abstract
HER2-targeted therapy has been shown to have limited efficacy in ovarian
cancer despite frequent overexpression of this receptor. Photochemical
internalization (PCI) is a modality for cytosolic drug delivery,
currently undergoing clinical evaluation. In the present project we
studied the application of PCI in combination with the HER2-targeted
recombinant fusion toxin, MH3-B1/rGel, for the treatment of ovarian
cancer. The SKOV-3 cell line, resistant to trastuzumab- and MH3-B1/rGel-
monotherapy, was shown to respond strongly to PCI of MH3-B1/rGel to a
similar extent as observed for the treatment-sensitive SK-BR-3 breast
cancer cells. Extensive hydrolytic degradation of MH3-B1/rGel in acidic
endocytic vesicles was indicated as the mechanism of MH3-B1/rGel
resistance in SKOV-3 cells. This was shown by the positive Pearson's
correlation coefficient between Alexa488-labeled MH3-B1/rGel and
Lysotracker in SKOV-3 cells in contrast to the negative Pearson's
correlation coefficient in SK-BR-3 cells. The application of PCI to
induce the release of MH3-B1/rGel was also demonstrated to be effective
on SKOV-3 xenografts. Application of PCI with MH3-B1/rGel was further
found highly effective in the HER2 expressing HOC-7 and NuTu-19 ovarian
cancer cell lines. The presented results warrant future development of
PCI in combination with MH3-B1/rGel as a novel therapeutic approach in
preclinical models of ovarian cancer.
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