4.8 Article

Ultrasmall Folate Receptor Alpha Targeted Enzymatically Cleavable Silica Nanoparticle Drug Conjugates Augment Penetration and Therapeutic Efficacy in Models of Cancer

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 16, Issue 12, Pages 20021-20033

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.2c05342

Keywords

ultrasmall; folate receptor alpha; silica nanoparticle drug conjugates; patient-derived ovarian cancer; tumor spheroids; penetration

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An ultrasmall folate receptor alpha (FR alpha) targeted silica nanoparticle (C'Dot) drug conjugate (CDC) was developed to address the limitations of current systemic drug delivery for cancer management. The lead candidate formulation demonstrated specific targeting, multivalent binding properties, enzymatic responsive payload cleavage, stability in human plasma, rapid clearance, and minimal organ retention. It also showed superior efficacy in tumor penetration, cytotoxicity, and therapeutic outcome in various tumor models expressing different levels of FR alpha.
To address the key challenges in the development of next-generation drug delivery systems (DDS) with desired physicochemical properties to overcome limitations regarding safety, in vivo efficacy, and solid tumor penetration, an ultrasmall folate receptor alpha (FR alpha) targeted silica nanoparticle (C'Dot) drug conjugate (CDC; or folic acid CDC) was developed. A broad array of methods was employed to screen a panel of CDCs and identify a lead folic acid CDC for clinical development. These included comparing the performance against antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) in three-dimensional tumor spheroid penetration ability, assessing in vitro/ex vivo cytotoxic efficacy, as well as in vivo therapeutic outcome in multiple cell-line-derived and patient-derived xenograft models. An ultrasmall folic acid CDC, EC112002, was identified as the lead candidate out of >500 folic acid CDC formulations evaluated. Systematic studies demonstrated that the lead formulation, EC112002, exhibited highly specific FR alpha targeting, multivalent binding properties that would mediate the ability to outcompete endogenous folate in vivo, enzymatic responsive payload cleavage, stability in human plasma, rapid in vivo clearance, and minimal normal organ retention organ distribution in non-tumor-bearing mice. When compared with an anti-FR alpha-DM4 ADC, EC112002 demonstrated deeper penetration into 3D cell-line-derived tumor spheroids and superior specific cytotoxicity in a panel of 3D patient-derived tumor spheroids, as well as enhanced efficacy in cell-line-derived and patient-derived in vivo tumor xenograft models expressing a range of low to high levels of FR alpha. With the growing interest in developing clinically translatable, safe, and efficacious DDSs, EC112002 has the potential to address some of the critical limitations of the current systemic drug delivery for cancer management.

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