In Vivo Selection of anti-glioblastoma DNA aptamer-drug conjugates in an orthotopic patient-derived xenograft model
Doherty, C.; Jain, S.; Ott, L.; Bakken, K.; Wilbanks, B.; Burgenske, D.; Pearson, K.; Griffith, J.; Tian, Z.; Meridew, J.; Yerneni, S.; Elmquist, W.; Sarkaria, J.; Maher, L. J.
Show abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is an aggressive, high-grade glioma with a near-universally fatal prognosis. Therapeutic failure is often attributed to the highly selective blood brain barrier (BBB), the diffuse infiltrative nature of the tumor, and the marked intratumoral heterogeneity of GBM. Although antibody drug conjugates ADCs have shown promise for high grade gliomas such as GBM, efficacy is limited by ADC size. Aptamers--short, synthetic, single-stranded DNA or RNA molecules--can be [~]6-fold lower in molecular weight than IgG antibodies and have the potential to cross the intact BBB. Unlike other nucleic acid-based therapies, aptamer function arises from three-dimensional shape rather than genetic coding. Here we aim to replace the targeting component of the ADC paradigm with a DNA aptamer, thus creating an aptamer-drug conjugate (ApDC). We employed in vivo SELEX using an orthotopic patient-derived xenograft (PDX) GBM mouse model and a vast ([~]100 trillion 80-mer sequences) ApDC library. We report the results from this first in vivo ApDC selection of its kind. We characterize target tissue binding ex vivo, cell association, biodistribution, and pharmacokinetics from this selection. This study exemplifies an unbiased approach to a problem that rational design has yet to overcome, offering a new direction for GBM therapeutic development.
Matching journals
The top 15 journals account for 50% of the predicted probability mass.