4.8 Article

Site-specific targeting of antibody activity in vivo mediated by disease-associated proteases

Journal

JOURNAL OF CONTROLLED RELEASE
Volume 161, Issue 3, Pages 804-812

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jconrel.2012.05.035

Keywords

Pro-antibody; Protease; Targeting; Atherosclerosis; Vascular cell adhesion protein 1

Funding

  1. NIH [5 U54 CA119335-04, PEN 5 U01 HL080718-04, 1 R21 CA159232-01, 1 R01 GM097114-01A1]
  2. California Institute for Regenerative Medicine

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As a general strategy to selectively target antibody activity in vivo, a molecular architecture was designed to render binding activity dependent upon proteases in disease tissues. A protease-activated antibody (pro-antibody) targeting vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1), a marker of atherosclerotic plaques, was constructed by tethering a binding site-masking peptide to the antibody via a matrix metalloprotease (MMP) susceptible linker. Pro-antibody activation in vitro by MMP-1 yielded a 200-fold increase in binding affinity and restored anti-VCAM-1 binding in tissue sections from ApoE(-/-) mice ex vivo. The pro-antibody was efficiently activated by native proteases in aorta tissue extracts from ApoE(-/-), but not from normal mice, and accumulated in aortic plaques in vivo with enhanced selectivity when compared to the unmodified antibody. Pro-antibody accumulation in aortic plaques was MMP-dependent, and significantly inhibited by a broad-spectrum MMP inhibitor. These results demonstrate that the activity of disease-associated proteases can be exploited to site-specifically target antibody activity in vivo. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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