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Neelima Koppada

Bioanalytical Systems (United States)

Publishes on Caveolin-1 and cellular processes, HER2/EGFR in Cancer Research, Bone health and treatments. 32 papers and 2.7k citations.

32Publications
2.7kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Impact of Drug Conjugation on Pharmacokinetics and Tissue Distribution of Anti-STEAP1 Antibody–Drug Conjugates in Rats
C. Andrew Boswell, Eduardo E. Mundo, Crystal Zhang et al.|Bioconjugate Chemistry|2011
Cited by 204

Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) are designed to combine the exquisite specificity of antibodies to target tumor antigens with the cytotoxic potency of chemotherapeutic drugs. In addition to the general chemical stability of the linker, a thorough understanding of the relationship between ADC composition and biological disposition is necessary to ensure that the therapeutic window is not compromised by altered pharmacokinetics (PK), tissue distribution, and/or potential organ toxicity. The six-transmembrane epithelial antigen of prostate 1 (STEAP1) is being pursued as a tumor antigen target. To assess the role of ADC composition in PK, we evaluated plasma and tissue PK profiles in rats, following a single dose, of a humanized anti-STEAP1 IgG1 antibody, a thio-anti-STEAP1 (ThioMab) variant, and two corresponding thioether-linked monomethylauristatin E (MMAE) drug conjugates modified through interchain disulfide cysteine residues (ADC) and engineered cysteines (TDC), respectively. Plasma PK of total antibody measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) revealed ∼45% faster clearance for the ADC relative to the parent antibody, but no apparent difference in clearance between the TDC and unconjugated parent ThioMab. Total antibody clearances of the two unconjugated antibodies were similar, suggesting minimal effects on PK from cysteine mutation. An ELISA specific for MMAE-conjugated antibody indicated that the ADC cleared more rapidly than the TDC, but total antibody ELISA showed comparable clearance for the two drug conjugates. Furthermore, consistent with relative drug load, the ADC had a greater magnitude of drug deconjugation than the TDC in terms of free plasma MMAE levels. Antibody conjugation had a noticeable, albeit minor, impact on tissue distribution with a general trend toward increased hepatic uptake and reduced levels in other highly vascularized organs. Liver uptakes of ADC and TDC at 5 days postinjection were 2-fold and 1.3-fold higher, respectively, relative to the unmodified antibodies. Taken together, these results indicate that the degree of overall structural modification in anti-STEAP1-MMAE conjugates has a corresponding level of impact on both PK and tissue distribution.

Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of DSTA4637A: A novel THIOMAB™ antibody antibiotic conjugate against <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> in mice
Cited by 81Open Access

DSTA4637A, a novel THIOMAB™ antibody antibiotic conjugate (TAC) against Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus), is currently being investigated as a potential therapy against S. aureus infections. Structurally, TAC is composed of an anti-S. aureus antibody linked to a potent antibiotic, dmDNA31. The goal of the current study was to characterize the pharmacokinetics (PK) of TAC in mice, assess the effect of S. aureus infection on its PK, and evaluate its pharmacodynamics (PD) by measuring the bacterial load in various organs at different timepoints following TAC treatment. Plasma concentrations of 3 analytes, total antibody (TAb), antibody-conjugated dmDNA31 (ac-dmDNA31), and unconjugated dmDNA31, were measured in these studies. In non-infected mice (target antigen absent), following intravenous (IV) administration of a single dose of TAC, systemic concentration-time profiles of both TAb and ac-dmDNA31 were bi-exponential and characterized by a short distribution phase and a long elimination phase as expected for a monoclonal antibody-based therapeutic. Systemic exposures of both TAb and ac-dmDNA31 were dose proportional over the dose range tested (5 to 50 mg/kg). In a mouse model of systemic S. aureus infection (target antigen present), a single IV dose of TAC demonstrated PK behavior similar to that in the non-infected mice, and substantially reduced bacterial load in the heart, kidney, and bones on 7 and 14 d post dosing. These findings have increased our understanding of the PK and PK/PD of this novel molecule, and have shown that at efficacious dose levels the presence of S. aureus infection had minimal effect on TAC PK.

An Anti-B7-H4 Antibody–Drug Conjugate for the Treatment of Breast Cancer
Steven R. Leong, Wei‐Ching Liang, Yan Wu et al.|Molecular Pharmaceutics|2015
Cited by 61

B7-H4 has been implicated in cancers of the female reproductive system and investigated for its possible use as a biomarker for cancer, but there are no preclinical studies to demonstrate that B7-H4 is a molecular target for therapeutic intervention of cancer. We provide evidence that the prevalence and expression levels of B7-H4 are high in different subtypes of breast cancer and that only a few normal tissues express B7-H4 on the cell membrane. These profiles of low normal expression and upregulation in cancer provide an opportunity for the use of antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), cytotoxic drugs chemically linked to antibodies, for the treatment of B7-H4 positive cancers. We have developed an ADC specific to B7-H4 that uses a linker drug consisting of a potent antimitotic, monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE), linked to engineered cysteines (THIOMAB) via a protease labile linker. We will refer to ADCs that use the THIOMAB format as TDCs to help distinguish the format from standard MC-vc-MMAE ADCs that are conjugated to the interchain disulfide bonds. Anti-B7-H4 (h1D11)-MC-vc-PAB-MMAE (h1D11 TDC) produced durable tumor regression in cell line and patient-derived xenograft models of triple-negative breast cancer. It also binds rat B7-H4 with similar affinity to human and allowed us to test for target dependent toxicity in rats. We found that our anti-B7-H4 TDC has toxicity findings similar to untargeted TDC. Our results validate B7-H4 as an ADC target for breast cancer and support the possible use of this TDC in the treatment of B7-H4(+) breast cancer.

Hypoxia Attenuates Trastuzumab Uptake and Trastuzumab-Emtansine (T-DM1) Cytotoxicity through Redistribution of Phosphorylated Caveolin-1
Cited by 31

Abstract The antibody–drug conjugate trastuzumab-emtansine (T-DM1) offers an additional treatment option for patients with HER2-amplified tumors. However, primary and acquired resistance is a limiting factor in a significant subset of patients. Hypoxia, a hallmark of cancer, regulates the trafficking of several receptor proteins with potential implications for tumor targeting. Here, we have investigated how hypoxic conditions may regulate T-DM1 treatment efficacy in breast cancer. The therapeutic effect of T-DM1 and its metabolites was evaluated in conjunction with biochemical, flow cytometry, and high-resolution imaging studies to elucidate the functional and mechanistic aspects of hypoxic regulation. HER2 and caveolin-1 expression was investigated in a well-annotated breast cancer cohort. We find that hypoxia fosters relative resistance to T-DM1 in HER2+ cells (SKBR3 and BT474). This effect was not a result of deregulated HER2 expression or resistance to emtansine and its metabolites. Instead, we show that hypoxia-induced translocation of caveolin-1 from cytoplasmic vesicles to the plasma membrane contributes to deficient trastuzumab internalization and T-DM1 chemosensitivity. Caveolin-1 depletion mimicked the hypoxic situation, indicating that vesicular caveolin-1 is indispensable for trastuzumab uptake and T-DM1 cytotoxicity. In vitro studies suggested that HER2 and caveolin-1 are not coregulated, which was supported by IHC analysis in patient tumors. We find that phosphorylation-deficient caveolin-1 inhibits trastuzumab internalization and T-DM1 cytotoxicity, suggesting a specific role for caveolin-1 phosphorylation in HER2 trafficking. Implications: Together, our data for the first time identify hypoxic regulation of caveolin-1 as a resistance mechanism to T-DM1 with potential implications for individualized treatment of breast cancer.