Ultrasensitive tumour-penetrating nanosensors of protease activity.

Nat Biomed Eng
Authors
Abstract

The ability to identify cancer lesions with endogenous biomarkers is currently limited to tumours ~1 cm in diameter. We recently reported an exogenously administered tumour-penetrating nanosensor that sheds, in response to tumour-specific proteases, peptide fragments that can then be detected in the urine. Here, we report the optimization, informed by a pharmacokinetic mathematical model, of the surface presentation of the peptide substrates to both enhance on-target protease cleavage and minimize off-target cleavage, and of the functionalization of the nanosensors with tumour-penetrating ligands that engage active trafficking pathways to increase activation in the tumour microenvironment. The resulting nanosensor discriminated sub-5 mm lesions in human epithelial tumours and detected nodules with median diameters smaller than 2 mm in an orthotopic model of ovarian cancer. We also demonstrate enhanced receptor-dependent specificity of signal generation in the urine in an immunocompetent model of colorectal liver metastases, and activation of the nanosensors in human tumour microarrays when re-engineered as fluorogenic zymography probes.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Nat Biomed Eng
Volume
1
Date Published
2017
ISSN
2157-846X
DOI
10.1038/s41551-017-0054
PubMed ID
28970963
PubMed Central ID
PMC5621765
Links
Grant list
F32 CA177094 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
P20 GM103418 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
P30 CA014051 / CA / NCI NIH HHS / United States
P30 ES002109 / ES / NIEHS NIH HHS / United States