4.7 Article

A Novel 111In-Labeled Anti-Prostate-Specific Membrane Antigen Nanobody for Targeted SPECT/CT Imaging of Prostate Cancer

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE
Volume 56, Issue 7, Pages 1094-1099

Publisher

SOC NUCLEAR MEDICINE INC
DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.115.156729

Keywords

Nanobody; PSMA; SPECT; In-111; prostate cancer

Funding

  1. Center for Translational Molecular Medicine [03O-203]
  2. Erasmus MC grant Novel Radio-Antagonists for PET/MRI Imaging and Therapy of Prostate Cancer

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Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is overexpressed in prostate cancer (PCa) and a promising target for molecular imaging and therapy. Nanobodies (single-domain antibodies, VHH) are the smallest antibody-based fragments possessing ideal molecular imaging properties, such as high target specificity and rapid background clearance. We developed a novel anti-PSMA Nanobody (JVZ-007) for targeted imaging and therapy of PCa. Here, we report on the application of the In-111-radiolabeled Nanobody for SPECT/CT imaging of PCa. Methods: A Nanobody library was generated by immunization of a llama with 4 human PCa cell lines. Anti-PSMA Nanobodies were captured by biopanning on PSMA-overexpressing cells. JVZ-007 was selected for evaluation as an imaging probe. JVZ-007 was initially produced with a c-myc-hexahistidine (his) tag allowing purification and detection. The c-myc-his tag was subsequently replaced by a single cysteine at the C terminus, allowing site-specific conjugation of chelates for radiolabeling. JVZ-007-cmyc-his was conjugated to 2-(4-isothiocyanatobenzyI)-diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (p-SCN-DTPA) via the lysines, whereas JVZ-007-cys was conjugated to maleimide-DTPA via the C-terminal cysteine. PSMA targeting was analyzed in vitro by cell-binding experiments using flow cytometry, autoradiography, and internalization assays with various PCa cell lines and patient-derived xeno-grafts (PDXs). The targeting properties of radiolabeled Nanobodies were evaluated in vivo in biodistribution and SPECT/CT imaging experiments, using nude mice bearing PSMA-positive PC-310 and PSMA-negative PC-3 tumors. Results: JVZ-007 was successfully conjugated to DTPA for radiolabeling with In-111 at room temperature. In-111-JVZ007-c-myc-his and In-111-JVZ007-cys internalized in LNCaP cells and bound to PSMA-expressing PDXs and, importantly, not to PSMA-negative PDXs and human kidneys. Good tumor targeting and fast blood clearance were observed for (111)InJVZ-007-c-myc-his and In-111-JVZ-007-cys. Renal uptake of 111InJVZ-007-c-myc-his was initially high but was efficiently reduced by coinjection of gelofusine and lysine. The replacement of the c-myc-his tag by the cysteine contributed to a further reduction of renal uptake without loss of targeting. PC-310 tumors were clearly visualized by SPECT/CT with both tracers, with low renal uptake (<4 percentage injected dose per gram) for In-111-JVZ007-cys already at 3 h after injection. Conclusion: We developed an In-111-radiolabeled anti-PSMA Nanobody, showing good tumor targeting, low uptake in nontarget tissues, and low renal retention, allowing excellent SPECT/CT imaging of PCa within a few hours after injection.

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