The elevated expression of bombesin receptors in many of the deadliest cancers has attracted special interest in developing bombesin-directed agents for tumor imaging and therapy. Previously, we constructed the chimeric peptide BB28 by fusing bombesin to a mitochondria-disrupting peptide. BB28 selectively induced the apoptosis of various tumor cells in vitro and showed promising in vivo antitumor effects. In general, a short circulating half-life limits the in vivo effect of peptides. To prolong the half-life of BB28, here, we generated the novel peptide ABB28 by fusing an albumin-binding domain (ABD) to the N-terminus of BB28. ABB28 exhibited much higher binding affinity for albumin than BB28, and this modification extended the peptide half-life from several minutes to 2 h. Optical imaging revealed that ABB28 accumulated in xenografted tumors within 1h post-injection and persisted at an evident level for up to 24 h. ABB28 exerted stronger tumor-suppressive effects than BB28. Significant differences in the tumor volumes (P<0.001) and the tumor weights (P=0.002) were observed between ABB28- and BB28-treated mice. Moreover, ABB28 exhibited tumor suppression comparable to that of PEGylated 5K-BB28 in vivo. These results suggest that half-life extension via ABD fusion represents a useful strategy for optimizing bombesin-directed pharmaceuticals for cancer-targeted therapy.
Keywords: Albumin; Albumin-binding domain; Bombesin; Drug carrier; Tumor-homing peptide.
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