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Buckyballs Boost Antibody's Chemotherapy
Payload
In the ongoing search for better ways
to target anticancer drugs to kill tumors without making
people sick, researchers find that nanoparticles called
buckyballs might be used to significantly boost the
payload of drugs carried by tumor-targeting antibodies.
Scientists at Rice University and The University of
Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center have developd a method
for creating a new class of anti-cancer compounds that
contain both tumor-targeting antibodies and nanoparticles
called buckyballs. Buckyballs are soccer ball-shaped
molecules of pure carbon that can each be loaded with
several molecules of anticancer drugs like Taxol®.
In the new research, the scientists found they could
load as many as 40 buckyballs into a single skin-cancer
antibody called ZME-018. Antibodies are large proteins
created by the immune system to target and attack diseased
or invading cells.
Previous work at M. D. Anderson has shown that ZME-018
can be used to deliver drugs directly into melanoma
tumors, and work at Rice has shown that Taxol can be
chemically attached to a buckyball.
"The idea that we can potentially carry more than
one Taxol per buckyball is exciting, but the real advantage
of fullerene immunotherapy over other targeted therapeutic
agents is likely to be the buckyball's potential to
carry multiple drug payloads, such as Taxol plus other
chemotherapeutic drugs," said Rice's Lon Wilson,
professor of chemistry. "Cancer cells can become
drug resistant, and we hope to cut down on the possibility
of their escaping treatment by attacking them with more
than one kind of drug at a time."
Researchers have long dreamed of using antibodies like
ZME-018 to better target chemotherapy drugs like Taxol,
and M. D. Anderson's Michael G. Rosenblum, Ph.D., professor
in the Department of Experimental Therapeutics and Chief
of the Immunopharmacology and Targeted Therapy Laboratory,
has conducted some of the pioneering work in this field.
"This is an exciting opportunity to apply novel
materials such as fullerenes to generate targeted therapeutics
with unique properties," Rosenblum said. "If
successful, this could usher in a new class of agents
for therapy not only for cancer, but for other diseases
as well."
While it's possible to attach drug molecules directly
to antibodies, Wilson said scientists haven't been able
to attach more than a handful of drug molecules to an
antibody without significantly changing its targeting
ability. That happens, in large part, because the chemical
bonds that are used to attach the drugs -- strong, covalent
bonds -- tend to block the targeting centers on the
antibody's surface. If an antibody is modified with
too many covalent bonds, the chemical changes will destroy
its ability to recognize the cancer it was intended
to attack.
Wilson said the team from Rice and M. D. Anderson had
planned to overcome this limitation by attaching multiple
molecules of Taxol to each buckyball, which would then
be covalently connected to the antibodies. To the team's
surprise, many more buckyballs than expected attached
themselves to the antibody. Moreover, no covalent bonds
were required, so the increased payload did not significantly
change the targeting ability of the antibody.
Wilson said certain binding sites on the antibody are
hydrophobic (water repelling), and the team believes
that these hydrophobic sites attract the hydrophobic
buckyballs in large numbers so multiple drugs can be
loaded into a single antibody in a spontaneous manner
to give the antibody-drug agent more "bang for
the buck."
"The use of these nanomaterials solves some intractable
problems in targeted therapy and additionally demonstrates
the increasing value of the team science approach bridging
different disciplines to uniquely address existing problems,"
Rosenblum said.
Visit www.rice.edu

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