Tumor pretargeting with biotinylated antibodies and avidin, followed by a delayed delivery of radioactive-labeled biotin, is currently used for in vivo diagnosis and therapy in cancer patients. Herein, we describe the use of a three-step antibody/avidin targeting approach to increase the local concentration and the persistence of biotinylated human tumor necrosis factor cu (bio-TNF) on a mouse tumor, Mouse RMA lymphoma cells were transfected with the Thy 1.1 allele (RMA-Thy I,I) to generate a unique tumor-associated antigen. In vitro pretargeting of RMA-Thy 1.1 cells with the biotinylated anti-Thy 1.1 monoclonal antibody 19E12 (bio-19E12) and NeutrAvidin increased the amount of bio-TNF that bound to the cell (10-20 times in comparison with non-pretargeted cells), as well as its half-life on the surface (>30 times), Furthermore, cell pretargeting reduced by more than 2 orders of magnitude the LD50 of bio-TNF in a cytolytic assay with actinomycin D. Finally, RMA-Thy 1.1 cells, pretreated in vitro with bio-TNF according to the three-step procedure and injected into syngeneic C57/BL6 mice, were less tumorigenic than controls, These results indicate that the three-step targeting approach markedly increases the amount and the persistence of bio-TNF on the cell surface and that cell-bound bio-TNF can trigger cytolytic effects in vitro and antitumor effects in vivo. Tumor pretargeting with biotinylated antibodies and avidin could be a novel strategy for increasing the therapeutic index of TNF.

Tumor cell targeting with antibody-avidin complexes and biotinylated tumor necrosis factor alpha

CORTI , ANGELO
1997-01-01

Abstract

Tumor pretargeting with biotinylated antibodies and avidin, followed by a delayed delivery of radioactive-labeled biotin, is currently used for in vivo diagnosis and therapy in cancer patients. Herein, we describe the use of a three-step antibody/avidin targeting approach to increase the local concentration and the persistence of biotinylated human tumor necrosis factor cu (bio-TNF) on a mouse tumor, Mouse RMA lymphoma cells were transfected with the Thy 1.1 allele (RMA-Thy I,I) to generate a unique tumor-associated antigen. In vitro pretargeting of RMA-Thy 1.1 cells with the biotinylated anti-Thy 1.1 monoclonal antibody 19E12 (bio-19E12) and NeutrAvidin increased the amount of bio-TNF that bound to the cell (10-20 times in comparison with non-pretargeted cells), as well as its half-life on the surface (>30 times), Furthermore, cell pretargeting reduced by more than 2 orders of magnitude the LD50 of bio-TNF in a cytolytic assay with actinomycin D. Finally, RMA-Thy 1.1 cells, pretreated in vitro with bio-TNF according to the three-step procedure and injected into syngeneic C57/BL6 mice, were less tumorigenic than controls, These results indicate that the three-step targeting approach markedly increases the amount and the persistence of bio-TNF on the cell surface and that cell-bound bio-TNF can trigger cytolytic effects in vitro and antitumor effects in vivo. Tumor pretargeting with biotinylated antibodies and avidin could be a novel strategy for increasing the therapeutic index of TNF.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11768/7827
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