Akita Shin, Hattori Noboru, Masuda Takeshi, Horimasu Yasushi, Nakashima Taku, Iwamoto Hiroshi, Fujitaka Kazunori, Miyake Masayuki, Kohno Nobuoki
Department of Molecular and Internal Medicine, Graduate School of Biomedical and Health Sciences, Hiroshima University, Hiroshima, Japan.
Department of Thoracic Surgery, Koseikai Takeda Hospital, Kyoto, Japan.
Cancer Sci. 2015 Jul;106(7):921-8. doi: 10.1111/cas.12692. Epub 2015 May 29.
Aminopeptidase N (APN/CD13) is involved in tumor cell invasion and tumor angiogenesis and is considered a promising therapeutic target in the treatment of cancer. To develop a novel monoclonal antibody-based cancer therapy targeting APN/CD13, we established a fully humanized anti-APN/CD13 monoclonal antibody, MT95-4. In vitro, MT95-4 inhibited APN/CD13 enzymatic activity on the tumor cell surface and blocked tumor cell invasion. B16 mouse melanoma cells stably expressing human APN/CD13 were also established and were inoculated s.c. or injected i.v. into nude mice. We found that expression of human APN/CD13 in murine melanoma cells increased the size of subcutaneous tumors, extent of lung metastasis and degree of angiogenesis in the subcutaneous tumors; these tumor-promoting and angiogenesis-promoting characteristics were reduced by the i.p. administration of MT95-4. To further verify the specificity of MT95-4 for neutralization of APN/CD13 activity, MT95-4 was administered into NOD/SCID mice inoculated s.c. with H1299 or PC14 cells, which exhibit high expression of APN/CD13, or with A549 cells, which exhibit weak expression of APN/CD13. MT95-4 reduced tumor growth and angiogenesis in mice bearing H1299-derived and PC14-derived tumors, but not in mice bearing A549-derived tumors. These results suggested that the antitumor and anti-angiogenic effects of MT95-4 were dependent on APN/CD13 expression in tumor cells. Given that MT95-4 is the first fully humanized monoclonal antibody against APN/CD13, MT95-4 should be recognized as a promising candidate for monoclonal antibody therapy against tumors expressing APN/CD13.
氨肽酶N(APN/CD13)参与肿瘤细胞侵袭和肿瘤血管生成,被认为是癌症治疗中一个有前景的治疗靶点。为了开发一种基于新型单克隆抗体的针对APN/CD13的癌症治疗方法,我们制备了一种完全人源化的抗APN/CD13单克隆抗体MT95-4。在体外,MT95-4抑制肿瘤细胞表面的APN/CD13酶活性并阻断肿瘤细胞侵袭。还建立了稳定表达人APN/CD13的B16小鼠黑色素瘤细胞,并将其皮下接种或静脉注射到裸鼠体内。我们发现,鼠黑色素瘤细胞中人APN/CD13的表达增加了皮下肿瘤的大小、肺转移程度和皮下肿瘤中的血管生成程度;腹腔注射MT95-4可降低这些促进肿瘤和促进血管生成的特性。为了进一步验证MT95-4中和APN/CD13活性的特异性,将MT95-4注射到皮下接种了高表达APN/CD13的H1299或PC14细胞或低表达APN/CD13的A549细胞的NOD/SCID小鼠体内。MT95-4可抑制携带H1299来源和PC14来源肿瘤的小鼠的肿瘤生长和血管生成,但对携带A549来源肿瘤的小鼠无效。这些结果表明,MT95-4的抗肿瘤和抗血管生成作用依赖于肿瘤细胞中APN/CD13的表达。鉴于MT95-4是首个针对APN/CD13的完全人源化单克隆抗体,MT95-4应被视为针对表达APN/CD13的肿瘤进行单克隆抗体治疗的有前景的候选药物。