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Clostridium perfringensenterotoxin C-terminal domain labeled to fluorescent dyes forin vivovisualization of micrometastatic chemotherapy-resistant ovarian cancer

Authors :
Salvatore Lopez
Emiliano Cocco
Peter E. Schwartz
Caroline J. Zeiss
Floriana Centritto
Sergio Pecorelli
Erik M. Shapiro
Dan-Arin Silasi
Jonathan Black
Sara Gasparrini
Stefania Bellone
Elena Ratner
Alessandro D. Santin
Roberta Nicoletti
Thomas J. Rutherford
Carlton L. Schwab
Yang Deng
Elena Bonazzoli
Masoud Azodi
Natalia J. Sumi
W. Mark Saltzman
Ileana Bortolomai
Source :
International Journal of Cancer. 137:2618-2629
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wiley, 2015.

Abstract

Identification of micrometastatic disease at the time of surgery remains extremely challenging in ovarian cancer patients. We used fluorescence microscopy, an in vivo imaging system and a fluorescence stereo microscope to evaluate fluorescence distribution in Claudin-3- and -4-overexpressing ovarian tumors, floating tumor clumps isolated from ascites and healthy organs. To do so, mice harboring chemotherapy-naive and chemotherapy-resistant human ovarian cancer xenografts or patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) were treated with the carboxyl-terminal binding domain of the Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin (c-CPE) conjugated to FITC (FITC-c-CPE) or the near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent tag IRDye CW800 (CW800-c-CPE) either intraperitoneally (IP) or intravenously (IV). We found tumor fluorescence to plateau at 30 min after IP injection of both the FITC-c-CPE and the CW800-c-CPE peptides and to be significantly higher than in healthy organs (p < 0.01). After IV injection of CW800-c-CPE, tumor fluorescence plateaued at 6 hr while the most favorable tumor-to-background fluorescence ratio (TBR) was found at 48 hr in both mouse models. Importantly, fluorescent c-CPE was highly sensitive for the in vivo visualization of peritoneal micrometastatic tumor implants and the identification of ovarian tumor spheroids floating in malignant ascites that were otherwise not detectable by conventional visual observation. The use of the fluorescent c-CPE peptide may represent a novel and effective optical approach at the time of primary debulking surgery for the real-time detection of micrometastatic ovarian disease overexpressing the Claudin-3 and -4 receptors or the identification of residual disease at the time of interval debulking surgery after neoadjuvant chemotherapy treatment.

Details

ISSN :
00207136
Volume :
137
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1a9bd7b5168d93cb861ebf9a1d48ff78
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.29632