4 research outputs found
Moving Beyond Isothiocyanates: A Look at the Stability of Conjugation Links Toward Radiolysis in <sup>89</sup>Zr-Labeled Immunoconjugates
Zirconium-89 is the most widely used radioisotope for
immunoPET
because its physical half-life (78.2 h) suits the one of antibodies.
Desferrioxamine B (DFO) is the standard chelator for the complexation
of zirconium(IV), and its bifunctional version, containing a phenylisothiocyanate
function, is the most commonly used for the conjugation of DFO to
proteins. However, preliminary results have shown that the thiourea
link obtained from the conjugation of isothiocyanate and lysines is
sensitive to the ionizing radiation generated by the radioisotope,
leading to the rupture of the link and the release of the chelator/radiometal
complex. This radiolysis phenomenon could produce nonspecific signal
and prevent the detection of bone metastasis, as free zirconium accumulates
into the bones. The aim of this work was to study the stability of
a selection of conjugation linkers in 89Zr-labeled immunoconjugates.
We have synthesized several DFO-based bifunctional chelators appended
with an isothiocyanate moiety, a bicyclononyne, or a squaramate ester.
Two antibodies (trastuzumab and rituximab) were conjugated and radiolabeled
with zirconium-89. The effect of increasing activities of zirconium-89
on the integrity of the bioconjugate bearing thiourea links was evaluated
as well as the impact of the presence of a radioprotectant. The stability
of the radiolabeled antibodies was studied over 7 days in PBS and
human plasma. Radioconjugates’ integrity was evaluated using
iTLC and size-exclusion chromatography. This study shows that the
nature of the linker between the chelator and biomolecule can have
a strong impact on the stability of the 89Zr-labeled conjugates,
as well as on the aggregation of the conjugates
Site-Specifically Labeled Antibody–Drug Conjugate for Simultaneous Therapy and ImmunoPET
The
conjugation of antibodies with cytotoxic drugs can alter their <i>in vivo</i> pharmacokinetics. As a result, the careful assessment
of the <i>in vivo</i> behavior, and specifically the tumor-targeting
properties, of antibody–drug conjugates represents a crucial
step in their development. In order to facilitate this process, we
have created a methodology that facilitates the dual labeling of an
antibody with both a toxin and a radionuclide for positron emission
tomography (PET). To minimize the impact of these modifications, this
chemoenzymatic approach leverages strain-promoted azide–alkyne
click chemistry to graft both cargoes to the heavy chain glycans of
the immuoglobulin’s F<sub>c</sub> domain. As a proof-of-concept,
a HER2-targeting trastuzumab immunoconjugate was created bearing both
a monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE) toxin as well as the long-lived positron-emitting
radiometal <sup>89</sup>Zr (<i>t</i><sub>1/2</sub> ≈
3.3 days). Both the tumor targeting and therapeutic efficacy of the <sup>89</sup>Zr-trastuzumab-MMAE immunoconjugate were validated <i>in vivo</i> using a murine model of HER2-expressing breast cancer.
The site-specifically dual-labeled construct enabled the clear visualization
of tumor tissue via PET imaging, producing tumoral uptake of ∼70%ID/g.
Furthermore, a longitudinal therapy study revealed that the immunoconjugate
exerts significant antitumor activity, leading to a >90% reduction
in tumor volume over the course of 20 days
Exploring Structural Parameters for Pretargeting Radioligand Optimization
Pretargeting
offers a way to enhance target specificity while reducing off-target
radiation dose to healthy tissue during payload delivery. We recently
reported the development of an <sup>18</sup>F-based pretargeting strategy
predicated on the inverse electron demand Diels–Alder reaction
as well as the use of this approach to visualize pancreatic tumor
tissue in vivo as early as 1 h postinjection. Herein, we report a
comprehensive structure: pharmacokinetic relationship study of a library
of 25 novel radioligands that aims to identify radiotracers with optimal
pharmacokinetic and dosimetric properties. This investigation revealed
key relationships between molecular structure and in vivo behavior
and produced two lead candidates exhibiting rapid tumor targeting
with high target-to-background activity concentration ratios at early
time points. We believe this knowledge to be of high value for the
design and clinical translation of next-generation pretargeting agents
for the diagnosis and treatment of disease
Pretargeted PET Imaging Using a Site-Specifically Labeled Immunoconjugate
In recent years, both site-specific
bioconjugation techniques and
bioorthogonal pretargeting strategies have emerged as exciting technologies
with the potential to improve the safety and efficacy of antibody-based
nuclear imaging. In the work at hand, we have combined these two approaches
to create a pretargeted PET imaging strategy based on the rapid and
bioorthogonal inverse electron demand Diels–Alder reaction
between a <sup>64</sup>Cu-labeled tetrazine radioligand (<sup>64</sup>Cu-Tz-SarAr) and a site-specifically modified huA33-<i>trans</i>-cyclooctene immunoconjugate (<sup>ss</sup>huA33-PEG<sub>12</sub>-TCO). A bioconjugation strategy that harnesses enzymatic transformations
and strain-promoted azide–alkyne click chemistry was used to
site-specifically append PEGylated TCO moieties to the heavy chain
glycans of the colorectal cancer-targeting huA33 antibody. Preclinical
in vivo validation studies were performed in athymic nude mice bearing
A33 antigen-expressing SW1222 human colorectal carcinoma xenografts.
To this end, mice were administered <sup>ss</sup>huA33-PEG<sub>12</sub>-TCO via tail vein injection andî—¸following accumulation intervals
of 24 or 48 hî—¸<sup>64</sup>Cu-Tz-SarAr. PET imaging and biodistribution
studies reveal that this strategy clearly delineates tumor tissue
as early as 1 h post-injection (6.7 ± 1.7%ID/g at 1 h p.i.),
producing images with excellent contrast and high tumor-to-background
activity concentration ratios (tumor:muscle = 21.5 ± 5.6 at 24
h p.i.). Furthermore, dosimetric calculations illustrate that this
pretargeting approach produces only a fraction of the overall effective
dose (0.0214 mSv/MBq; 0.079 rem/mCi) of directly labeled radioimmunoconjugates.
Ultimately, this method effectively facilitates the high contrast
pretargeted PET imaging of colorectal carcinoma using a site-specifically
modified immunoconjugate