4.8 Article

Chemotrap-1: An Engineered Soluble Receptor That Blocks Chemokine-Induced Migration of Metastatic Cancer Cells In vivo

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 70, Issue 20, Pages 8138-8148

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-10-0175

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Funding

  1. Ligue Nationale contre le Cancer
  2. Wellcome Trust [083583]
  3. Skin Cancer Research Foundation
  4. Michael Brough Healing Foundation
  5. British Heart Foundation [BS06/009]

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Cancer and dendritic cells recognize and migrate toward chemokines secreted from lymphatics and use this mechanism to invade the lymphatic system, and cancer cells metastasize through it. The lymphatic-secreted chemokine ligand CCL21 has been identified as a key regulatory molecule in the switch to a metastatic phenotype in melanoma and breast cancer cells. However, it is not known whether CCL21 inhibition is a potential therapeutic strategy for inhibition of metastasis. Here, we describe an engineered CCL21-soluble inhibitor, Chemotrap-1, which inhibits migration of metastatic melanoma cells in vivo. Two-hybrid, pull-down, and coimmunoprecipitation assays allowed us to identify a naturally occurring human zinc finger protein with CCL21 chemokine-binding properties. Further analyses revealed a short peptide (similar to 70 amino acids), with a predicted coiled-coil structure, which is sufficient for association with CCL21. This CCL21 chemokine-binding peptide was then fused to the Fc region of human IgG1 to generate Chemotrap-1, a human chemokine-binding Fc fusion protein. Surface plasmon resonance and chemotaxis assays showed that Chemotrap-1 binds CCL21 and inhibits CCL21-induced migration of melanoma cells in vitro with subnanomolar affinity. In addition, Chemotrap-1 blocked migration of melanoma cells toward lymphatic endothelial cells in vitro and in vivo. Finally, Chemotrap-1 strongly reduced lymphatic invasion, tracking, and metastasis of CCR7-expressing melanoma cells in vivo. Together, these results show that CCL21 chemokine inhibition by Chemotrap-1 is a potential therapeutic strategy for metastasis and provide further support for the hypothesis that lymphatic-mediated metastasis is a chemokine-dependent process. Cancer Res; 70(20); 8138-48. (C) 2010 AACR.

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