Purpose: Selective delivery of drugs into the target tissue is expected to result in high drug concentrations in the tissue of interest and therefore enhanced drug efficacy. To develop a peptide-based radiopharmaceutical, we investigated the properties of a peptide with affinity for human breast cancer, which has been selected through phage display.
Experimental design: The bioactivity of the p160 peptide (VPWMEPAYQRFL) was evaluated in vitro and in vivo. The specific binding to human breast cancer MDA-MB-435 cells was confirmed in competition experiments. Internalization of the peptide was investigated with confocal microscopy. Furthermore, the biodistribution of (131)I-labeled p160 was studied in tumor-bearing mice. In vivo stability was evaluated at different periods after tracer administration using high-performance liquid chromatography analysis.
Results: The binding of (125)I-labeled p160 was inhibited up to 95% by the unlabeled peptide with an IC(50) value of 0.6 micromol/L. In addition, 40% of the total bound activity was found to be internalized into the human breast cancer cells. Although a rapid degradation was seen, biodistribution studies in nude mice showed a higher uptake in tumor than in most of the organs. Perfusion of the animals caused a reduction of the radioligand accumulation in the healthy tissues, whereas the tumor uptake remained constant. A comparison of [(131)I]p160 with a (131)I-labeled Arg-Gly-Asp peptide revealed a higher tumor-to-organ ratio for [(131)I]p160.
Conclusions: p160 has properties that make it an attractive carrier for tumor imaging and the intracellular delivery of isotopes or chemotherapeutic drugs.