4.7 Article

Targeting neuropilin-1 in human leukemia and lymphoma

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 117, Issue 3, Pages 920-927

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2010-05-282921

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Funding

  1. NIH
  2. DOD
  3. University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center
  4. Gillson-Longenbaugh Foundation
  5. Kimberly Patterson Fellowship for Leukemia Research

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Targeted drug delivery offers an opportunity for the development of safer and more effective therapies for the treatment of cancer. In this study, we sought to identify short, cell-internalizing peptide ligands that could serve as directive agents for specific drug delivery in hematologic malignancies. By screening of human leukemia cells with a combinatorial phage display peptide library, we isolated a peptide motif, sequence Phe-Phe/Tyr-Any-Leu-Arg-Ser (F(F)/(Y)XLRS), which bound to different leukemia cell lines and to patient-derived bone marrow samples. The motif was internalized through a receptor-mediated pathway, and we next identified the corresponding receptor as the transmembrane glycoprotein neuropilin-1 (NRP-1). Moreover, we observed a potent anti-leukemia cell effect when the targeting motif was synthesized in tandem to the pro-apoptotic sequence (D)(KLAKLAK)(2). Finally, our results confirmed increased expression of NRP-1 in representative human leukemia and lymphoma cell lines and in a panel of bone marrow specimens obtained from patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia or acute myelogenous leukemia compared with normal bone marrow. These results indicate that NRP-1 could potentially be used as a target for ligand-directed therapy in human leukemias and lymphomas and that the prototype CGFYWLRSC-GG-(D)(KLAKLAK)(2) is a promising drug candidate in this setting. (Blood. 2011;117(3):920-927)

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