Nowadays, personalized cancer therapy relies on small molecules, monoclonal antibodies, or antibody–drug conjugates (ADC). Many nanoparticle (NP)-based drug delivery systems are also actively investigated, but their advantage over ADCs has not been demonstrated yet. Here, using the Avidin-Nucleic-Acid-Nano-Assemblies (ANANAS), a class of polyavidins multifuctionalizable with stoichiometric control, we compare quantitatively anti-EGFR antibody(cetuximab)-targeted NPs to the corresponding ADC. We show that ANANAS tethering of cetuximab promotes a more efficient EGFR-dependent vesicle-mediated internalization. Cetuximab-guided ANANAS carrying doxorubicin are more cytotoxic in vitro and much more potent in vivo than the corresponding ADC, leading to 43% tumor reduction at low drug dosage (0.56 mg/kg). Advantage of cetuximab-guided ANANAS with respect to the ADC goes beyond the increase in drug-to-antibody ratio. Even if further studies are needed, we propose that NP tethering could expand application of the anti-EGFR antibody to a wider number of cancer patients including the KRAS-mutated ones, currently suffering from poor prognosis.
A new class of inhibitors of tubulin polymerization based on the 2-amino-3-(3',4',5'-trimethoxybenzoyl)benzo[b]furan molecular scaffold was synthesized and evaluated for in vivo and in vitro biological activity. These derivatives were synthesized with different electron-releasing or electron-withdrawing substituents at one of the C-4 through C-7 positions. Methoxy substitution and location on the benzene part of the benzo[b]furan ring played an important role in affecting antiproliferative activity, with the greatest activity occurring with the methoxy group at the C-6 position, the least with the substituent at C-4. The same effect was also observed with ethoxy, methyl or bromine at the C-6 position of the benzo[b]furan skeleton, with the 6-ethoxy-2-amino-3-(3',4',5'trimethoxybenzoyl)benzo[b]furan derivative 4f as the most promising compound of the series.This compound showed remarkable antiproliferative activity (IC50: 5 pM) against the Daoy medulloblastoma cell line, and 4f was nearly devoid of toxicity on healthy human lymphocytes and astrocytes. The potent antiproliferative activity of 4f was derived from its inhibition of tubulin polymerization by binding to the colchicine site. The compound was also examined for in vivo activity, showing higher potency at 15 mg/kg compared with the reference compound combretastatin A-4 phosphate at 30 mg/kg against a syngeneic murine mammary tumor.
An accurate urine test for diverse populations with active tuberculosis could be transformative for preventing TB deaths. Urinary liporabinomannan (LAM) testing has been previously restricted to HIV co-infected TB patients. In this study we evaluate urinary LAM in HIV negative, pediatric and adult, pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis patients. We measured 430 microbiologically confirmed pretreatment tuberculosis patients and controls from Peru, Guinea Bissau, Venezuela, Uganda and the United States using three monoclonal antibodies, MoAb1, CS35, and A194, which recognize distinct LAM epitopes, a one-sided immunoassay, and blinded cohorts. We evaluated sources of assay variability and comorbidities (HIV and diabetes). All antibodies successfully discriminated TB positive from TB negative patients. ROAUC from the average of three antibodies' responses was 0.90; 95% CI 0.87-0.93, 90% sensitivity, 73.5% specificity (80 pg/mL). MoAb1, recognizing the 5-methylthio-dxylofuranose(MTX)-mannose(Man) cap epitope, performed the best, was less influenced by glycosuria and identified culture positive pediatric (N = 19) and extrapulmonary (N = 24) patients with high accuracy (ROAUC 0.
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