Oncotarget

Research Papers:

NG2 proteoglycan as a pericyte target for anticancer therapy by tumor vessel infarction with retargeted tissue factor

Caroline Brand, Christoph Schliemann, Janine Ring, Torsten Kessler, Sebastian Bäumer, Linus Angenendt, Verena Mantke, Rebecca Ross, Heike Hintelmann, Tilmann Spieker, Eva Wardelmann, Rolf M. Mesters, Wolfgang E. Berdel _ and Christian Schwöppe

PDF  |  HTML  |  How to cite

Oncotarget. 2016; 7:6774-6789. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.6725

Metrics: PDF 1711 views  |   HTML 2535 views  |   ?  


Abstract

Caroline Brand1, Christoph Schliemann1, Janine Ring1, Torsten Kessler1, Sebastian Bäumer1, Linus Angenendt1, Verena Mantke1, Rebecca Ross1, Heike Hintelmann1, Tilmann Spieker2, Eva Wardelmann2, Rolf M. Mesters1, Wolfgang E. Berdel1,*, Christian Schwöppe1,*

1Department of Medicine A, Hematology, Oncology and Pneumology, University of Muenster, Albert-Schweitzer-Campus 1, D-48129 Muenster, Germany

2Gerhard-Domagk Institute for Pathology, University of Muenster, Albert-Schweitzer-Campus 1, D-48129 Muenster, Germany

*These authors have contributed equally and share senior authorship

Correspondence to:

Wolfgang Berdel, e-mail: [email protected]

Keywords: truncated tissue factor, vascular targeting, vascular infarction, cancer, NG2 proteoglycan

Received: August 30, 2015     Accepted: November 25, 2015     Published: January 05, 2016

ABSTRACT

tTF-TAA and tTF-LTL are fusion proteins consisting of the extracellular domain of tissue factor (TF) and the peptides TAASGVRSMH and LTLRWVGLMS, respectively. These peptides represent ligands of NG2, a surface proteoglycan expressed on angiogenic pericytes and some tumor cells. Here we have expressed the model compound tTF-NGR, tTF-TAA, and tTF-LTL with different lengths in the TF domain in E. coli and used these fusion proteins for functional studies in anticancer therapy. We aimed to retarget TF to tumor vessels leading to tumor vessel infarction with two barriers of selectivity, a) the leaky endothelial lining in tumor vessels with the target NG2 being expressed on pericytes on the abluminal side of the endothelial cell barrier and b) the preferential expression of NG2 on angiogenic vessels such as in tumors. Chromatography-purified tTF-TAA showed identical Factor X (FX)-activating procoagulatory activity as the model compound tTF-NGR with Km values of approx. 0.15 nM in Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The procoagulatory activity of tTF-LTL varied with the chosen length of the TF part of the fusion protein. Flow cytometry revealed specific binding of tTF-TAA to NG2-expressing pericytes and tumor cells with low affinity and dissociation KD in the high nM range. In vivo and ex vivo fluorescence imaging of tumor xenograft-carrying animals and of the explanted tumors showed reduction of tumor blood flow upon tTF-TAA application. Therapeutic experiments showed a reproducible antitumor activity of tTF-TAA against NG2-expressing A549-tumor xenografts, however, with a rather small therapeutic window (active/toxic dose in mg/kg body weight).


Creative Commons License All site content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
PII: 6725