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Natural Product Splicing Inhibitors: A New Class of Antibody–Drug Conjugate (ADC) Payloads

Authors :
Frank Loganzo
Frank Barletta
Jesse Alexander Teske
Dangshe Ma
Sylvia Musto
Chakrapani Subramanyam
Hans-Peter Gerber
L. Nathan Tumey
Ken Dirico
Christopher J. O’Donnell
Judy Lucas
Edmund I. Graziani
Puja Sapra
Michael V. Green
Brian Rago
Hadi Falahaptisheh
Haiyin He
Tracey Clark
Frank E. Koehn
Xiaogang Han
Robert Veneziale
Sujiet Puthenveetil
Source :
Bioconjugate Chemistry. 27:1880-1888
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2016.

Abstract

There is a considerable ongoing work to identify new cytotoxic payloads that are appropriate for antibody-based delivery, acting via mechanisms beyond DNA damage and microtubule disruption, highlighting their importance to the field of cancer therapeutics. New modes of action will allow a more diverse set of tumor types to be targeted and will allow for possible mechanisms to evade the drug resistance that will invariably develop to existing payloads. Spliceosome inhibitors are known to be potent antiproliferative agents capable of targeting both actively dividing and quiescent cells. A series of thailanstatin-antibody conjugates were prepared in order to evaluate their potential utility in the treatment of cancer. After exploring a variety of linkers, we found that the most potent antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) were derived from direct conjugation of the carboxylic acid-containing payload to surface lysines of the antibody (a "linker-less" conjugate). Activity of these lysine conjugates was correlated to drug-loading, a feature not typically observed for other payload classes. The thailanstatin-conjugates were potent in high target expressing cells, including multidrug-resistant lines, and inactive in nontarget expressing cells. Moreover, these ADCs were shown to promote altered splicing products in N87 cells in vitro, consistent with their putative mechanism of action. In addition, the exposure of the ADCs was sufficient to result in excellent potency in a gastric cancer xenograft model at doses as low as 1.5 mg/kg that was superior to the clinically approved ADC T-DM1. The results presented herein therefore open the door to further exploring splicing inhibition as a potential new mode-of-action for novel ADCs.

Details

ISSN :
15204812 and 10431802
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bioconjugate Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....193c1f106b4a8739b46d3d725eac0eba
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.6b00291