Evaluation of glycodendron and synthetically modified dextran clearing agents for multistep targeting of radioisotopes for molecular imaging and radioimmunotherapy Journal Article


Authors: Cheal, S. M.; Yoo, B.; Boughdad, S.; Punzalan, B.; Yang, G.; Dilhas, A.; Torchon, G.; Pu, J.; Axworthy, D. B.; Zanzonico, P.; Ouerfelli, O.; Larson, S. M.
Article Title: Evaluation of glycodendron and synthetically modified dextran clearing agents for multistep targeting of radioisotopes for molecular imaging and radioimmunotherapy
Abstract: A series of N-acetylgalactosamine-dendrons (NAG-dendrons) and dextrans bearing biotin moieties were compared for their ability to complex with and sequester circulating bispecific antitumor antibody streptavidin fusion protein (scFv4-SA) in vivo, to improve tumor-to-normal tissue concentration ratios for multistep targeted (MST) radioimmunotherapy and diagnosis. Specifically, a total of five NAG-dendrons employing a common synthetic scaffold structure containing 4, 8, 16, or 32 carbohydrate residues and a single biotin moiety were prepared (NAGB), and for comparative purposes, a biotinylated-dextran with an average molecular weight of 500 kD was synthesized from amino-dextran (DEXB). One of the NAGB compounds, CA16, has been investigated in humans; our aim was to determine if other NAGB analogues (e.g., CA8 or CA4) were bioequivalent to CA16 and/or better suited as MST reagents. In vivo studies included dynamic positron-emission tomography (PET) imaging of 124I-labeled-scFv4-SA clearance and dual-label biodistribution studies following MST directed at subcutaneous (s.c.) human colon adenocarcinoma xenografts in mice. The MST protocol consists of three injections: first, a scFv4-SA specific for an antitumor-associated glycoprotein (TAG-72); second, CA16 or other clearing agent; and third, radiolabeled biotin. We observed using PET imaging of the 124I- labeled-scFv4-SA clearance that the spatial arrangement of ligands conjugated to NAG (i.e., biotin linked with an extended spacer, referred to herein as long-chain (LC)) can impact the binding to the antibody in circulation and subsequent liver uptake of the NAG-antibody complex. Also, NAGB CA32-LC or CA16-LC can be utilized during MST to achieve comparable tumor-to-blood ratios and absolute tumor uptake seen previously with CA16. Finally, DEXB was equally effective as NAGB CA32-LC at lowering scFv4-SA in circulation, but at the expense of reducing absolute tumor uptake of radiolabeled biotin. © 2013 American Chemical Society.
Keywords: radioimmunotherapy; pretargeting; asialoglycoprotein; bispecific antibodies
Journal Title: Molecular Pharmaceutics
Volume: 11
Issue: 2
ISSN: 1543-8384
Publisher: American Chemical Society  
Date Published: 2013-11-12
Start Page: 400
End Page: 416
Language: English
DOI: 10.1021/mp4003128
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 24219178
PMCID: PMC4270281
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 3 March 2014 -- CODEN: MPOHB -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Ouathek Ouerfelli
    102 Ouerfelli
  2. Pat B Zanzonico
    357 Zanzonico
  3. Anna I Dilhas
    3 Dilhas
  4. Barney Yoo
    13 Yoo
  5. Guangbin Yang
    28 Yang
  6. Steven M Larson
    959 Larson
  7. Sarah Marie Cheal
    49 Cheal
  8. Jun   Pu
    2 Pu