Abstract

Binding kinetics play an important role in cancer diagnosis and therapeutics. However, current methods of quantifying binding kinetics fail to consider the three-dimensional environment that drugs and imaging agents experience in biological tissue. In response, a methodology to assay agent binding and dissociation in 3-D tissue culture was developed using paired-agent molecular imaging principles. To test the methodology, the uptakes of ABY-029 (an IRDye 800CW-labeled epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-targeted antibody mimetic) and IRDye-700DX carboxylate in 3-D spheroids were measured in four different human cancer cell lines throughout staining and rinsing. A compartment model (optimized for the application) was then fit to the kinetic curves of both imaging agents to estimate binding and dissociation rate constants of the EGFR-targeted ABY-029 agent. A statistically significant correlation was observed between apparent association rate constant (k3) and the receptor concentration experimentally and in simulations (r = 0.99, p < 0.05). A statistically significant difference was found between effective k3 (apparent rate constant of ABY-029 binding to EGFR) values for cell lines with varying levels of EGFR expression (p < 0.05), with no significant difference found between cell lines and controls for other fit parameters. Additionally, a similar binding affinity profile compared to a gold standard method was determined by this model. This low-cost methodology to quantify imaging agent or drug binding affinity in clinically relevant 3-D tumor spheroid models can be used to guide timing of imaging in molecular guided surgery and could have implications in drug development.

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