The aim of this study was to demonstrate that oligo-branched peptides can be effective either for spotlighting tumor cells that overexpress peptide receptors, or for killing them, simply by exchanging the functional moiety coupled to the conserved receptor-targeting core. Tetra-branched peptides containing neurotensin (NT) sequence are described here as selective targeting agents for human colon, pancreas and prostate cancer. Fluorophore-conjugated peptides were used to measure tumor versus healthy tissue binding in human surgical samples, resulting in validation of neurotensin receptors as highly promising tumor-biomarkers. Drug-armed branched peptides were synthesized with different conjugation methods, resulting in uncleavable adducts or drug-releasing molecules. Cytotoxicity on human cell lines from colon (HT-29), pancreas (PANC-1) or prostate (PC-3) carcinoma indicated branched NT conjugated with MTX and 5-FdU as the most active agents on PANC-1 (EC50 4.4e-007 M) and HT-29 (1.1e-007 M), respectively. Tetra-branched NT armed with 5-FdU was used for in vivo experiments in HT-29-xenografted mice and produced a 50% reduction in tumor growth with respect to animals treated with the free drug. An unrelated branched peptide carrying the same drug was completely ineffective. In vitro and in vivo results indicated that branched peptides are valuable tools for tumor selective targeting

Modular branched neurotensin peptides for tumor target tracing and receptor-mediated therapy: a proof-of-concept / Chiara Falciani; Barbara Lelli; Jlenia Brunetti1; S. Pileri; A. Cappelli; Alessandro Pini; Chiara Pagliuca2; N. Ravenni; L. Bencini; Stefano Menichetti; R. Moretti; M. De Prizio; M. Scatizzi; Luisa Bracci1. - In: CURRENT CANCER DRUG TARGETS. - ISSN 1568-0096. - STAMPA. - 10:(2010), pp. 695-704. [10.2174/156800910793605875]

Modular branched neurotensin peptides for tumor target tracing and receptor-mediated therapy: a proof-of-concept

MENICHETTI, STEFANO;
2010

Abstract

The aim of this study was to demonstrate that oligo-branched peptides can be effective either for spotlighting tumor cells that overexpress peptide receptors, or for killing them, simply by exchanging the functional moiety coupled to the conserved receptor-targeting core. Tetra-branched peptides containing neurotensin (NT) sequence are described here as selective targeting agents for human colon, pancreas and prostate cancer. Fluorophore-conjugated peptides were used to measure tumor versus healthy tissue binding in human surgical samples, resulting in validation of neurotensin receptors as highly promising tumor-biomarkers. Drug-armed branched peptides were synthesized with different conjugation methods, resulting in uncleavable adducts or drug-releasing molecules. Cytotoxicity on human cell lines from colon (HT-29), pancreas (PANC-1) or prostate (PC-3) carcinoma indicated branched NT conjugated with MTX and 5-FdU as the most active agents on PANC-1 (EC50 4.4e-007 M) and HT-29 (1.1e-007 M), respectively. Tetra-branched NT armed with 5-FdU was used for in vivo experiments in HT-29-xenografted mice and produced a 50% reduction in tumor growth with respect to animals treated with the free drug. An unrelated branched peptide carrying the same drug was completely ineffective. In vitro and in vivo results indicated that branched peptides are valuable tools for tumor selective targeting
2010
10
695
704
Chiara Falciani; Barbara Lelli; Jlenia Brunetti1; S. Pileri; A. Cappelli; Alessandro Pini; Chiara Pagliuca2; N. Ravenni; L. Bencini; Stefano Menichetti; R. Moretti; M. De Prizio; M. Scatizzi; Luisa Bracci1
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
2010_CCDT_10_695.pdf

Accesso chiuso

Tipologia: Altro
Licenza: Tutti i diritti riservati
Dimensione 745.03 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
745.03 kB Adobe PDF   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/900136
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 37
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 36
social impact