Targeting tumor angiogenic vasculature using polymer-RGD conjugates.

Journal: Journal Of Controlled Release : Official Journal Of The Controlled Release Society
Published:
Abstract

Sites of neovascular angiogenesis are important chemotherapy targets. In this study, the synthesis, characterization, in-vivo imaging and biodistribution of a technetium-99m labeled, water-soluble, N-(2-hydroxypropyl) methacrylamide (HPMA) copolymer carrying doubly cyclized Arg-Gly-Asp motifs (HPMA copolymer-RGD4C conjugate) are reported. In vitro endothelial cell adhesion assays indicated that HPMA copolymer-RGD4C conjugates inhibited alphaVbeta3-mediated endothelial cell adhesion while HPMA copolymer Arg-Gly-Glu control conjugates (HPMA copolymer-RGE4C conjugate) and hydrolyzed HPMA copolymer precursor (HPMA copolymer) showed no activity. The scintigraphic images of prostate tumor bearing SCID mice obtained 24 h post-i.v. injection indicated greater tumor localization of HPMA copolymer-RGD4C conjugate than the control, HPMA copolymer-RGE4C conjugate. The 24-h necropsy radioactivity data showed that HPMA copolymer-RGD4C conjugate had significantly higher (p<0.001) tumor localization compared to HPMA copolymer-RGE4C conjugate and HPMA copolymer. Also, HPMA copolymer-RGD4C conjugates had sustained tumor retention over 72 h and reasonably efficient clearance from the background organs. These results suggest that specific tumor angiogenesis targeting is possible with HPMA copolymer-RGD4C conjugates. This construct provides a foundation that should support targeted delivery of radionuclides and drugs to solid tumors for diagnostic and therapeutic applications.

Authors
Amitava Mitra, Justin Mulholland, Anjan Nan, Edwina Mcneill, Hamidreza Ghandehari, Bruce Line
Relevant Conditions

Prostate Cancer