scholarly journals In Vitro and In Vivo Efficacy of a Novel Glucose–Methotrexate Conjugate in Targeted Cancer Treatment

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 1748
Author(s):  
Marta Woźniak ◽  
Gabriela Pastuch-Gawołek ◽  
Sebastian Makuch ◽  
Jerzy Wiśniewski ◽  
Tibor Krenács ◽  
...  

Methotrexate (MTX) is a commonly used antimetabolite, which inhibits folate and DNA synthesis to be effective in the treatment of various malignancies. However, MTX therapy is hindered by the lack of target tumor selectivity. We have designed, synthesized and evaluated a novel glucose–methotrexate conjugate (GLU–MTX) both in vitro and in vivo, in which a cleavable linkage allows intracellular MTX release after selective uptake through glucose transporter−1 (GLUT1). GLU–MTX inhibited the growth of colorectal (DLD-1), breast (MCF-7) and lung (A427) adenocarcinomas, squamous cell carcinoma (SCC-25), osteosarcoma (MG63) cell lines, but not in WI-38 healthy fibroblasts. In tumor cells, GLU–MTX uptake increased 17-fold compared to unconjugated MTX. 4,6-O-ethylidene-α-D-glucose (EDG), a GLUT1 inhibitor, significantly interfered with GLU–MTX induced growth inhibition, suggesting a glucose-mediated drug uptake. Glu-MTX also caused significant tumor growth delay in vivo in breast cancer-bearing mice. These results show that our GLUT-MTX conjugate can be selectively uptake by a range of tumor cells to cause their significant growth inhibition in vitro, which was also confirmed in a breast cancer model in vivo. GLUT1 inhibitor EDG interfered with these effects verifying the selective drug uptake. Accordingly, GLU–MTX offers a considerable tumor selectivity and may offer cancer growth inhibition at reduced toxicity.

2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 83-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
André De Lima Mota ◽  
Bruna Vitorasso Jardim-Perassi ◽  
Tialfi Bergamin De Castro ◽  
Jucimara Colombo ◽  
Nathália Martins Sonehara ◽  
...  

Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women and has a high mortality rate. Adverse conditions in the tumor microenvironment, such as hypoxia and acidosis, may exert selective pressure on the tumor, selecting subpopulations of tumor cells with advantages for survival in this environment. In this context, therapeutic agents that can modify these conditions, and consequently the intratumoral heterogeneity need to be explored. Melatonin, in addition to its physiological effects, exhibits important anti-tumor actions which may associate with modification of hypoxia and Warburg effect. In this study, we have evaluated the action of melatonin on tumor growth and tumor metabolism by different markers of hypoxia and glucose metabolism (HIF-1α, glucose transporters GLUT1 and GLUT3 and carbonic anhydrases CA-IX and CA-XII) in triple negative breast cancer model. In an in vitro study, gene and protein expressions of these markers were evaluated by quantitative real-time PCR and immunocytochemistry, respectively. The effects of melatonin were also tested in a MDA-MB-231 xenograft animal model. Results showed that melatonin treatment reduced the viability of MDA-MB-231 cells and tumor growth in Balb/c nude mice (p <0.05). The treatment significantly decreased HIF-1α gene and protein expression concomitantly with the expression of GLUT1, GLUT3, CA-IX and CA-XII (p <0.05). These results strongly suggest that melatonin down-regulates HIF-1α expression and regulates glucose metabolism in breast tumor cells, therefore, controlling hypoxia and tumor progression. 


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinbo Qiao ◽  
Yixiao Zhang ◽  
Lisha Sun ◽  
Qingtian Ma ◽  
Jie Yang ◽  
...  

AbstractTumor metastasis remains the main cause of breast cancer-related deaths, especially the later breast cancer distant metastasis. This study assessed CD44−/CD24− tumor cells in 576 tissue specimens for associations with clinicopathological features and metastasis and then investigated the underlying molecular events. The data showed that level of CD44−/CD24− cells was associated with later postoperative distant tumor metastasis. Furthermore, CD44−/CD24− triple negative cells could spontaneously convert into CD44+/CD24− cancer stem cells (CSCs) with properties similar to CD44+/CD24− CSCs from parental MDA-MB-231 cells in terms of gene expression, tumor cell xenograft formation, and lung metastasis in vitro and in vivo. Single-cell RNA sequencing identified RHBDL2 as a regulator that enhanced spontaneous CD44+/CD24− CSC conversion, whereas knockdown of RHBDL2 expression inhibited YAP/NF-κB signaling and blocked spontaneous CD44−/CD24− cell conversion to CSCs. These data suggested that the level of CD44−/CD24− tumor cells could predict breast cancer prognosis, metastasis, and response to adjuvant therapy.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 1844-1844
Author(s):  
John Richards ◽  
Myriam N Bouchlaka ◽  
Robyn J Puro ◽  
Ben J Capoccia ◽  
Ronald R Hiebsch ◽  
...  

AO-176 is a highly differentiated, humanized anti-CD47 IgG2 antibody that is unique among agents in this class of checkpoint inhibitors. AO-176 works by blocking the "don't eat me" signal, the standard mechanism of anti-CD47 antibodies, but also by directly killing tumor cells. Importantly, AO-176 binds preferentially to tumor cells, compared to normal cells, and binds even more potently to tumors in their acidic microenvironment (low pH). Hematological neoplasms are the fourth most frequently diagnosed cancers in both men and women and account for approximately 10% of all cancers. Here we describe AO-176, a highly differentiated anti-CD47 antibody that potently targets hematologic cancers in vitro and in vivo. As a single agent, AO-176 not only promotes phagocytosis (15-45%, EC50 = 0.33-4.1 µg/ml) of hematologic tumor cell lines (acute myeloid leukemia, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, multiple myeloma, and T cell leukemia) but also directly targets and kills tumor cells (18-46% Annexin V positivity, EC50 = 0.63-10 µg/ml) in a non-ADCC manner. In combination with agents targeting CD20 (rituximab) or CD38 (daratumumab), AO-176 mediates enhanced phagocytosis of lymphoma and multiple myeloma cell lines, respectively. In vivo, AO-176 mediates potent monotherapy tumor growth inhibition of hematologic tumors including Raji B cell lymphoma and RPMI-8226 multiple myeloma xenograft models in a dose-dependent manner. Concomitant with tumor growth inhibition, immune cell infiltrates were observed with elevated numbers of macrophage and dendritic cells, along with increased pro-inflammatory cytokine levels in AO-176 treated animals. When combined with bortezomib, AO-176 was able to elicit complete tumor regression (100% CR in 10/10 animals treated with either 10 or 25 mg/kg AO-176 + 1 mg/kg bortezomib) with no detectable tumor out to 100 days at study termination. Overall survival was also greatly improved following combination therapy compared to animals treated with bortezomib or AO-176 alone. These data show that AO-176 exhibits promising monotherapy and combination therapy activity, both in vitro and in vivo, against hematologic cancers. These findings also add to the previously reported anti-tumor efficacy exhibited by AO-176 in solid tumor xenografts representing ovarian, gastric and breast cancer. With AO-176's highly differentiated MOA and binding characteristics, it may have the potential to improve upon the safety and efficacy profiles relative to other agents in this class. AO-176 is currently being evaluated in a Phase 1 clinical trial (NCT03834948) for the treatment of patients with select solid tumors. Disclosures Richards: Arch Oncology Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership, Other: Salary. Bouchlaka:Arch Oncology Inc.: Consultancy, Equity Ownership. Puro:Arch Oncology Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Capoccia:Arch Oncology Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Hiebsch:Arch Oncology Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Donio:Arch Oncology Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Wilson:Arch Oncology Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Chakraborty:Arch Oncology Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Sung:Arch Oncology Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Pereira:Arch Oncology Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership.


2019 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. 153473541984804 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paola Lasso ◽  
Mónica Llano Murcia ◽  
Tito Alejandro Sandoval ◽  
Claudia Urueña ◽  
Alfonso Barreto ◽  
...  

Background: The tumor cells responsible for metastasis are highly resistant to chemotherapy and have characteristics of stem cells, with a high capacity for self-regeneration and the use of detoxifying mechanisms that participate in drug resistance. In vivo models of highly resistant cells allow us to evaluate the real impact of the immune response in the control of cancer. Materials and Methods: A tumor population derived from the 4T1 breast cancer cell line that was stable in vitro and highly aggressive in vivo was obtained, characterized, and determined to exhibit cancer stem cell (CSC) phenotypes (CD44+, CD24+, ALDH+, Oct4+, Nanog+, Sox2+, and high self-renewal capacity). Orthotopic transplantation of these cells allowed us to evaluate their in vivo susceptibility to chemo and immune responses induced after vaccination. Results: The immune response induced after vaccination with tumor cells treated with doxorubicin decreased the formation of tumors and macrometastasis in this model, which allowed us to confirm the immune response relevance in the control of highly chemotherapy-resistant ALDH+ CSCs in an aggressive tumor model in immunocompetent animals. Conclusions: The antitumor immune response was the main element capable of controlling tumor progression as well as metastasis in a highly chemotherapy-resistant aggressive breast cancer model.


2017 ◽  
Vol 79 (6) ◽  
pp. 1195-1203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elham Mousavi ◽  
Shahrzad Tavakolfar ◽  
Ali Almasirad ◽  
Zahra Kooshafar ◽  
Soudeh Dehghani ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1716-1716 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Ikeda ◽  
Teru Hideshima ◽  
Robert J. Lutz ◽  
Sonia Vallet ◽  
Samantha Pozzi ◽  
...  

Abstract CD138 is expressed on differentiated plasma cells and is involved in the development and/or proliferation of multiple myeloma (MM), for which it is a primary diagnostic marker. In this study, we report that immunoconjugates comprised of the murine/human chimeric CD138-specific monoclonal antibody nBT062 conjugated with highly cytotoxic maytansinoid derivatives (nBT062-SMCC-DM1, nBT062-SPDB-DM4 and nBT062-SPP-DM1) showed cytotoxic activity against CD138-positive MM cells both in vitro and in vivo. These agents demonstrated cytotoxicity against OPM1 and RPMI8226 (CD138-positive MM cell lines) in a dose and time-dependent fashion and were also cytotoxic against primary tumor cells from MM patients. Minimal cytotoxicity was noted in CD138-negative cell lines and no activity was observed against peripheral blood mononuclear cells from healthy volunteers, suggesting that CD138-targeting is important for immunoconjugate-mediated cytotoxicity. Examination of the mechanism of action whereby these immunoconjugates induced cytotoxicity in MM cells demonstrated that treatment triggered G2/M cell cycle arrest, followed by apoptosis associated with cleavage of PARP and caspase-3, -8 and -9. Neither interleukin-6 nor insulin-like growth factor-I could overcome the apoptotic effect of these agents. The level of soluble (s)CD138 in the BM plasma from 15 MM patients was evaluated to determine the potential impact of sCD138 on immunoconjugate function. The sCD138 level in BM plasma was found to be significantly lower than that present in MM cell culture supernatants where potent in vitro cytotoxicity was observed, suggesting that sCD138 levels in MM patient BM plasma would not interfere with immunoconjugate activity. Because adhesion to bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs) triggers cell adhesion mediated drug resistance to conventional therapies, we next examined the effects of the conjugates on MM cell growth in the context of BMSC. Co-culture of MM cells with BMSCs, which protects against dexamethasoneinduced death, had no impact on the cytotoxicity of the immunoconjugates. The in vivo efficacy of these immunoconjugates was also evaluated in SCID mice bearing established CD138-positive MM xenografts and in a SCID-human bone xenograft model of myeloma. Significant tumor growth delay or regressions were observed at immunoconjugate concentrations that were well tolerated in all models tested. The ability of these agents to mediate bystander killing of proximal CD138-negative cells was also evaluated. While nBT062-SPDB-DM4 was inactive against CD138-negative Namalwa cells cultured alone, significant killing of these CD138-negative cells by nBT062-SPDB-DM4 was observed when mixed with CD138-positive OPM2 cells. This bystander killing may contribute to the eradication of MM tumors by disrupting the tumor microenvironment and/or killing CD138-negative MM tumor cells, such as the putative CD138 negative myeloma stem cells. These studies demonstrate strong evidence of in vitro and in vivo selective cytotoxicity of these immunoconjugates and provide the preclinical framework supporting evaluation of nBT062-based immunoconjugates in clinical trials to improve patient outcome in MM.


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e13579-e13579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nandini Dey ◽  
Hui Wu ◽  
Yuliang Sun ◽  
Pradip De ◽  
Brian Leyland-Jones

e13579 Background: BRCA1-deficiency confers sensitivity to PARP1 inhibition (alone or in combination with platinum compounds) in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC). Recent understanding of the biology of TNBC tumor cells has recognized molecular targets suitable for treatment with targeted therapeutics including cell surface RTK(s), such as EGFR. Methods: We studied the effect of combination of PARP inhibitor, (olaparib) plus carboplatin with a dual EGFR/VEGFR inhibitor, vandetanib in a TNBC model in both in vitro and in vivo settings. We tested the effects of drug combinations on (a) cell signaling marker(s) of survival/proliferation/apoptosis, (b) adhesion-dependent and clonogenic survival, and (c) different phenotypes (migration, invasion, vascular mimicry, and cord formation) using TNBC cell and HUVEC cells. The combination of PARP1 inhibition and EGFR/VEGFR inhibition was evaluated in tumor-bearing athymic mice treated with olaparib plus carboplatin and vandetanib. Results: Data showed that, (1) EC50s for vandetanib ranged from 5-15 µM, (2) vandetanib (10 µM) inhibited phosphorylation of AKT (S473 & T308), S6RP, 4EBP1 and ERK, (3) effect of olaparib on TNBC cell survival can be effectively studied in vitro by clonogenic assay, (4) TNBC cell lines exhibited higher sensitivity to vandetanib in clonogenic assay when combined with 10 µM fixed dose of olaparib, and (5) a combination of vandetanib with olaparib plus carboplatin time dependently increased caspase-3 and PARP cleavage, inhibited vascular mimicry, blocked fibronectin-directed migration, and suppressed clonogenic growth in TNBC cells.Vandetanib blocked (a) cord formation, (b) vitronectin-directed migration, and (c) HIF-1alpha accumulation and phosphorylation of proliferation markers (AKT, 4EBP1, and ERK) in HUVEC cells. Conclusions: Anti-proliferative/pro-apoptotic, and anti-migratory/invasive effects of vandetanib (alone or in combination with carboplatin plus olaparib) were observed both in tumor cells and in endothelial cells. We are currently studying in vivo the effect of combining olaparib plus carboplatin with vandetanib, in xenograft model the results of which will be presented in the meeting.


2007 ◽  
Vol 103 (1) ◽  
pp. 129-129
Author(s):  
Yingchao Zhang ◽  
Yu Wang ◽  
Wenxin Gao ◽  
Ruhui Zhang ◽  
Xichun Han ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (17) ◽  
pp. 9279
Author(s):  
Inés Martínez-Pena ◽  
Pablo Hurtado ◽  
Nuria Carmona-Ule ◽  
Carmen Abuín ◽  
Ana Belén Dávila-Ibáñez ◽  
...  

Background: Cancer metastasis is a deathly process, and a better understanding of the different steps is needed. The shedding of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) and CTC-cluster from the primary tumor, its survival in circulation, and homing are key events of the metastasis cascade. In vitro models of CTCs and in vivo models of metastasis represent an excellent opportunity to delve into the behavior of metastatic cells, to gain understanding on how secondary tumors appear. Methods: Using the zebrafish embryo, in combination with the mouse and in vitro assays, as an in vivo model of the spatiotemporal development of metastases, we study the metastatic competency of breast cancer CTCs and CTC-clusters and the molecular mechanisms. Results: CTC-clusters disseminated at a lower frequency than single CTCs in the zebrafish and showed a reduced capacity to invade. A temporal follow-up of the behavior of disseminated CTCs showed a higher survival and proliferation capacity of CTC-clusters, supported by their increased resistance to fluid shear stress. These data were corroborated in mouse studies. In addition, a differential gene signature was observed, with CTC-clusters upregulating cell cycle and stemness related genes. Conclusions: The zebrafish embryo is a valuable model system to understand the biology of breast cancer CTCs and CTC-clusters.


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