4.7 Article

Evaluating the Therapeutic Efficacy of Mono- and Bivalent Affibody-Based Fusion Proteins Targeting HER3 in a Pancreatic Cancer Xenograft Model

Journal

PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics12060551

Keywords

affibody molecules; HER3; albumin-binding domain; seribantumab; therapy; MM-121

Funding

  1. Swedish Cancer Society
  2. Cancerfonden [CAN 2017/425, CAN 2018/436, CAN2017/649, CAN2016/463, CAN2019/190101]
  3. Swedish Research Council
  4. Vetenskapsradet [2019-00986, 2019-00994, 2019/00104]
  5. Wallenberg Center for Protein Research
  6. Swedish Agency for Innovation VINNOVA [2019/00104]
  7. Swedish Research Council [2019-00994, 2019-00986] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council

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Human epidermal growth factor receptor 3 (HER3) has been increasingly scrutinized as a potential drug target since the elucidation of its role in mediating tumor growth and acquired therapy resistance. Affibody molecules are so-called scaffold proteins with favorable biophysical properties, such as a small size for improved tissue penetration and extravasation, thermal and chemical stability, and a high tolerance to modifications. Additionally, affibody molecules are efficiently produced in prokaryotic hosts or by chemical peptide synthesis. We have previously evaluated the biodistribution profiles of five mono- and bivalent anti-HER3 affibody molecules (designated as 3) fused to an albumin-binding domain (designated as A), 3A, 33A, 3A3, A33, and A3, that inhibit ligand-dependent phosphorylation. In the present study, we examined the therapeutic efficacy of the three most promising variants, 3A, 33A, and 3A3, in a direct comparison with the HER3-targeting monoclonal antibody seribantumab (MM-121) in a preclinical BxPC-3 pancreatic cancer model. Xenografted mice were treated with either an affibody construct or MM-121 and the tumor growth was compared to a vehicle group. Receptor occupancy was estimated by positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) imaging using a HER3-targeting affibody imaging agent [Ga-68]Ga-(HE)(3)-Z(08698)-NODAGA. The affibody molecules could inhibit ligand-dependent phosphorylation and cell proliferation in vitro and demonstrated tumor growth inhibition in vivo comparable to that of MM-121. PET/CT imaging showed full receptor occupancy for all tested drug candidates. Treatment with 3A and 3A3 affibody constructs was more efficient than with 33A and similar to the anti-HER3 antibody seribantumab, showing that the molecular design of affibody-based therapeutics targeting HER3 in terms of the relative position of functional domains and valency has an impact on therapeutic effect.

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