🚨New publication alert🚨

Typeset version of our most recent publication in European Urology just hit!

Wonderful collaboration with MIsha Beltran, Adam Sowalsky, and Pete Nelson!

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As some of you might know, our group has long been interested in using #GPC3 as an #HCC-selective target to develop #radiopharmaceuticals.

Example: https://jnm.snmjournals.org/content/64/7/1017

Site-Specifically Conjugated Single-Domain Antibody Successfully Identifies Glypican-3–Expressing Liver Cancer by Immuno-PET

Primary liver cancer is the third leading cause of cancer-related deaths, and its incidence and mortality are increasing worldwide. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) accounts for 80% of primary liver cancer cases. Glypican-3 (GPC3) is a heparan sulfate proteoglycan that histopathologically defines HCC and represents an attractive tumor-selective marker for radiopharmaceutical imaging and therapy for this disease. Single-domain antibodies are a promising scaffold for imaging because of their favorable pharmacokinetic properties, good tumor penetration, and renal clearance. Although conventional lysine-directed bioconjugation can be used to yield conjugates for radiolabeling full-length antibodies, this stochastic approach risks negatively affecting target binding of the smaller single-domain antibodies. To address this challenge, site-specific approaches have been explored. Here, we used conventional and sortase-based site-specific conjugation methods to engineer GPC3-specific human single-domain antibody (HN3) PET probes. Methods: Bifunctional deferoxamine (DFO) isothiocyanate was used to synthesize native HN3 (nHN3)-DFO. Site-specifically modified HN3 (ssHN3)-DFO was engineered using sortase-mediated conjugation of triglycine-DFO chelator and HN3 containing an LPETG C-terminal tag. Both conjugates were radiolabeled with 89Zr, and their binding affinity in vitro and target engagement of GPC3-positive (GPC3+) tumors in vivo were determined. Results: Both 89Zr-ssHN3 and 89Zr-nHN3 displayed nanomolar affinity for GPC3 in vitro. Biodistribution and PET/CT image analysis in mice bearing isogenic A431 and A431-GPC3+ xenografts, as well as in HepG2 liver cancer xenografts, showed that both conjugates specifically identify GPC3+ tumors. 89Zr-ssHN3 exhibited more favorable biodistribution and pharmacokinetic properties, including higher tumor uptake and lower liver accumulation. Comparative PET/CT studies on mice imaged with both 18F-FDG and 89Zr-ssHN3 showed more consistent tumor accumulation for the single-domain antibody conjugate, further establishing its potential for PET imaging. Conclusion: 89Zr-ssHN3 showed clear advantages in tumor uptake and tumor-to-liver signal ratio over the conventionally modified 89Zr-nHN3 in xenograft models. Our results establish the potential of HN3-based single-domain antibody probes for GPC3-directed PET imaging of liver cancers.

Journal of Nuclear Medicine

So, it's perhaps no surprise that when we came across the work by out of Duke showing that #GPC3 was also expressed in neuroendocrine prostate cancer #nepc, it piqued our interest!

https://doi.org/10.1002/path.6063

For this story, we asked whether we could explore expression (RNA & protein) in patient samples (PDXs, PDOs, cell lines, IHC of tumors) more sytematically and whether we could use #GPC3 as a #radiopharmaceutical target for #NEPC.

Turns out that GPC3 is highly enriched in patients with AR-/NE+ subtype of prostate cancers!

And when tested one of our #GPC3-selective #radiotheranostics pairs, we observed nice localization and therapeutic benefit in H660 xenograft models!
Work pursuing #GPC3 #radiotheranostics using PDX models could validate these findings and offer a much needed therapeutic option for this rare, difficult to treat cancer.

One final note: You'll notice that in the RNAseq data of PDXs/PDOs, there's another target we highlighted #DLL3, which is also expressed in SCLC and NEPC and is being pursued as a target for these cancers including #radiotheranostics

https://doi.org/10.1016/S1470-2045(24)00249-3

Shoutout to first author and postdoctoral fellow in our group Woonghee Lee who helped make this happen!

Link to paper: https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1l7x714kpm0hbQ