Abstract

Urothelial cells, including bladder cancer (BCa) cells, represent a highly valuable but challenging target for localized antineoplastic therapy. This study describes a novel, biomimetic approach to improve intravesical drug delivery, based on glycan-specific targeting. In direct analogy to the invasion mechanism used by uropathogenic bacteria, we evaluate the potential of lectin bioconjugates to facilitate binding and uptake of large payload molecules at this penetration-hostile barrier. Wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) served as a targeting ligand and was covalently coupled to fluorescein-labeled bovine serum albumin (fBSA), yielding multivalent protein bioconjugates. Cytoadhesion, uptake and intracellular processing were characterized on a panel of urothelial cell lines of non-malignant and malignant origin. Conjugation to WGA rendered the fBSA payload protein strongly cytoadhesive, with a clear preference in binding to cancerous cells. The highly specific, lectin-mediated recognition process was followed by rapid internalization, and extensive but non-exclusive accumulation in acid and LAMP-2-positive compartments. Stage of malignancy and mechano-structural cell configuration were important determinants for the sorting between different processing pathways. Lectin-bioconjugates allow for triggering endogenous uptake routes and influencing the intracellular distribution in BCa cells. They hold considerable promise for enhancing the delivery of small molecule drugs and complex biomolecules in intravesical therapy.

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