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Effects of131I-labeled TNT-1 radioimmunotherapy on HT-29 human colon adenocarcinoma spheroids
Authors:Feng-Ming Chen  Chang-Zheng Liu  Alan L Epstein
Institution:(1) Department of Radiology Research, City of Hope National Medical Center, 91 010 Duarte, California, USA;(2) Department of Pathology, University of Southern California, School of Medicine, 90 033 Los Angeles, California, USA;(3) Present address: Department of Nuclear Medicine, Sun Yat-Sen Medical University, Guang-Zhou, China
Abstract:Summary Radiolabeled murine monoclonal antibody TNT-1, directed against the nuclear histones of degenerating cells, was used to treat human colon adenocarcinoma HT-29 spheroids in vitro. The therapeutic effects of131I-TNT-1 were investigated as a function of the radioactive dose, treatment time, and number of treatments. Efficacy of treatment was assessed by TNT-1 antibody uptake, spheroid growth delay, and morphological examination using light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). From these studies, it was determined that the therapeutic effect increased with the number of doses and the duration of treatment. Spheroids treated for 24 h showed approximately two to four times more cell death than those with a 2-h treatment. As previously shown in animal models, additonal treatment with radiolabeled TNT-1 produced an expanding number of TNT-1 targets, and subsequent treatments were more effective as shown by antibody uptake studies. Microscopic examinations demonstrated that morphological changes consistent with spheroid destruction correlated well with antibody uptake data and increased gradually with dose, treatment time, and frequency of treatments. At the ultrastructural level, destruction of cells in the treated spheroids included the formation of porous cell membranes, crater-like holes (SEM), blebbing, and dissolution of cytoplasmic organelles (TEM). With continued culture, the injured spheroids were found to disaggregate after intensive131I-TNT-1 therapy (e.g. 50 µCi/ml or 100 µCi/ml with two or three 24-h treatments). These findings suggest that tumor spheroids can be used as an in vitro model to evaluate monoclonal antibody therapy using TNT-1 and other candidate mAbs directed against intracellular antigens exposed in degenerating cells of tumors.
Keywords:Tumor spheroid  Tumor necrosis treatment  Radioimmunotherapy  Human colon adenocarcinoma
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