posted on 2018-01-22, 00:00authored byPierre Adumeau, Delphine Vivier, Sai Kiran Sharma, Jessica Wang, Terry Zhang, Aimei Chen, Brian J. Agnew, Brian M. Zeglis
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.