Bifunctional Janus Particles as Multivalent Synthetic Nanoparticle Antibodies (SNAbs) for Selective Depletion of Target Cells

Monoclonal antibodies (mAb) have had a transformative impact on treating cancers and immune disorders. However, their use is limited by high development time and monetary cost, manufacturing complexities, suboptimal pharmacokinetics, and availability of disease-specific targets. To address some of t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nano letters 2021-01, Vol.21 (1), p.875-886
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Jiaying, Toy, Randall, Vantucci, Casey, Pradhan, Pallab, Zhang, Zijian, Kuo, Katie M, Kubelick, Kelsey P, Huo, Da, Wen, Jianguo, Kim, Jinhwan, Lyu, Zhiheng, Dhal, Simran, Atalis, Alexandra, Ghosh-Choudhary, Shohini K, Devereaux, Emily J, Gumbart, James C, Xia, Younan, Emelianov, Stanislav Y, Willett, Nick J, Roy, Krishnendu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Monoclonal antibodies (mAb) have had a transformative impact on treating cancers and immune disorders. However, their use is limited by high development time and monetary cost, manufacturing complexities, suboptimal pharmacokinetics, and availability of disease-specific targets. To address some of these challenges, we developed an entirely synthetic, multivalent, Janus nanotherapeutic platform, called Synthetic Nanoparticle Antibodies (SNAbs). SNAbs, with phage-display-identified cell-targeting ligands on one "face" and Fc-mimicking ligands on the opposite "face", were synthesized using a custom, multistep, solid-phase chemistry method. SNAbs efficiently targeted and depleted myeloid-derived immune-suppressor cells (MDSCs) from mouse-tumor and rat-trauma models, ex vivo. Systemic injection of MDSC-targeting SNAbs efficiently depleted circulating MDSCs in a mouse triple-negative breast cancer model, enabling enhanced T cell and Natural Killer cell infiltration into tumors. Our results demonstrate that SNAbs are a versatile and effective functional alternative to mAbs, with advantages of a plug-and-play, cell-free manufacturing process, and high-throughput screening (HTS)-enabled library of potential targeting ligands.
ISSN:1530-6984
1530-6992
DOI:10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c04833