Biomaterials Research (Nov 2022)

CDH17 nanobodies facilitate rapid imaging of gastric cancer and efficient delivery of immunotoxin

  • Jingbo Ma,
  • Xiaolong Xu,
  • Chunjin Fu,
  • Peng Xia,
  • Ming Tian,
  • Liuhai Zheng,
  • Kun Chen,
  • Xiaolian Liu,
  • Yilei Li,
  • Le Yu,
  • Qinchang Zhu,
  • Yangyang Yu,
  • Rongrong Fan,
  • Haibo Jiang,
  • Zhifen Li,
  • Chuanbin Yang,
  • Chengchao Xu,
  • Ying Long,
  • Jigang Wang,
  • Zhijie Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40824-022-00312-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 1
pp. 1 – 20

Abstract

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Abstract Background It is highly desirable to develop new therapeutic strategies for gastric cancer given the low survival rate despite improvement in the past decades. Cadherin 17 (CDH17) is a membrane protein highly expressed in cancers of digestive system. Nanobody represents a novel antibody format for cancer targeted imaging and drug delivery. Nanobody targeting CHD17 as an imaging probe and a delivery vehicle of toxin remains to be explored for its theragnostic potential in gastric cancer. Methods Naïve nanobody phage library was screened against CDH17 Domain 1-3 and identified nanobodies were extensively characterized with various assays. Nanobodies labeled with imaging probe were tested in vitro and in vivo for gastric cancer detection. A CDH17 Nanobody fused with toxin PE38 was evaluated for gastric cancer inhibition in vitro and in vivo. Results Two nanobodies (A1 and E8) against human CDH17 with high affinity and high specificity were successfully obtained. These nanobodies could specifically bind to CDH17 protein and CDH17-positive gastric cancer cells. E8 nanobody as a lead was extensively determined for tumor imaging and drug delivery. It could efficiently co-localize with CDH17-positive gastric cancer cells in zebrafish embryos and rapidly visualize the tumor mass in mice within 3 h when conjugated with imaging dyes. E8 nanobody fused with toxin PE38 showed excellent anti-tumor effect and remarkably improved the mice survival in cell-derived (CDX) and patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models. The immunotoxin also enhanced the anti-tumor effect of clinical drug 5-Fluorouracil. Conclusions The study presents a novel imaging and drug delivery strategy by targeting CDH17. CDH17 nanobody-based immunotoxin is potentially a promising therapeutic modality for clinical translation against gastric cancer. Graphical Abstract

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