Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, Radiochemistry and Radiation Chemistry Key Laboratory of Fundamental Science, Key Laboratory of Bioorganic Chemistry and Molecular Engineering of Ministry of Education, College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Peking University, Beijing, P. R. China.
Changping Laboratory, Beijing, P. R. China.
Nature. 2024 Jun;630(8015):206-213. doi: 10.1038/s41586-024-07461-6. Epub 2024 May 22.
Targeted radionuclide therapy, in which radiopharmaceuticals deliver potent radionuclides to tumours for localized irradiation, has addressed unmet clinical needs and improved outcomes for patients with cancer. A therapeutic radiopharmaceutical must achieve both sustainable tumour targeting and fast clearance from healthy tissue, which remains a major challenge. A targeted ligation strategy that selectively fixes the radiopharmaceutical to the target protein in the tumour would be an ideal solution. Here we installed a sulfur (VI) fluoride exchange (SuFEx) chemistry-based linker on radiopharmaceuticals to prevent excessively fast tumour clearance. When the engineered radiopharmaceutical binds to the tumour-specific protein, the system undergoes a binding-to-ligation transition and readily conjugates to the tyrosine residues through the 'click' SuFEx reaction. The application of this strategy to a fibroblast activation protein (FAP) inhibitor (FAPI) triggered more than 80% covalent binding to the protein and almost no dissociation for six days. In mice, SuFEx-engineered FAPI showed 257% greater tumour uptake than did the original FAPI, and increased tumour retention by 13-fold. The uptake in healthy tissues was rapidly cleared. In a pilot imaging study, this strategy identified more tumour lesions in patients with cancer than did other methods. SuFEx-engineered FAPI also successfully achieved targeted β- and α-radionuclide therapy, causing nearly complete tumour regression in mice. Another SuFEx-engineered radioligand that targets prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) also showed enhanced therapeutic efficacy. Considering the broad scope of proteins that can potentially be ligated to SuFEx warheads, it might be possible to adapt this strategy to other cancer targets.
靶向放射性核素疗法,即放射性药物将高活性放射性核素递送至肿瘤部位进行局部照射,已满足了癌症患者的未满足的临床需求并改善了他们的治疗效果。治疗性放射性药物必须实现肿瘤的持续靶向和从健康组织中快速清除,这仍然是一个主要挑战。一种选择性地将放射性药物固定在肿瘤靶蛋白上的靶向连接策略将是一个理想的解决方案。在这里,我们在放射性药物上安装了基于硫(VI)氟化物交换(SuFEx)化学的连接子,以防止肿瘤清除过快。当工程放射性药物与肿瘤特异性蛋白结合时,该系统会发生结合到连接的转变,并通过“点击”SuFEx 反应容易地与酪氨酸残基结合。该策略在成纤维细胞激活蛋白(FAP)抑制剂(FAPI)中的应用引发了超过 80%的与蛋白质的共价结合,并且在六天内几乎没有解离。在小鼠中,与原始 FAPI 相比,SuFEx 工程化的 FAPI 对肿瘤的摄取增加了 257%,肿瘤保留增加了 13 倍。健康组织中的摄取很快被清除。在一项初步成像研究中,该策略在癌症患者中比其他方法识别出更多的肿瘤病变。SuFEx 工程化的 FAPI 还成功地实现了靶向β和α放射性核素治疗,导致小鼠中的肿瘤几乎完全消退。另一种靶向前列腺特异性膜抗原(PSMA)的 SuFEx 工程化放射性配体也显示出增强的治疗效果。考虑到可以潜在地将 SuFEx 弹头连接到的蛋白质范围广泛,可能可以将这种策略应用于其他癌症靶标。