Abstract

Targeted therapies are a promising alternative to conventional chemotherapy, with an increasing number of therapeutics targeting specific molecular aberrancies in cancer cells. One of the emerging targets for directed cancer treatments is fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFRs), which are known to be involved in the pathogenesis and progression of multiple cancer types, specially in lung, bladder, and breast cancers. Here, we are demonstrating the development of the FGFR1-targeting agent based on the interactome screening approach, based on the isolation of binding regions from ligands interacting with the receptor. The parallel analysis by FGFR1 pull-down of chymotryptic peptides coupled with MS analysis, and PepSpot analysis yielded equivalent peptide sequences from FGF4, one of the FGFR1 ligands. Three sequences served as a basis for peptibody (Fc-fusion) generation, to overcome clinical limitations of peptidic agents, and two of them showed favorable FGFR1-binding in vitro and FGFR1-dependent internalization into cells. To validate if developed FGFR1-targeting peptibodies can be used for drug delivery, similar to the well-established concept of antibody–drug conjugates (ADCs), peptibodyF4_1 was successfully conjugated with monomethylauristatin E (MMAE), and has shown significant and specific toxicity toward FGFR1-expressing lung cancer cell lines, with nanomolar EC50 values. Essentially, the development of new effective FGFR1 binders that comprise the naturally occurring FGFR-recognition peptides and Fc region ensuring high plasma stability, and long bloodstream circulation is an interesting strategy expanding targeted anticancer agents’ portfolio. Furthermore, identifying peptides effectively binding the receptor from sequences of its ligands is not limited to FGFRs and is an approach versatile enough to be a basis for a new peptide/peptibodies development strategy.

Highlights

  • Targeted therapies are a promising alternative to conventional chemotherapy, with an increasing number of therapeutics targeting specific molecular aberrancies in cancer cells entering the clinical trials and being approved for the pharmaceutical market

  • There are many growth factor receptors, and among them, fibroblast growth factor receptors (FGFRs) family is known to be frequently deregulated in multiple cancer types (Haugsten et al, 2010; Ornitz and Itoh, 2015; Hoy, 2020)

  • Identifying the fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) family members that display the ability to be bound by FGFR1 even in the unfolded state is the starting point to find the binding region and identify the linear peptide sequence

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Summary

Introduction

Targeted therapies are a promising alternative to conventional chemotherapy, with an increasing number of therapeutics targeting specific molecular aberrancies in cancer cells entering the clinical trials and being approved for the pharmaceutical market. There are many growth factor receptors, and among them, FGFR (fibroblast growth factor receptor) family is known to be frequently deregulated in multiple cancer types (Haugsten et al, 2010; Ornitz and Itoh, 2015; Hoy, 2020). The study of FGFR-targeted therapies is mostly focused on either smallmolecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) or monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) as therapeutic agents, and only two TKItype drugs have been approved so far (Markham, 2019; Hoy, 2020). Increasing number of new peptides are identified, thanks to the developments in highthroughput peptide screening, computational biology, and advances in selection techniques such as phage display (Saw and Song, 2019; Schwaar et al, 2019; Bozovičar and Bratkovič, 2020; Quartararo et al, 2020)

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