41 research outputs found

    Bivalent engagement of endothelial surface antigens is critical to prolonged surface targeting and protein delivery in vivo

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    Targeted drug delivery to the endothelium has the potential to generate localized therapeutic effects at the blood- tissue interface. For some therapeutic cargoes, it is essential to maintain contact with the bloodstream to exert protective effects. The pharmacokinetics (PK) of endothelial surface- targeted affinity ligands and biotherapeutic cargo remain a largely unexplored area, despite obvious translational implications for this strategy. To bridge this gap, we site- specifically radiolabeled mono- (scFv) and bivalent (mAb) affinity ligands specific for the endothelial cell adhesion molecules, PECAM- 1 (CD31) and ICAM- 1 (CD54). Radiotracing revealed similar lung biodistribution at 30 minutes post- injection (79.3% ± 4.2% vs 80.4% ± 10.6% ID/g for αICAM and 58.9% ± 3.6% ID/g vs. 47.7% ± 5.8% ID/g for αPECAM mAb vs. scFv), but marked differences in organ residence time, with antibodies demonstrating an order of magnitude greater area under the lung concentration vs. time curve (AUCinf 1698 ± 352 vs. 53.3 ± 7.9 ID/g*hrs for αICAM and 1023 ± 507 vs. 114 ± 37 ID/g*hrs for αPECAM mAb vs scFv). A physiologically based pharmacokinetic model, fit to and validated using these data, indicated contributions from both superior binding characteristics and prolonged circulation time supporting multiple binding- detachment cycles. We tested the ability of each affinity ligand to deliver a prototypical surface cargo, thrombomodulin (TM), using one- to- one protein conjugates. Bivalent mAb- TM was superior to monovalent scFv- TM in both pulmonary targeting and lung residence time (AUCinf 141 ± 3.2 vs 12.4 ± 4.2 ID/g*hrs for ICAM and 188 ± 90 vs 34.7 ± 19.9 ID/g*hrs for PECAM), despite having similar blood PK, indicating that binding strength is more important parameter than the kinetics of binding. To maximize bivalent target engagement, we synthesized an oriented, end- to- end anti- ICAM mAb- TM conjugate and found that this therapeutic had the best lung residence time (AUCinf 253 ± 18 ID/g*hrs) of all TM modalities. These observations have implications not only for the delivery of TM, but also potentially all therapeutics targeted to the endothelial surface.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156501/3/fsb220760_am.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156501/2/fsb220760-sup-0001-Supinfo.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156501/1/fsb220760.pd

    Collaborative Enhancement of Antibody Binding to Distinct PECAM-1 Epitopes Modulates Endothelial Targeting

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    Antibodies to platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 (PECAM-1) facilitate targeted drug delivery to endothelial cells by “vascular immunotargeting.” To define the targeting quantitatively, we investigated the endothelial binding of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to extracellular epitopes of PECAM-1. Surprisingly, we have found in human and mouse cell culture models that the endothelial binding of PECAM-directed mAbs and scFv therapeutic fusion protein is increased by co-administration of a paired mAb directed to an adjacent, yet distinct PECAM-1 epitope. This results in significant enhancement of functional activity of a PECAM-1-targeted scFv-thrombomodulin fusion protein generating therapeutic activated Protein C. The “collaborative enhancement” of mAb binding is affirmed in vivo, as manifested by enhanced pulmonary accumulation of intravenously administered radiolabeled PECAM-1 mAb when co-injected with an unlabeled paired mAb in mice. This is the first demonstration of a positive modulatory effect of endothelial binding and vascular immunotargeting provided by the simultaneous binding a paired mAb to adjacent distinct epitopes. The “collaborative enhancement” phenomenon provides a novel paradigm for optimizing the endothelial-targeted delivery of therapeutic agents

    Ferritin Nanocages with Biologically Orthogonal Conjugation for Vascular Targeting and Imaging

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    Genetic incorporation of biologically orthogonal functional groups into macromolecules has the potential to yield efficient, controlled, reproducible, site-specific conjugation of affinity ligands, contrast agents, or therapeutic cargoes. Here, we applied this approach to ferritin, a ubiquitous iron-storage protein that self-assembles into multimeric nanocages with remarkable stability, size uniformity (12 nm), and endogenous capacity for loading and transport of a variety of inorganic and organic cargoes. The unnatural amino acid, 4-azidophenylalanine (4-AzF), was incorporated at different sites in the human ferritin light chain (hFTL) to allow site-specific conjugation of alkyne-containing small molecules or affinity ligands to the exterior surface of the nanocage. The optimal positioning of the 4-AzF residue was evaluated by screening a library of variants for the efficiency of copper-free click conjugation. One of the engineered ferritins, hFTL-5X, was found to accommodate ∼14 small-molecule fluorophores (AlexaFluor 488) and 3–4 IgG molecules per nanocage. Intravascular injection in mice of radiolabeled hFTL-5X carrying antibody to cell adhesion molecule ICAM-1, but not control IgG, enabled specific targeting to the lung due to high basal expression of ICAM-1 (43.3 ± 6.99 vs 3.48 ± 0.14%ID/g for Ab vs IgG). Treatment of mice with endotoxin known to stimulate inflammatory ICAM-1 overexpression resulted in 2-fold enhancement of pulmonary targeting (84.4 ± 12.89 vs 43.3 ± 6.99%ID/g). Likewise, injection of fluorescent, ICAM-targeted hFTL-5X nanocages revealed the effect of endotoxin by enhancement of near-infrared signal, indicating potential utility of this approach for both vascular targeting and imaging
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