Presentation + Paper
21 August 2020 Peptide-based scaffolds for in vivo immobilization and enzyme attachment in therapeutic applications
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Advances in molecular design and synthetic chemistry enable the development of novel molecular therapeutic treatments of diverse diseases. A strategy proposed nearly 25 years ago for the treatment of metastatic cancer, but never realized, entails the following general processes: (i) Accumulation of an insoluble scaffold in the tumor extracellular space upon native enzyme (Enat) cleavage of a soluble precursor, and (ii) covalent attachment to the scaffold of a non-native (heterologous) enzyme (Ehet), which catalytically converts an abundance of aqueous-soluble radionuclide-bearing prodrug to an aqueous-insoluble drug; the latter precipitates in the tumor extracellular space. Here, the design and chemical synthesis of a molecular entity (1) for formation of the scaffold are described. Compound 1 is an “A2BC”-type lysine-based architecture that contains two chromogenic indoxyl-glucoside units (A), which upon cleavage by a glucosidase (Enat) undergo oxidative dimerization to provide a water-insoluble indigoid polymer; a maleimide (B) for attachment to a cancer-targeting agent; and the binding motif Loracarbef (C), a carbacephem antibiotic that forms a covalent adduct with a mutant β-lactamase (a proposed tether to, and/or possible fusion protein with, Ehet). Studies here also include maleimide–thiol conjugation of I to transferrin (a cell uptake carrier) and the covalent attachment of a mutant b-lactamase to Loracarbef. Together, the work supports an approach for molecular brachytherapy (or endoradiotherapy), where radionuclide seeds are self-assembled directly in the region of therapeutic need.
Conference Presentation
© (2020) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
David L. Lee, Hsiao-Ling M. Chin, Christopher G. Knudsen, George L. Mayers, David S. Rose, Roy K. Skogstrom, Timothy Palzkill, Hikaru Fujita, Yunlong Zhang, Zhiyuan Wu, and Jonathan S. Lindsey "Peptide-based scaffolds for in vivo immobilization and enzyme attachment in therapeutic applications", Proc. SPIE 11477, Molecular and Nano Machines III, 1147708 (21 August 2020); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2566895
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Chromatography

Cancer

Tumors

Chemistry

Solids

Proteins

Back to Top