Abstract
Near infrared intra-operative optical imaging is an emerging technique with clear implications for improved cancer surgery by enabling a more distinct delineation of the tumor margins during resection. This modality has the potential to increase the number of patients having a curative radical tumor resection. In the present study, a new uPAR-targeted fluorescent probe was developed and the in vivo applicability was evaluated in a human xenograft mouse model. Most human carcinomas express high level of uPAR in the tumor-stromal interface of invasive lesions and uPAR is therefore considered an ideal target for intra-operative imaging. Conjugation of the flourophor indocyanine green (ICG) to the uPAR agonist (AE105) provides an optical imaging ligand with sufficiently high receptor affinity to allow for a specific receptor targeting in vivo. For in vivo testing, human glioblastoma xenograft mice were subjected to optical imaging after i.v. injection of ICG-AE105, which provided an optimal contrast in the time window 6–24 h post injection. Specificity of the uPAR-targeting probe ICG-AE105 was demonstrated in vivo by 1) no uptake of unconjugated ICG after 15 hours, 2) inhibition of ICG-AE105 tumor uptake by a bolus injection of the natural uPAR ligand pro-uPA, and finally 3) the histological colocalization of ICG-AE105 fluorescence and immunohistochemical detected human uPAR on resected tumor slides. Taken together, our data supports the potential use of this probe for intra-operative optical guidance in cancer surgery to ensure complete removal of tumors while preserving adjacent, healthy tissue.
Highlights
Development of improved methods for cancer resection has in many years been relatively stagnant
The absorption spectrum of indocyanine green (ICG)-AE105 was slightly broadened as compared to the absorption spectrum of ICG, while the fluorescence and excitation spectra were identical for ICG and ICG-AE105 (Fig 1C)
The binding of ICG-Glu-Glu-AE105 to purified Urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) was measured and yielded an IC50 134 nM compared to 20 nM for the unmodified AE105 [21] (Fig 1B)
Summary
Development of improved methods for cancer resection has in many years been relatively stagnant. PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0147428 February 1, 2016
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