Enhancement of tumor necrosis factor α antitumor immunotherapeutic properties by targeted delivery to aminopeptidase N (CD13)

F Curnis, A Sacchi, L Borgna, F Magni, A Gasparri… - Nature …, 2000 - nature.com
F Curnis, A Sacchi, L Borgna, F Magni, A Gasparri, A Corti
Nature biotechnology, 2000nature.com
The clinical use of tumor necrosis factor α (TNF) as an anticancer drug is limited to local
treatments because of its dose-limiting systemic toxicity. We show here that murine TNF
fused with CNGRC peptide (NGR-TNF), an aminopeptidase N (CD13) ligand that targets
activated blood vessels in tumors, is 12–15 times more efficient than murine TNF in
decreasing the tumor burden in lymphoma and melanoma animal models, whereas its
toxicity is similar. Similarly, human NGR-TNF induced stronger antitumor effects than human …
Abstract
The clinical use of tumor necrosis factor α (TNF) as an anticancer drug is limited to local treatments because of its dose-limiting systemic toxicity. We show here that murine TNF fused with CNGRC peptide (NGR-TNF), an aminopeptidase N (CD13) ligand that targets activated blood vessels in tumors, is 12–15 times more efficient than murine TNF in decreasing the tumor burden in lymphoma and melanoma animal models, whereas its toxicity is similar. Similarly, human NGR-TNF induced stronger antitumor effects than human TNF, even with 30 times lower doses. Coadministration of murine NGR-TNF with a CNGRC peptide or an anti-CD13 antibody markedly decreased its antitumor effects. Tumor regression, induced by doses of murine NGR-TNF lower than the LD 50, was accompanied by protective immunity. In contrast, no cure was induced by TNF at any dose. These results suggest that targeted delivery of TNF to CD13 may enhance its immunotherapeutic properties. Moreover, these findings reveal the potential of tumor homing peptides to generate a new class of recombinant cytokines that compared to immunocytokines have a simpler structure, could be easier to produce and are potentially less immunogenic.
nature.com