JOURNAL ARTICLE

Hypoxia-Activated PEGylated Conditional Aptamer/Antibody for Cancer Imaging with Improved Specificity

Abstract

Aptamers and antibodies, as molecular recognition probes, play critical roles in cancer diagnosis and therapy. However, their recognition ability is based on target overexpression in disease cells, not target exclusivity, which can cause on-target off-tumor effects. To address the limitation, we herein report a novel strategy to develop a conditional aptamer conjugate which recognizes its cell surface target, but only after selective activation, as determined by characteristics of the disease microenvironment, which, in our model, involve tumor hypoxia. This conditional aptamer is the result of conjugating the aptamer with PEG5000-azobenzene-NHS, which is responsive to hypoxia, here acting as a caging moiety of conditional recognition. More specifically, the caging moiety is unresponsive in the intact conjugate and prevents target recognition. However, in the presence of sodium dithionite or hypoxia (<0.1% O2) or in the tumor microenvironment, the caging moiety responds by allowing conditional recognition of the cell-surface target, thereby reducing the chance of on-target off-tumor effects. It is also confirmed that the strategy can be used for developing a conditional antibody. Therefore, this study demonstrates an efficient strategy by which to develop aptamer/antibody-based diagnostic probes and therapeutic drugs for cancers with a unique hypoxic microenvironment.

Keywords:
Aptamer Chemistry Conjugate Hypoxia (environmental) Moiety Antibody Tumor microenvironment Cancer research Cancer cell Biophysics Cancer Tumor cells Molecular biology Immunology Stereochemistry Internal medicine

Metrics

103
Cited By
6.49
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
34
Refs
0.97
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
RNA Interference and Gene Delivery
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
Nanoplatforms for cancer theranostics
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering

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