Design and Evaluation of Radiolabeled Affibody Tracers for Imaging of HER2-expressing Tumors

The growing understanding of tumor biology and the identification of tumor specificgenetic and molecular alterations, such as the overexpression of human epidermal growthfactor receptor 2 (HER2), opens up for personalization of patient management using targeted therapies. However, this puts stringen...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wållberg, Helena
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: KTH, Molekylär Bioteknologi 2011
Subjects:
PET
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-40890
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7501-092-2
id ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-40890
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-kth-408902013-01-08T13:07:48ZDesign and Evaluation of Radiolabeled Affibody Tracers for Imaging of HER2-expressing TumorsengWållberg, HelenaKTH, Molekylär BioteknologiStockholm : KTH Royal Institute of Technology2011Affibody moleculeradionuclide molecular imagingHER2radiotracerSPECTPETbiodistributionprotein engineeringradiolabelingThe growing understanding of tumor biology and the identification of tumor specificgenetic and molecular alterations, such as the overexpression of human epidermal growthfactor receptor 2 (HER2), opens up for personalization of patient management using targeted therapies. However, this puts stringent demands on the diagnostic tools usedto identify patients that are likely to respond to a particular treatment. Radionuclide molecular imaging is a promising non-invasive method to visualize and characterize the expression of such targets. This thesis, based on five papers, is focused on the development of radiolabeled Affibody molecules for imaging of HER2-expression in malignant tumors. Affibody molecules, which represent a rather novel class of affinity proteins developed by combinatorial protein engineering of the protein A derived Z-domain, display manyfeatures that make them promising tracers for molecular imaging applications. The aim of the work presented here was to further develop the tracer format for improved in vivo properties and flexibility in the choice of radionuclide. In paper I, the development of an assay that enables quantitative studies of the internalization rate and cellular processing of high affinity Affibody molecules is described. The assay was applied to a HER2-binding Affibody variant that was efficiently retained by HER2-expressing cells, although characterized by a slow internalization rate. This may have implications for the choice of label for Affibody molecules since high affinity to the target may be equally, or more, important for good imaging quality than residualizing properties of the radiolabel. In paper II, a HER2-binding Affibody molecule and the monoclonal antibody trastuzumab were labeled with positron emitting 124I, for a head-to-head in vivocomparison of the two tracer formats. The effects of tracer size and presence of an Fc region on the biodistribution profile were investigated. In paper III, a HER2-binding Affibody molecule was site-specifically labeled with radiocobalt and evaluated in vitro and in vivo.A head-to-head in vivo comparison with the well-studied 111In-labeled counterpart was performed, revealing promising potential for the cobalt-labeled molecule as a PET-tracerfor visualization of HER2. Paper IV describes the in vitro and in vivo evaluation of a panel of Affibody molecules with different C-terminal peptide-based chelators for the coordination of 99mTc. Even small changes in the C-terminal sequence had appreciable impact on the biodistribution of the Affibody molecules and by optimizing the design of the chelator, the kidney uptake of 99mTc could be significantly reduced. Finally, in paper V we describe the development of a HER2-targeting Affibody variant equipped with a Sel-tag for site-specific labeling with the short-lived positron emitter 11C. This novel Affibody tracer could be used to image HER2-expressing tumors in vivo within one hour after injection. Taken together, Affibody molecules show great promise as targeting tracers for radionuclide molecular imaging of HER2. Careful design and optimization of the tracer protein is important and can be used to improve the biodistribution and targeting properties of Affibody molecules. QC 20110922Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-40890urn:isbn:978-91-7501-092-2Trita-BIO-Report, 1654-2312 ; 2011:21application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Affibody molecule
radionuclide molecular imaging
HER2
radiotracer
SPECT
PET
biodistribution
protein engineering
radiolabeling
spellingShingle Affibody molecule
radionuclide molecular imaging
HER2
radiotracer
SPECT
PET
biodistribution
protein engineering
radiolabeling
Wållberg, Helena
Design and Evaluation of Radiolabeled Affibody Tracers for Imaging of HER2-expressing Tumors
description The growing understanding of tumor biology and the identification of tumor specificgenetic and molecular alterations, such as the overexpression of human epidermal growthfactor receptor 2 (HER2), opens up for personalization of patient management using targeted therapies. However, this puts stringent demands on the diagnostic tools usedto identify patients that are likely to respond to a particular treatment. Radionuclide molecular imaging is a promising non-invasive method to visualize and characterize the expression of such targets. This thesis, based on five papers, is focused on the development of radiolabeled Affibody molecules for imaging of HER2-expression in malignant tumors. Affibody molecules, which represent a rather novel class of affinity proteins developed by combinatorial protein engineering of the protein A derived Z-domain, display manyfeatures that make them promising tracers for molecular imaging applications. The aim of the work presented here was to further develop the tracer format for improved in vivo properties and flexibility in the choice of radionuclide. In paper I, the development of an assay that enables quantitative studies of the internalization rate and cellular processing of high affinity Affibody molecules is described. The assay was applied to a HER2-binding Affibody variant that was efficiently retained by HER2-expressing cells, although characterized by a slow internalization rate. This may have implications for the choice of label for Affibody molecules since high affinity to the target may be equally, or more, important for good imaging quality than residualizing properties of the radiolabel. In paper II, a HER2-binding Affibody molecule and the monoclonal antibody trastuzumab were labeled with positron emitting 124I, for a head-to-head in vivocomparison of the two tracer formats. The effects of tracer size and presence of an Fc region on the biodistribution profile were investigated. In paper III, a HER2-binding Affibody molecule was site-specifically labeled with radiocobalt and evaluated in vitro and in vivo.A head-to-head in vivo comparison with the well-studied 111In-labeled counterpart was performed, revealing promising potential for the cobalt-labeled molecule as a PET-tracerfor visualization of HER2. Paper IV describes the in vitro and in vivo evaluation of a panel of Affibody molecules with different C-terminal peptide-based chelators for the coordination of 99mTc. Even small changes in the C-terminal sequence had appreciable impact on the biodistribution of the Affibody molecules and by optimizing the design of the chelator, the kidney uptake of 99mTc could be significantly reduced. Finally, in paper V we describe the development of a HER2-targeting Affibody variant equipped with a Sel-tag for site-specific labeling with the short-lived positron emitter 11C. This novel Affibody tracer could be used to image HER2-expressing tumors in vivo within one hour after injection. Taken together, Affibody molecules show great promise as targeting tracers for radionuclide molecular imaging of HER2. Careful design and optimization of the tracer protein is important and can be used to improve the biodistribution and targeting properties of Affibody molecules. === QC 20110922
author Wållberg, Helena
author_facet Wållberg, Helena
author_sort Wållberg, Helena
title Design and Evaluation of Radiolabeled Affibody Tracers for Imaging of HER2-expressing Tumors
title_short Design and Evaluation of Radiolabeled Affibody Tracers for Imaging of HER2-expressing Tumors
title_full Design and Evaluation of Radiolabeled Affibody Tracers for Imaging of HER2-expressing Tumors
title_fullStr Design and Evaluation of Radiolabeled Affibody Tracers for Imaging of HER2-expressing Tumors
title_full_unstemmed Design and Evaluation of Radiolabeled Affibody Tracers for Imaging of HER2-expressing Tumors
title_sort design and evaluation of radiolabeled affibody tracers for imaging of her2-expressing tumors
publisher KTH, Molekylär Bioteknologi
publishDate 2011
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-40890
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7501-092-2
work_keys_str_mv AT wallberghelena designandevaluationofradiolabeledaffibodytracersforimagingofher2expressingtumors
_version_ 1716509568870121472