4.7 Article

Effect of Receptor Occupancy on Folate Receptor Internalization

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 1007-1013

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/mp400659t

Keywords

receptor recycling; folate receptor endocytosis; ligand targeted drugs; antibodies to folate receptors; ligand valency on nanomedicines

Funding

  1. Endocyte Inc. (West Lafayette, IN)

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The folate receptor (FR) is a GPI anchored cell surface glycoprotein that functions to facilitate folic acid uptake and mediate signal transduction. With the introduction of multiple folate-targeted drugs into the clinic, the question has arisen regarding how frequently a patient can be dosed with a FR-targeted drug or antibody and whether dosing frequency exerts any impact on the availability of FR for subsequent rounds of FR-mediated drug uptake. Although the rate of FR recycling has been examined in murine tumor models, little or no information exists on the impact of FR occupancy on its rate of endocytosis. The present study quantitates the number of cell surface FR-alpha and FR-beta following exposure to saturating concentrations of a variety of folate-linked molecules and anti-FR antibodies, including the unmodified vitamin, folate-linked drug mimetics, multifolate derivatized nanoparticles, and monoclonal antibodies to FR. We report here that FR occupancy has no impact on the rate of FR internalization. We also demonstrate that multivalent conjugates that bind and cross-link FRs at the cell surface internalize at the same rate as monovalent folate conjugates that have no impact on FR clustering, even though the multivalent conjugates traffic through a different endocytic pathway.

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