Photodynamic Molecular Beacon Triggered by Fibroblast Activation Protein on Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts for Diagnosis and Treatment of Epithelial Cancers

Pui‐Chi Lo(Molecular Oncology (United States)), Juan Chen(Molecular Oncology (United States)), Klara Stefflova(Molecular Oncology (United States)), Michael S. Warren(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Roya Navab(University of Toronto), Bizhan Bandarchi(Molecular Oncology (United States)), Stefanie Mullins(University of Pennsylvania), Ming‐Sound Tsao(University of Toronto), Jonathan D. Cheng(Fox Chase Cancer Center), Gang Zheng(University of Pennsylvania)
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
December 18, 2008
Cited by 106Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Fibroblast activation protein (FAP) is a cell-surface serine protease highly expressed on cancer-associated fibroblasts of human epithelial carcinomas but not on normal fibroblasts, normal tissues, and cancer cells. We report herein a novel FAP-triggered photodynamic molecular beacon (FAP-PPB) comprising a fluorescent photosensitizer and a black hole quencher 3 linked by a peptide sequence (TSGPNQEQK) specific to FAP. FAP-PPB was effectively cleaved by both human FAP and murine FAP. By use of the HEK293 transfected cells (HEK-mFAP, FAP(+); HEK-vector, FAP(-)), systematic in vitro and in vivo experiments validated the FAP-specific activation of FAP-PPB in cancer cells and mouse xenografts, respectively. FAP-PPB was cleaved by FAP, allowing fluorescence restoration in FAP-expressing cells while leaving non-expressing FAP cells undetectable. Moreover, FAP-PPB showed FAP-specific photocytotoxicity toward HEK-mFAP cells whereas it was non-cytotoxic toward HEK-Vector cells. This study suggests that the FAP-PPB is a potentially useful tool for epithelial cancer detection and treatment.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis