Abstract

There is presently no effective therapy for relapsing, metastatic, androgen-independent prostate cancer. Immunotherapy with monoclonal antibody-vehicled toxins (Immunotoxins, ITs) may be a promising novel treatment option for the management of prostate cancer in these cases. Three anti-prostate specific membrane antigen (anti-PSMA) monoclonals (J591, PEQ226.5, and PM2P079.1) were cross-linked to ricin A-chain (RTA; native or recombinant), and their cytotoxic effects were investigated in monolayer and three-dimensional (3-D) cell cultures of prostate carcinoma cells (LNCaP). The various Immunotoxins showed effects in the nanomolar range (IC(50s) of 1.6-99 ng/ml) against PSMA+ cells (IC(50) being the concentration inhibiting 50% cell proliferation or protein synthesis). PSMA(-) cell lines were 62- to 277-fold less sensitive to anti-PSMA ITs, evidencing an appreciable therapeutic window. Treatment with J591-smpt-nRTA (0.35-31.7ng/ml) resulted in complete eradication of 3-D tumor micromasses or in 1.46- to 0.35-log reduction of target cells number, depending on the dose. Anti-PSMA ITs appear to be promising for use in the eradication of small prostate tumor cell aggregates present in tissues and in the bone marrow.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call