In vitro and in vivo evaluation of Bombesin-MMAE conjugates for targeted tumour therapy

Gomena, Jacopo [Gomena, Jacopo (Peptide chemistry), author]; Modena, Daniela; Cordella, Paola; Vári, Balázs [Vári, Balázs (biológus), author] National Institute of Oncology; School of PhD Studies (SU); Ranđelović, Ivan [Randelovic, Ivan (Oncology), author] National Institute of Oncology; Borbély, Adina; Bottani, Michela; Vári-Mező, Diána [Mező, Diána (biológus), author] National Institute of Oncology; School of PhD Studies (SU); Halmos, Gábor [Halmos, Gábor (Experimentális on...), author] Biofarmácia Tanszék (UD); Juhász, Éva [Juhász, Éva (Gyermekgyógyászat...), author] Department of Pediatrics (UD); Steinkühler, Christian; Tóvári, József [Tóvári, József (Daganatbiológia, ...), author] National Institute of Oncology; Mező, Gábor ✉ [Mező, Gábor (Szerves kémia), author] HUN-REN-ELTE Research Group of Peptide Chemistry (ELTE / ELU FoS / IC)

English Article (Journal Article) Scientific
Published: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY 0223-5234 1768-3254 277 Paper: 116767 , 13 p. 2024
  • SJR Scopus - Organic Chemistry: D1
Identifiers
Fundings:
  • (NRDIF-OTKA K146039)
  • (National Tumor Biology Laboratory (2022–2.1.1-NL-2022-00010)))
  • Hungarian Thematic Excellence Program((TKP2021-EGA-44))
  • (TKP2021-EGA-20)
  • (TKP2021-EGA)
Targeted tumour therapy has proved to be an efficient alternative to overcome the limitations of conventional chemotherapy. The upregulation of the bombesin receptor 2 (BB2) in several malignancies and the advantages offered by peptide drug conjugates over antibody drug conjugates in terms of production and tumour targeting motivated us to synthesise and test bombesin conjugates armed with the tubulin binder monomethyl auristatin E. The widely used Val-Cit-PABC was initially included as cathepsin cleavable self-immolative linker for the release of the free drug. However, the poor stability of the Val-Cit-conjugates in mouse plasma encouraged us to consider the optimised alternatives Glu-Val-Cit-PABC and Glu-Gly-Cit-PABC. Conjugate BN-EVcM1, featuring Glu-Val-Cit-PABC, combined suitable stability (t(½) in mouse and human plasma: 8.4 h and 4.6 h, respectively), antiproliferative activity in vitro (IC50 = 29.6 nM on the human prostate cancer cell line PC-3) and the full release of the free payload within 24 h. Three conjugates, namely BN-EGcM1, BN-EVcM1 and BN-EVcM2, improved the accumulation of MMAE in PC-3 human prostate cancer xenograft mice models, compared to the administration of the free drug. Among them, BN-EVcM1 also stood out for the significantly extended survival of mice in in vivo acute efficacy studies and for the significant inhibition of the growth of a PC-3 tumour in mice in both acute and chronic efficacy studies.
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2025-04-07 04:26