4.7 Article

Site-Specific 89Zr- and 111In-Radiolabeling and In Vivo Evaluation of Glycan-free Antibodies by Azide-Alkyne Cycloaddition with a Non-natural Amino Acid

Journal

BIOCONJUGATE CHEMISTRY
Volume 31, Issue 4, Pages 1177-1187

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.0c00100

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Funding

  1. NIH [NHLBI R00HL125728]
  2. Stony Brook University

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Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) are a class of targeted therapeutics consisting of a monoclonal antibody coupled to a cytotoxic payload. Various bioconjugation methods for producing site-specific ADCs have been reported recently, in efforts to improve immunoreactivity and pharmacokinetics and minimize batch variance.potential issues associated with first-generation ADCs prepared via stochastic peptide coupling of lysines or reduced cysteines. Recently, cell-free protein synthesis of antibodies incorporating para-azidomethyl phenylalanine (pAMF) at specific locations within the protein sequence has emerged as a means to generate antibody-drug conjugates with strictly defined drug-antibody-ratio, leading to ADCs with markedly improved stability, activity, and specificity. The incorporation of pAMF enables the conjugation of payloads functionalized for strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition. Here, we introduce two dibenzylcyclooctyne-functionalized bifunctional chelators that enable the incorporation of radioisotopes for positron emission tomography with Zr-89 (t(1/2) = 78.4 h, beta(+) = 395 keV (22%), gamma = 897 keV) or single photon emission computed tomography with In-111 (t(1/2) = 67.3 h, gamma = 171 keV (91%), 245 keV (94%)) under physiologically compatible conditions. We show that the corresponding radiolabeled conjugates with site-specifically functionalized antibodies targeting HER2 are amenable to targeted molecular imaging of HER2+ expressing tumor xenografts in mice and exhibit a favorable biodistribution profile in comparison with conventional, glycosylated antibody conjugates generated by stochastic bioconjugation.

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