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Targeting of T/Tn Antigens with a Plant Lectin to Kill Human Leukemia Cells by Photochemotherapy

Photochemotherapy is used both for solid tumors and in extracorporeal treatment of various hematologic disorders. Nevertheless, its development in oncology remains limited, because of the low selectivity of photosensitizers (PS) towards human tumor cells. To enhance PS efficiency, we recently covale...

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Autores principales: Poiroux, Guillaume, Pitié, Marguerite, Culerrier, Raphaël, Lafont, Elodie, Ségui, Bruno, Van Damme, Els J. M., Peumans, Willy J., Bernadou, Jean, Levade, Thierry, Rougé, Pierre, Barre, Annick, Benoist, Hervé
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3157357/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21858067
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023315
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author Poiroux, Guillaume
Pitié, Marguerite
Culerrier, Raphaël
Lafont, Elodie
Ségui, Bruno
Van Damme, Els J. M.
Peumans, Willy J.
Bernadou, Jean
Levade, Thierry
Rougé, Pierre
Barre, Annick
Benoist, Hervé
author_facet Poiroux, Guillaume
Pitié, Marguerite
Culerrier, Raphaël
Lafont, Elodie
Ségui, Bruno
Van Damme, Els J. M.
Peumans, Willy J.
Bernadou, Jean
Levade, Thierry
Rougé, Pierre
Barre, Annick
Benoist, Hervé
author_sort Poiroux, Guillaume
collection PubMed
description Photochemotherapy is used both for solid tumors and in extracorporeal treatment of various hematologic disorders. Nevertheless, its development in oncology remains limited, because of the low selectivity of photosensitizers (PS) towards human tumor cells. To enhance PS efficiency, we recently covalently linked a porphyrin (TrMPyP) to a plant lectin (Morniga G), known to recognize with high affinity tumor-associated T and Tn antigens. The conjugation allowed a quick uptake of PS by Tn-positive Jurkat leukemia cells and efficient PS-induced phototoxicity. The present study was performed: (i) to evaluate the targeting potential of the conjugate towards tumor and normal cells and its phototoxicity on various leukemia cells, (ii) to investigate the mechanism of conjugate-mediated cell death. The conjugate: (i) strongly increased (×1000) the PS phototoxicity towards leukemic Jurkat T cells through an O-glycan-dependent process; (ii) specifically purged tumor cells from a 1∶1 mixture of Jurkat leukemia (Tn-positive) and healthy (Tn-negative) lymphocytes, preserving the activation potential of healthy lymphocytes; (iii) was effective against various leukemic cell lines with distinct phenotypes, as well as fresh human primary acute and chronic lymphoid leukemia cells; (iv) induced mostly a caspase-independent cell death, which might be an advantage as tumor cells often resist caspase-dependent cell death. Altogether, the present observations suggest that conjugation with plant lectins can allow targeting of photosensitizers towards aberrant glycosylation of tumor cells, e.g. to purge leukemia cells from blood and to preserve the normal leukocytes in extracorporeal photochemotherapy.
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spelling pubmed-31573572011-08-19 Targeting of T/Tn Antigens with a Plant Lectin to Kill Human Leukemia Cells by Photochemotherapy Poiroux, Guillaume Pitié, Marguerite Culerrier, Raphaël Lafont, Elodie Ségui, Bruno Van Damme, Els J. M. Peumans, Willy J. Bernadou, Jean Levade, Thierry Rougé, Pierre Barre, Annick Benoist, Hervé PLoS One Research Article Photochemotherapy is used both for solid tumors and in extracorporeal treatment of various hematologic disorders. Nevertheless, its development in oncology remains limited, because of the low selectivity of photosensitizers (PS) towards human tumor cells. To enhance PS efficiency, we recently covalently linked a porphyrin (TrMPyP) to a plant lectin (Morniga G), known to recognize with high affinity tumor-associated T and Tn antigens. The conjugation allowed a quick uptake of PS by Tn-positive Jurkat leukemia cells and efficient PS-induced phototoxicity. The present study was performed: (i) to evaluate the targeting potential of the conjugate towards tumor and normal cells and its phototoxicity on various leukemia cells, (ii) to investigate the mechanism of conjugate-mediated cell death. The conjugate: (i) strongly increased (×1000) the PS phototoxicity towards leukemic Jurkat T cells through an O-glycan-dependent process; (ii) specifically purged tumor cells from a 1∶1 mixture of Jurkat leukemia (Tn-positive) and healthy (Tn-negative) lymphocytes, preserving the activation potential of healthy lymphocytes; (iii) was effective against various leukemic cell lines with distinct phenotypes, as well as fresh human primary acute and chronic lymphoid leukemia cells; (iv) induced mostly a caspase-independent cell death, which might be an advantage as tumor cells often resist caspase-dependent cell death. Altogether, the present observations suggest that conjugation with plant lectins can allow targeting of photosensitizers towards aberrant glycosylation of tumor cells, e.g. to purge leukemia cells from blood and to preserve the normal leukocytes in extracorporeal photochemotherapy. Public Library of Science 2011-08-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3157357/ /pubmed/21858067 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023315 Text en Poiroux et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Poiroux, Guillaume
Pitié, Marguerite
Culerrier, Raphaël
Lafont, Elodie
Ségui, Bruno
Van Damme, Els J. M.
Peumans, Willy J.
Bernadou, Jean
Levade, Thierry
Rougé, Pierre
Barre, Annick
Benoist, Hervé
Targeting of T/Tn Antigens with a Plant Lectin to Kill Human Leukemia Cells by Photochemotherapy
title Targeting of T/Tn Antigens with a Plant Lectin to Kill Human Leukemia Cells by Photochemotherapy
title_full Targeting of T/Tn Antigens with a Plant Lectin to Kill Human Leukemia Cells by Photochemotherapy
title_fullStr Targeting of T/Tn Antigens with a Plant Lectin to Kill Human Leukemia Cells by Photochemotherapy
title_full_unstemmed Targeting of T/Tn Antigens with a Plant Lectin to Kill Human Leukemia Cells by Photochemotherapy
title_short Targeting of T/Tn Antigens with a Plant Lectin to Kill Human Leukemia Cells by Photochemotherapy
title_sort targeting of t/tn antigens with a plant lectin to kill human leukemia cells by photochemotherapy
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3157357/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21858067
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023315
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