Combinatorial effects of doxorubicin and retargeted tissue factor by intratumoral entrapment of doxorubicin and proapoptotic increase of tumor vascular infarction

Stucke-Ring J., Ronnacker J., Brand C., Höltke C., Schliemann C., Kessler T., Schmidt L., Harrach S., Mantke V., Hintelmann H., Hartmann W., Wardelmann E., Lenz G., Wünsch B., Müller-Tidow C., Mesters R., Schwöppe C., Berdel W.

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Truncated tissue factor (tTF), retargeted to tumor vasculature by GNGRAHA peptide (tTF-NGR), and doxorubicin have therapeutic activity against a variety of tumors. We report on combination experiments of both drugs using different schedules. We have tested fluorescence- and HPLC-based intratumoral pharmacokinetics of doxorubicin, flow cytometry for cellular phosphatidylserine (PS) expression, and tumor xenograft studies for showing in vivo apoptosis, proliferation decrease, and tumor shrinkage upon combination therapy with doxorubicin and induced tumor vascular infarction. tTF-NGR given before doxorubicin inhibits the uptake of the drug into human fibrosarcoma xenografts in vivo. Reverse sequence does not influence the uptake of doxorubicin into tumor, but significantly inhibits the late wash-out phase, thus entrapping doxorubicin in tumor tissue by vascular occlusion. Incubation of endothelial and tumor cells with doxorubicin in vitro increases PS concentrations in the outer layer of the cell membrane as a sign of early apoptosis. Cells expressing increased PS concentrations show comparatively higher procoagulatory efficacy on the basis of equimolar tTF-NGR present in the Factor X assay. Experiments using human M21 melanoma and HT1080 fibrosarcoma xenografts in athymic nude mice indeed show a combinatorial tumor growth inhibition applying doxorubicin and tTF-NGR in sequence over single drug treatment. Combination of cytotoxic drugs such as doxorubicin with tTF-NGR-induced tumor vessel infarction can improve pharmacodynamics of the drugs by new mechanisms, entrapping a cytotoxic molecule inside tumor tissue and reciprocally improving procoagulatory activity of tTF-NGR in the tumor vasculature via apoptosis induction in tumor endothelial and tumor cells.

Details about the publication

JournalOncotarget
Volume7
Issue50
Page range82458-82472
StatusPublished
Release year2016
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.18632/oncotarget.12559
Link to the full texthttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85004072329&origin=inward
KeywordsDoxorubicin tumor entrapment; Retargeted tissue factor; Vascular infarction; Vascular targeting

Authors from the University of Münster

Höltke, Carsten
Clinic of Radiology
Schliemann, Christoph
Medical Clinic of Internal Medicine A (Hematology, Oncology, and Oneumology) (Med A)
Wardelmann, Eva Erika
Gerhard Domagk Institute of Pathology