5. B SDS-PAGE analysis of purified site-specifically labeled antibodies. An analytical fraction of mIgG1-IH18 and mIgG1-IH20 was reacted with 5 kDa mPEG-DBCO to analyze purity and azide functionality. This resulted in the near-quantitative conversion to a product of higher molecular weight. (C) Mice bearing orthotopic 4T1 tumors were injected with one of four different 111In-labeled anti-PD-L1 antibodies. Biodistribution was determined ex vivo 24 h after injection. Values are presented as percentage injected dose per gram (%ID/g) and shown as mean ± SD, n = 5
Fig. 3In vitro characterization of multimodal PD-L1 imaging tools. A SDS-PAGE analysis of the antibody formats before and after sortagging with IH18. After purification using NiNTA beads and SEC, an analytical fraction of mIgG1-IH18 and Fab-IH18 was reacted with 5 kDa mPEG-DBCO to analyze purity and azide functionality. This resulted in the near-quantitative conversion to a fluorescent product of higher molecular weight. Fab-IH18-PEG was produced through large-scale reaction of Fab-IH18 with 20 kDa mPEG-DBCO and subsequently purified using cation exchange chromatography. B Competition assay. Renca cells were incubated with a serial dilution of unlabeled anti-PD-L1 MIH5 (WT) or different antibody-conjugate (mIgG1-IH18, Fab-IH18, Fab-IH18-PEG) concentrations, as well as commercially available anti-PD-L1-PE. Data are presented as mean ± SD, n = 3
Fig. 4Biodistribution results of anti-PD-L1 multimodal imaging tools. Biodistribution is shown at several time points after injection (p.i.) of 111In-labeled A mIgG1-IH18, B Fab-IH18 or C Fab-IH18-PEG. D Tumor uptake values (left graph) and tumor/blood ratios (right graph) of the three constructs are compared directly at each time point. Data are shown as mean ± SD, n = 5
Fig. 5SPECT/CT and IVIS imaging of labeled antibody distribution in mice bearing orthotopic 4T1 tumors. Representative examples of SPECT/CT and IVIS scans of mice bearing 4T1 tumors, acquired at different time points after injection of 111In-labeled mIgG1-IH18, Fab-IH18 or Fab-IH18-PEG. Tumors are indicated with white arrows. Fluorescence intensity is indicated as radiant efficiency [(p/s/cm2/sr)/(μW/cm2)]
Fig. 6Analysis of tumor sections shows distribution of mIgG1-IH18 radiographic and fluorescent signal and PD-L1 expression. A Physically adjacent tissue sections of a tumor from a mIgG1-IH18 treated mouse are stained with H&E, PD-L1 immunostaining, or where fluorescent and radiographic signal is acquired. PD-L1, autoradiography and fluorescence patterns are overlapping, demonstrating co-localization of these signals. B Fluorescence microscopy shows localization of mIgG1-IH18 with cellular resolution (DAPI in blue, Cy5 fluorescence in purple and PD-L1 immunofluorescent staining in green in the merge image)