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Quantifying ADC bystander payload penetration with cellular resolution using pharmacodynamic mapping

With the recent approval of 3 new antibody drug conjugates (ADCs) for solid tumors, this class of drugs is gaining momentum for the targeted treatment of cancer. Despite significant investment, there are still fundamental issues that are incompletely understood. Three of the recently approved ADCs c...

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Autores principales: Khera, Eshita, Cilliers, Cornelius, Smith, Michael D., Ganno, Michelle L., Lai, Katharine C., Keating, Thomas A., Kopp, Anna, Nessler, Ian, Abu-Yousif, Adnan O., Thurber, Greg M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Neoplasia Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7779838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33385970
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neo.2020.12.001
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author Khera, Eshita
Cilliers, Cornelius
Smith, Michael D.
Ganno, Michelle L.
Lai, Katharine C.
Keating, Thomas A.
Kopp, Anna
Nessler, Ian
Abu-Yousif, Adnan O.
Thurber, Greg M.
author_facet Khera, Eshita
Cilliers, Cornelius
Smith, Michael D.
Ganno, Michelle L.
Lai, Katharine C.
Keating, Thomas A.
Kopp, Anna
Nessler, Ian
Abu-Yousif, Adnan O.
Thurber, Greg M.
author_sort Khera, Eshita
collection PubMed
description With the recent approval of 3 new antibody drug conjugates (ADCs) for solid tumors, this class of drugs is gaining momentum for the targeted treatment of cancer. Despite significant investment, there are still fundamental issues that are incompletely understood. Three of the recently approved ADCs contain payloads exhibiting bystander effects, where the payload can diffuse out of a targeted cell into adjacent cells. These effects are often studied using a mosaic of antigen positive and negative cells. However, the distance these payloads can diffuse in tumor tissue while maintaining a lethal concentration is unclear. Computational studies suggest bystander effects partially compensate for ADC heterogeneity in tumors in addition to targeting antigen negative cells. However, this type of study is challenging to conduct experimentally due to the low concentrations of extremely potent payloads. In this work, we use a series of 3-dimensional cell culture and primary human tumor xenograft studies to directly track fluorescently labeled ADCs and indirectly follow the payload via an established pharmacodynamic marker (γH2A. X). Using TAK-164, an anti-GCC ADC undergoing clinical evaluation, we show that the lipophilic DNA-alkylating payload, DGN549, penetrates beyond the cell targeted layer in GCC-positive tumor spheroids and primary human tumor xenograft models. The penetration distance is similar to model predictions, where the lipophilicity results in moderate tissue penetration, thereby balancing improved tissue penetration with sufficient cellular uptake to avoid significant washout. These results aid in mechanistic understanding of the interplay between antigen heterogeneity, bystander effects, and heterogeneous delivery of ADCs in the tumor microenvironment to design clinically effective therapeutics.
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spelling pubmed-77798382021-01-08 Quantifying ADC bystander payload penetration with cellular resolution using pharmacodynamic mapping Khera, Eshita Cilliers, Cornelius Smith, Michael D. Ganno, Michelle L. Lai, Katharine C. Keating, Thomas A. Kopp, Anna Nessler, Ian Abu-Yousif, Adnan O. Thurber, Greg M. Neoplasia Original article With the recent approval of 3 new antibody drug conjugates (ADCs) for solid tumors, this class of drugs is gaining momentum for the targeted treatment of cancer. Despite significant investment, there are still fundamental issues that are incompletely understood. Three of the recently approved ADCs contain payloads exhibiting bystander effects, where the payload can diffuse out of a targeted cell into adjacent cells. These effects are often studied using a mosaic of antigen positive and negative cells. However, the distance these payloads can diffuse in tumor tissue while maintaining a lethal concentration is unclear. Computational studies suggest bystander effects partially compensate for ADC heterogeneity in tumors in addition to targeting antigen negative cells. However, this type of study is challenging to conduct experimentally due to the low concentrations of extremely potent payloads. In this work, we use a series of 3-dimensional cell culture and primary human tumor xenograft studies to directly track fluorescently labeled ADCs and indirectly follow the payload via an established pharmacodynamic marker (γH2A. X). Using TAK-164, an anti-GCC ADC undergoing clinical evaluation, we show that the lipophilic DNA-alkylating payload, DGN549, penetrates beyond the cell targeted layer in GCC-positive tumor spheroids and primary human tumor xenograft models. The penetration distance is similar to model predictions, where the lipophilicity results in moderate tissue penetration, thereby balancing improved tissue penetration with sufficient cellular uptake to avoid significant washout. These results aid in mechanistic understanding of the interplay between antigen heterogeneity, bystander effects, and heterogeneous delivery of ADCs in the tumor microenvironment to design clinically effective therapeutics. Neoplasia Press 2020-12-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7779838/ /pubmed/33385970 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neo.2020.12.001 Text en © 2020 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original article
Khera, Eshita
Cilliers, Cornelius
Smith, Michael D.
Ganno, Michelle L.
Lai, Katharine C.
Keating, Thomas A.
Kopp, Anna
Nessler, Ian
Abu-Yousif, Adnan O.
Thurber, Greg M.
Quantifying ADC bystander payload penetration with cellular resolution using pharmacodynamic mapping
title Quantifying ADC bystander payload penetration with cellular resolution using pharmacodynamic mapping
title_full Quantifying ADC bystander payload penetration with cellular resolution using pharmacodynamic mapping
title_fullStr Quantifying ADC bystander payload penetration with cellular resolution using pharmacodynamic mapping
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying ADC bystander payload penetration with cellular resolution using pharmacodynamic mapping
title_short Quantifying ADC bystander payload penetration with cellular resolution using pharmacodynamic mapping
title_sort quantifying adc bystander payload penetration with cellular resolution using pharmacodynamic mapping
topic Original article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7779838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33385970
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neo.2020.12.001
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