4.7 Article

Intrinsically Fluorescent Oligomeric Cytotoxic Conjugates Toxic for FGFR1-Overproducing Cancers

Journal

BIOMACROMOLECULES
Volume 22, Issue 12, Pages 5349-5362

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.1c01280

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Union under the European Regional Development Fund [POIR.04.04.00-00-43B2/17-00]
  2. Sonata Bis grant from the National Science Centre [2019/34/E/NZ3/00014]

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FGFR1 is considered an attractive molecular target for anticancer therapies due to its overexpression in various tumor types. By genetically fusing FGF1 to GFPp, a set of GFPp_FGF1 oligomers with improved receptor binding were generated, leading to the development of a stable and highly specific 3xGFPp_FGF1E_LPET_MMAE cytotoxic conjugate. This conjugate exhibited nanomolar affinity for FGFR1 and demonstrated efficient internalization into cancer cells with high FGFR1 expression, showing potential for imaging and targeted therapy of FGFR1-overproducing cancers.
Fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) is an integral membrane protein that transmits prolife signals through the plasma membrane. Overexpression of FGFR1 has been reported in various tumor types, and therefore, this receptor constitutes an attractive molecular target for selective anticancer therapies. Here, we present a novel system for generation of intrinsically fluorescent, self-assembling, oligomeric cytotoxic conjugates with high affinity and efficient internalization targeting FGFR1. In our approach, we employed FGF1 as an FGFR1 recognizing molecule and genetically fused it to green fluorescent protein polygons (GFPp), a fluorescent oligomerization scaffold, resulting in a set of GFPp_FGF1 oligomers with largely improved receptor binding. To validate the applicability of using GFPp_FGF1 oligomers as cancer probes and drug carriers in targeted therapy of cancers with aberrant FGFR1, we selected a trimeric variant from generated GFPp_FGF1 oligomers and further engineered it by introducing FGF1-stabilizing mutations and by incorporating the cytotoxic drug monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE) in a site-specific manner. The resulting intrinsically fluorescent, trimeric cytotoxic conjugate 3xGFPp_FGF1E_LPET_MMAE exhibits nanomolar affinity for the receptor and very high stability. Notably, the intrinsic fluorescence of 3xGFPp_FGF1E_LPET_MMAE allows for tracking the cellular transport of the conjugate, demonstrating that 3xGFPp_FGF1E_LPET_MMAE is efficiently and selectively internalized into cells expressing FGFR1. Importantly, we show that 3xGFPp_FGF1E_LPET_MMAE displays very high cytotoxicity against a panel of different cancer cells overproducing FGFR1 while remaining neutral toward cells devoid of FGFR1 expression. Our data implicate that the engineered fluorescent conjugates can be used for imaging and targeted therapy of FGFR1-overproducing cancers.

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