4.7 Article

Use of photoimmunoconjugates to characterize ABCB1 in cancer cells

Journal

NANOPHOTONICS
Volume 10, Issue 12, Pages 3049-3061

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/nanoph-2021-0252

Keywords

ABCB1; benzoporphyrin derivative; photodynamic therapy; photoimmunoconjugate; UIC2

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R21EB028508, R01CA260340]
  2. National Science Foundation [CBET-2030253]
  3. UMD-NCI Partnership for Integrative Cancer Research seed grant
  4. Intramural Program of the National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute, Center for Cancer Research

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Accurate detection of ABCB1 expression is crucial for identifying drug-resistant tumors. A new photoimmunoconjugate combining a clinically approved BPD photosensitizer and a conformational-sensitive UIC2 monoclonal antibody has been developed to target functionally active human ABCB1.
Accurate detection of ATP-binding cassette drug transporter ABCB1 expression is imperative for precise identification of drug-resistant tumors. Existing detection methods fail to provide the necessary molecular details regarding the functional state of the transporter. Photoimmunoconjugates are a unique class of antibody-dye conjugates for molecular diagnosis and therapeutic treatment. However, conjugating hydrophobic photosensitizers to hydrophilic antibodies is quite challenging. Here, we devise a photoimmunoconjugate that combines a clinically approved benzoporphyrin derivative (BPD) photosensitizer and the conformational-sensitive UIC2 monoclonal antibody to target functionally active human ABCB1 (i.e., ABCB1 in the inward-open conformation). We show that PEGylation of UIC2 enhances the BPD conjugation efficiency and reduces the amount of non-covalently conjugated BPD molecules by 17%. Size exclusion chromatography effectively separates the different molecular weight species found in the UIC2-BPD sample. The binding of UIC2-BPD to ABCB1 was demonstrated in lipidic nanodiscs and ABCB1-overexpressing triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) cells. UIC2-BPD was found to retain the conformation sensitivity of UIC2, as the addition of ABCB1 modulators increases the antibody reactivity in vitro. Thus, the inherent fluorescence capability of BPD can be used to label ABCB1-overexpressing TNBC cells using UIC2-BPD. Our findings provide insight into conjugation of hydrophobic photosensitizers to conformation-sensitive antibodies to target proteins expressed on the surface of cancer cells.

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