Quantitation of the tumor-targeting properties of antibody fragments conjugated to cell-permeating HIV-1 TAT peptides.

2002 
Human monoclonal antibodies are promising agents for the development of more selective anticancer therapeutics. However, the tumor-targeting efficiency of most anticancer antibodies is severely limited by their poor penetration into the tumor mass. Recent studies have shown that a peptide derived from the HIV TAT protein could improve the distribution of cytoplasmic reporter proteins when administered systemically as fusion proteins or cross-linked chimeras. In this article, we tested by quantitative biodistribtution analysis whether conjugation to TAT peptides could improve the tumor targeting properties of scFv(L19)-Cys:  an engineered human antibody fragment specific for the ED-B domain of fibronectin, a marker located in the modified extracellular matrix surrounding tumor neovasculature. Our results show that TAT peptides, consisting either of l-amino acids or d-amino acids, can efficiently transduce target cells when conjugated to fluorophores and/or antibody fragments, suggesting a receptor-independ...
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