WO2000054805A1 - SURFACE LOCALIZED COLLIGIN/HsP47 IN CARCINOMA CELLS - Google Patents

SURFACE LOCALIZED COLLIGIN/HsP47 IN CARCINOMA CELLS Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2000054805A1
WO2000054805A1 PCT/US2000/006588 US0006588W WO0054805A1 WO 2000054805 A1 WO2000054805 A1 WO 2000054805A1 US 0006588 W US0006588 W US 0006588W WO 0054805 A1 WO0054805 A1 WO 0054805A1
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Prior art keywords
hsp47
cell
cells
peptide
carcinoma
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PCT/US2000/006588
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French (fr)
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John J. Sauk
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University Of Maryland, Baltimore
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Priority to DE60038955T priority Critical patent/DE60038955D1/en
Priority to EP00917907A priority patent/EP1161262B1/en
Priority to AU38809/00A priority patent/AU3880900A/en
Priority to US09/936,565 priority patent/US7361730B1/en
Priority to JP2000604877A priority patent/JP2002539175A/en
Priority to CA002367256A priority patent/CA2367256A1/en
Publication of WO2000054805A1 publication Critical patent/WO2000054805A1/en

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    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/48Biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Haemocytometers
    • G01N33/50Chemical analysis of biological material, e.g. blood, urine; Testing involving biospecific ligand binding methods; Immunological testing
    • G01N33/53Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor
    • G01N33/574Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor for cancer
    • G01N33/57484Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor for cancer involving compounds serving as markers for tumor, cancer, neoplasia, e.g. cellular determinants, receptors, heat shock/stress proteins, A-protein, oligosaccharides, metabolites
    • G01N33/57492Immunoassay; Biospecific binding assay; Materials therefor for cancer involving compounds serving as markers for tumor, cancer, neoplasia, e.g. cellular determinants, receptors, heat shock/stress proteins, A-protein, oligosaccharides, metabolites involving compounds localized on the membrane of tumor or cancer cells
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P35/00Antineoplastic agents
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K16/00Immunoglobulins [IGs], e.g. monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies
    • C07K16/18Immunoglobulins [IGs], e.g. monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies against material from animals or humans
    • C07K16/28Immunoglobulins [IGs], e.g. monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies against material from animals or humans against receptors, cell surface antigens or cell surface determinants
    • C07K16/30Immunoglobulins [IGs], e.g. monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies against material from animals or humans against receptors, cell surface antigens or cell surface determinants from tumour cells
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K38/00Medicinal preparations containing peptides
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N2500/00Screening for compounds of potential therapeutic value

Definitions

  • This invention relates, e.g., to colligin/Hsp47 molecules which are expressed on the surface of carcinoma cells and to the use of such expressed molecules as targets for, e.g., therapeutic agents or imaging agents.
  • the invention also relates to peptides which bind specifically to external domains of such surface-localized Hsp47 molecules.
  • the heat shock protein colligin/CBP2/Hsp47 (sometimes referred to herein as Hsp47) can act as a molecular chaperone for collagen.
  • Hsp47 becomes closely associated with nascent chains of procollagen early during its translation and accompanies the protein from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the Golgi, whereupon collagen dissociates and is secreted, and the chaperone is recycled back to the ER. It is disclosed herein that, surprisingly, in carcinoma cells Hsp47 is not efficiently recycled to the ER but, rather, is localized on (e.g., leaks onto) the surface of the cells.
  • Examples 1 and 6 show that Hsp47 is localized on the surface of a number of carcinoma cell lines, including human oral squamous cell carcinoma lines, a murine epidermal cell line, breast cancer carcinoma lines and prostate cancer cell lines, but is not expressed on the surface of control, non-carcinoma cells.
  • cell-surface localized Hsp47 can serve as a marker and/or "homing target" for carcinoma cells.
  • Example 2 shows that at least of portion of surface localized Hsp47 is available for binding to, e.g.. a procollagen propeptide to which it normally binds in the intracellular environment.
  • carcinoma cells By targeting carcinoma cells with an agent that interacts specifically with available portions of Hsp47 expressed on the surface of the cells, one can deliver therapeutic agents efficiently, allowing for reduced doses required to achieve therapeutic effects and reduced side effects; and one can sensitively detect or image carcinoma cells, or carcinomas or tumors containing them, above a background of non-carcinoma cells.
  • This invention relates to a method for modulating a cell which expresses Hsp47 on its surface, comprising administering to the cell an effective amount of an agent which binds to an (at least one) external domain of Hsp47.
  • the invention also relates to a method for treating a patient suffering from a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some of the carcinoma cells, comprising administering to the patient an effective amount of an agent which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
  • the agent comprises a targeting moiety which is specific for Hsp47, and a therapeutic moiety, e.g., a drug or toxic substance.
  • the targeting moiety comprises an antibody, or a fragment or variant thereof, which is specific for an external domain of Hsp47.
  • the targeting moiety comprises a peptide which is specific for an external domain of Hsp47 , e.g., a peptide having the consensus motif XHyHyXXHyXXXXHyHy (SEQ ID NO: 1) or the consensus motif HyXXXHyHyXXHyXX (SEQ ID NO: 2).
  • the peptide has the sequence of one of SEQ ID NOs: 3 - 25.
  • the targeting moiety comprises a bacteriophage on whose surface is a peptide such as those disclosed above.
  • the invention also relates to a diagnostic imaging method of detecting a cell which expresses Hsp47 on its surface ⁇ e.g., a carcinoma cell, or a carcinoma or tumor comprising such a cell), comprising contacting the cell with an agent comprising a targeting moiety that binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47, and a detectable label (detectable moiety) ⁇ e.g., a label which is detectable by MRI, X-Ray, gamma scintigraphy, CT scanning, or the like).
  • the targeting moiety can comprise, e.g., an antibody, a peptide or a bacteriophage as described above.
  • the invention also relates to a method of screening for an agent which binds specifically to a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some of the carcinoma cells, comprising identifying an agent which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
  • the agent is useful for treating a carcinoma in a patient or for diagnosing a carcinoma in a patient.
  • kits for detecting a carcinoma cell or for treating a carcinoma cell comprising a targeting moiety which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47
  • the invention also relates to peptides which bind specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
  • the peptide contains the consensus motif
  • the peptide is one of SEQ ID NOs 3 - 25
  • the cell is a carcinoma cell
  • carcinoma cell means any of the various types of malignant neoplasms derived from epithelial tissue in any of several sites, e g , skm, basal cells, large intestine, lung, colon, breast, bladder, oral, head and neck, larynx, nasopharynx, adrenal cortex, apoc ⁇ ne gland, cloaca, embryonal cells, kidney, liver, pancreas, or prostate
  • carcinoma cell as used herein applies to a carcinoma cell, in vivo or in vitro, whether it occurs as an individual cell or m the context of a tissue, carcinoma in any stage of development, a tumor, a metastasis (including a micrometastasis), or the like
  • Sarcoma cells are also encompassed by the invention
  • the term "sarcoma” as used herein means any connective tissue neoplasm, formed by the proliferation of mesodermal cells Among the many types of sarcomas encompassed by the invention are fibrosarcomsa, rhabdosarcoma, neurofibrosarcoma and osteosarcoma
  • the term "sarcoma cell” as used herein applies to a sarcoma cell, in vivo or in vitro, whether it occurs as an individual cell or in the context of a tissue, a sarcoma in any stage of development, a tumor, a metastasis (including a micrometastasis), or the like
  • Methods to study sarcoma cells, particularly in relation to the expression of Hsp47, are disclosed, e g , in Monno et al (1997) In Vivo 11, 261-4, Mo ⁇ no et al (1997) In Vivo l ⁇ , 17-21
  • Methods and reagents such as those discussed herein in relation to carcinoma cells are, of course, applicable to any type of cell having surface expression of Hsp47, and to any physiological or pathological condition associated with such expression
  • Hsp47 has been cloned and/or sequenced from a number of organisms, including, e g , chicken (Hiroyashi et al (1991) Mol and Cell Biol 11, 4036-4044), mouse (Takechi et al (1992) Eur J of Biochem 206, 323-329), and human (e g , Nakamura. accession number #D83174 in the DDJB/EMBL/GenBank databases, Ikegawa et al
  • Hsp47 encompasses, e.g., wild type Hsp47 from any mammalian source, preferably human, or a variant thereof.
  • variant of Hsp47 is meant, e.g., any insertion, deletion, mutant form or substitution, either conservative or non-conservative, in either an internal or external domain of the protein, wherein such changes do not substantially alter the binding of the external domain to a targeting moiety as defined herein.
  • substitutions is meant by combinations such as Gly, Ala; Val, He, Leu; Asp, Glu; Asn, Gin; Ser, Thr; Lys, Arg; and Phe, Tyr.
  • Variants can include, e.g., homologs, analogs, muteins and mimetics (mimotopes).
  • Many types of protein modifications, including post-translational modifications, are included. See, e.g., modifications disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,935,835.
  • Hsp47 molecules which are modified so that they possess properties not normally associated with wild type Hsp47 are included, provided that an external domain can bind specifically to a targeting moiety of the invention.
  • An agent which binds to Hsp47 expressed ⁇ e.g., localized, located) on the surface of a cell can bind to one or more of any portion(s) or fragment(s) of the Hsp47 molecule, of any length, which are available for binding. Such an available sequence is referred to herein as an "external domain" of the Hsp47 protein.
  • an agent or moiety which "binds specifically” to ("is specific for”; binds “preferentially” to) an external domain of Hsp47 interacts with it, or forms or undergoes a physical association with it, in an amount and for a sufficient time to allow detection of the cell, or to modulate it ⁇ e.g., to elicit a therapeutic response).
  • specifically or “preferentially” is meant that the agent has a higher affinity, e.g., a higher degree of selectivity, for an external domain of Hsp47 than for other molecules located on the surface of a cell.
  • an agent or moiety which binds specifically to a particular type of cell e.g.
  • a carcinoma cell has a higher affinity, e.g., a higher degree of selectivity, for that type of cell than for a normal ⁇ e.g. , non-carcinoma) cell, such that the binding allows the carcinoma cell to be detected and distinguished from a background of normal cells, and/or allows for contacting a therapeutic moiety with a carcinoma cell but not (to a significant degree) with neighboring non-carconoma cells.
  • the affinity or degree of specificity can be determined by any of a variety of routine procedures, e.g., competitive binding studies. See, e.g., Czerwinski et al. (1998) Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. 25. 11,520-11, 525 and Moe et al. (1998). Phar.
  • the portion of an agent which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47 can be referred to as a "targeting moiety,” a “site-directed macromolecule,” a “ligand” or an "affinity ligandJ
  • any agent or moiety which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47 is encompassed by the invention.
  • One type of targeting moiety comprises an antibody which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
  • the term "antibody” as used herein can mean a polyclonal or, preferably, a monoclonal antibody, or a fragment (of any size) of a polyclonal or monoclonal antibody, e.g., Fv, Fab', Fab, F(ab') 2 , Fab'Fc, or the like.
  • Single chain antibodies are also encompassed by the invention. Any form of immunoglobulin is included, e.g., immunoglobulins A,D,E,G or M.
  • Antibodies of the invention can be isolated from natural sources; from hybridomas lymphomas, or the like; or they can be produced by synthetic and/or recombinant means. They can be partially or completely humanized, using conventional, art-recognized procedures, as described, e.g., in Jones et al. (1986). Nature 121,522; Riechmann et ⁇ /.(1988). Nature 232, 323 ; Verhoyen et ⁇ /.(1988).
  • Another type of targeting moiety comprises a peptide which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
  • a peptide can be of any size or amino acid composition effective to bind specifically to an external domain of Hsp47, so as to allow the formation of a detectable entity or the production of a therapeutic response.
  • the peptide is not full length collagen, and is not naturally occurnng collagen or a fragment thereof In a preferred embodiment, the peptide is less than about 90 ammo acids, e g , about 80, 70, 60, 50, 40, 30, 20 or 10 amino acids, most preferably about 12-16 ammo acids
  • the invention also encompasses larger polypeptides, which can be, e g , as long as a full-length procollagen, providing that the polypeptide can bind to an external domain of Hsp47, so as to allow the formation of a detectable entity or the production of a therapeutic response
  • Such methods include, e g , detection of an agent which is tagged, directly or indirectly, with a fluorescent label by lmmunofluorescence microscopy, including confocal microscopy, or by flow cytometry (FACscan), detection of a radioactively labeled agent by autoradiography, electron microscopy, lmmunostammg, subcellular fractionation, or the like Examples 1 and 6 illustrate some typical methods A number of peptides or peptide sequences have been identified which interact with mtracellular Hsp47, and/or with the isolated protein These peptides include, e g , the region of procollagen defined by the anti-propeptide antibody SP1
  • Pro-Gly n model sequences of collagen, and portions of gelatin (Nagata et al (1988) Biochem Biophys Res Comm 153, 428-434)
  • Such peptides, or variants, mimetics (mimotopes), muteins, analogs or fragments thereof, can be tested readily for then ability to interact specifically with an external domain of Hsp47, and those which bind avidly and/or selectively can be used as targeting moieties m the invention
  • vanants any insertion, deletion, mutant form or substitution, either conservative or non-conservative, where such changes do not substantially alter the bindmg of the peptide to an external domain of Hsp47
  • modified peptides which are encompassed by the invention are peptidomimetics, which can be generated and tested by routine, conventional means See, e g , al-Obeidi et al (1998) Mol Biotechnol 2, 205-23, ieber-Emmons et al (1997) Curr Opin Biotechnol &, 435-41 ,
  • the binding constant (avidity) of the peptide or peptide region with Hsp47 is 15-45 ⁇ m, most preferably, the binding constant is 20-30 ⁇ m
  • a technique for identifying peptides that can bind specifically and/or avidly to surface-expressed Hsp47 (external domains) is bacteriophage display (phage display) combined with affinity panning See, e g , Smith et al (1993) Methods Enzvmol 217. 228-57, Smith et al (1995) J Biol Chem 22D, 18,323-328, Krtamura et ⁇ / (1992) Cell
  • phage single stranded filamentous phage, e g , fd, F2, F5, Ml 3, and variants thereof Briefly, a set of random peptides of a chosen length (e g , 7-mers or 12-mers) are cloned into and displayed on the surface of bacteriophage, and phage are selected which bind preferentially to cells bearing surface-expressed Hsp47, following one or moie cycles of selection
  • Phage-displayed 12- mer peptides identified m this Example contain, in general, either the consensus motif, XHyHyXXHyXXXHyHy (SEQ ID NO 1) oi the consensus motif HyXXXHyHyXXHyXX (SEQ ID NO 2), where X is independently any ammo acid and Hy is independently any hydrophobic ammo acid
  • the hydrophobic ammo acid is a large one, e g , W (Trp), L(Leu) or F(Phe)
  • the peptides having the consensus motif SEQ ID NO 1 are those having the sequence of SEQ ID NOJ to SEQ ID NO: 13, as shown in Table 1. These peptides can be characterized as predominantly hydrophobic peptides.
  • FHWPTLYNMYIP SEQ. ID NO. 6
  • NWTLPTAQFAYL SEQ. ID NO. 9
  • VLIPVKALRAVW (SEQ. ID NO. 10)
  • TPQPNMMLRISP SEQ. ID NO. 11
  • peptides having the consensus motif SEQ ID NO: 2 are those having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 14 to SEQ ID NO: 25, as shown in Table 2. These peptides can be characterized as predominantly hydrophobic peptides.
  • GLYMHPPTHTMR (SEQ. ID NO. 14)
  • KHNEQTFHPKVP SEQ. ID NO. 17
  • TVLHSLAHQTFI SEQ. ID NO. 18
  • the predominantly hydrophobic peptides identified in Example 5 surprisingly do not exhibit specific sequence identity to regions of procollagen, which is known to bind to Hsp47 but, taking into account the hydropathic profile of the amino acids (see discussion in Example 5), nevertheless map primarily to regions within the N-propeptide region of collagen (residues 59-71) or the C-propeptide region (residues 1344-1445).
  • the predominantly hydrophilic peptides also do not exhibit specific sequence identity to regions of procollagen, but generally map to regions within the helical region of procollagen.
  • Example 5 Among the phage-displayed 7-mer peptides identified in Example 5 are those having the sequence of SEQ ID NOJ6 to SEQ ID NO: 62, as shown in Table 3.
  • GITSLLS SEQ. ID NO. 26
  • FHSGWPQ SEQ. ID NO. 27
  • NVPYVVH (SEQ. ID NO. 40)
  • DRFSPMP (SEQ. ID NO. 41 ) HFQPRHH (SEQ. ID NO. 42)
  • HSTSTPH SEQ. ID NO. 43
  • HNYLNLT SEQ. ID NO. 46
  • ISQGTTP SEQ. ID NO. 47
  • HPSLN P SEQ. ID NO. 50
  • HSTSVTQ (SEQ. ID NO. 51 )
  • YVASWPO (SEQ. ID NO. 52)
  • VAGNPLQ SEQ. ID NO. 54
  • NVPYGVH (SEQ. ID NO. 58)
  • Peptides according to the invention include the SEQ IDs disclosed herein, as well as peptides which are extended by as many as, e.g., 20 additional amino acids ⁇ e.g., about 1 , 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 or 18) on either or both ends of the peptide, provided that the extended peptide exhibits the requisite specificity/avidity for an external domain of Hsp47.
  • a peptide of the invention is "isolated ' e.g., is in a form other than it occurs in nature, e.g., in a buffer, in a dry form awaiting reconstitution, as part of a kit, etc.
  • the peptide is substantially purified.
  • substantially purified refers to a molecule, such as a peptide, that is substantially free of other proteins, lipids, carbohydrates, nucleic acids, and other biological materials with which it is naturally associated.
  • a substantially pure molecule, such as a peptide can be at least about 60%, by dry weight, preferably about 70%, 80%, 90%, 95% or 99%) the molecule of interest.
  • One skilled in the art can purify peptides using standard protein purification methods and the purity of the peptides can be determined using standard methods including, e.g., polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (e.g., SDS-PAGE), column chromatography ⁇ e.g., high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), and amino-terminal amino acid sequence analysis.
  • polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis e.g., SDS-PAGE
  • column chromatography e.g., high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)
  • amino-terminal amino acid sequence analysis e.g., amino-terminal amino acid sequence analysis.
  • peptides exhibiting a specificity for surface-expressed Hsp47 are identified, free energy calculations or other properties can be determined for each, and this information can be used to design other agents or drugs, e.g., organic compounds, which bind preferentially to surface expressed Hsp47.
  • agents or drugs e.g., organic compounds, which bind preferentially to surface expressed Hsp47.
  • Such methods are conventional. See, e.g., Rejyo et al. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 22, 8945-8950; Gabius et al. (1998) Phar. Res. 15., 23-30; and Selz et al. (1998) Biophysical Jol. 25_, 2332-2343.
  • Phage display/panning techniques can not only serve to identify peptides which can be used in the invention, but can also provide bacteriophage bearing such peptides on their surface which can be used in the invention. That is, a targeting moiety of the invention can be the peptide-bearing bacteriophage, itself. Such bacteriophage exhibit the advantage that they are readily internalized into the ER of cells to which they adhere. See, e.g., Example 6.
  • a targeting moiety as above is used to deliver a therapeutic moiety (e g , a drug or toxic substance) to a cell which expresses Hsp47 on it surface ⁇ e g , a carcinoma cell, for example one which constitutes part of a tissue or a tumor)
  • a therapeutic agent of the invention preferably comprises a targeting moiety and, associated with it, a therapeutic moiety
  • a therapeutic agent can modulate a cell either positively or negatively, providing that it has a net therapeutic effect on the environment in which the cell resides (e g , a tissue, tumor, metastasis, patient, or the like)
  • modulate is meant that any physiological response of the cell, e g , a metabolic activity, a response to an internal or external environmental factor, a synthetic or catabohc process, activation, repression, etc , is altered
  • the therapeutic agent can achieve inhibition or suppression of growth, killing, destruction, elimination, control, modification, etc of the cell or tissue Cytostatic, cytolytic, cyto
  • Example 7 A typical method for performing pharmacokinetics in an animal model is shown in Example 7 A typical animal model for testing the effect of an agent on tumors is the human oral squamous cell carcinoma xenograft model, is shown in Example 7 Among the factors which can be assayed are survival rate of the animal, reduction in size of a treated tumor, and the presence oi absence of metastases, such as lymph node oi lung metastasis
  • therapeutic moieties can be isolated from natural sources, or can be produced by synthetic and/or recombinant means, all of which are well-known to one of ordinary skill in the art
  • drugs or therapeutic moieties which can be used in the invention are chemotherapeutic and/or cytotoxic agents such as, e g , steroids, antimetabohtes, anthracychne, vmcaalkaloids, neocarzinostatm (NCS), adnamycm, dideoxycytidme, cisplatm, doxorubicin, pirarubicm, melphalan and daunomycm, or the like
  • Methods to attach such moieties to targeting moieties are routine and conventional
  • Example 7 illustrates methods to attach doxorubicin to an antibody or peptide targeting agent
  • the therapeutic moiety such as, e g , steroids, antimetabohtes, anthracychne, vmcaalkaloids, neocar
  • nbosome inhibiting proteins especially the nbosome inhibiting proteins of barley, wheat, corn, rye, or gelonin, or ⁇ bosome-inactivatmg glycoprotein (GPIR)
  • the therapeutic moiety can comprise any of a variety of art-recognized radioisotopes or radionuclides
  • Methods of radiotherapy m which cytotoxic doses of radioactivity are delivered to cells, are conventional in the art and are described, e g , in EP 481 ,526, U S Pat 5,962,424, Roeske et al (1990) Int J Radiation Oncology Biol Phys 12, 1539-48, and Leichner et al (1993) Med Phys 20 (2 Pt 2), 569-77
  • Such radioactive compounds can affect the targeted cell as well as adjacent tumor cells which, for one reason or another, do not display Hsp47 on their surface
  • Further disclosure of the types of radioactive agents which can be used, and how to attach them to targeting moieties, is discussed below in reference to imaging agents Among the most preferred radiation sources are Tc-99 and In-I l l
  • the therapeutic moiety can compnse an antibody, and can be used as a basis for conventional types of immuno therapy, e g , as discussed below m regard to antibodies that are not associated with an additional therapeutic moiety
  • vanous therapeutic moieties can be coupled to one targeting moiety, thereby accommodating vanable cytotoxicity
  • two or more different therapeutic agents are administered together
  • one can administer the toxm to the patient in an amount effective to kill tumor cells See, e g , U S patent 5,667,786
  • an ant ⁇ -Hsp47 antibody which is not associated with an additional therapeutic moiety can be used to treat, e g , a carcinoma, in a method of immunotherapy
  • Any of the types of antibodies described herein as targeting moieties can be used for immunotherapy Methods of immunotherapy are conventional and are descnbed, e g , in U.S. Patents 6,015,567, 5,478,556 and 6,0
  • Example 3 demonstrates that cell surface localized Hsp47 is associated with the tetraspanm protein, CD9, and thus can be involved in the interaction of cells with the cellular matnx Therefore, an antibody directed against Hsp47 can modulate the interaction of a cell, e g , a carcinoma cell, with the mtracellular matnx
  • cell surface expression of Hsp47 can be conelated with cell mvasiveness and phagokmesis (mobility) which, m turn, can be correlated with metastatic potential of a carcinogenic cell
  • Example 4 demonstrates a negative conelation in several cell lines between cell surface expression of Hsp47 and mvasiveness/phagokmesis
  • the invention encompasses methods of treatment with an ant ⁇ -Hsp47 antibody to modulate (increase or decrease a physiological activity or property of) a cell (e g g
  • Hsp47 cell surface expression is negatively correlated with tumor mvasiveness and/or metastasis
  • the detection of surface-expressed Hsp47 can serve as the basis of a diagnostic method to identify tumors (e g , carcinomas) which are substantially non-metastatic and/or which are associated with a better prognosis than tumors on whose surface the expression of Hsp47 is substantially lowei
  • the antibody can elicit an immunological effect
  • the invention encompasses situations in which an antibody recruits NK cells for antibody-mediated cell-mediated cytotoxicity
  • Bifunctional antibodies can bnng effectors such as NK and T c close to the tumor target
  • two bispecific heteroantibodyconjugates e g , ant ⁇ -tumor/ant ⁇ -CD3 and ant ⁇ -tumor/ant ⁇ -CD28, can be co-admimstered
  • two such heteroconjugates can act synergistically to induce contact between a T-cell and a tumoi to activate direct cytotoxicity even if the T-cell, itself, does not have conventional specificity for the tumor target
  • Immunotherapy can be carried out by introducing an antibody directly into a patient, using conventional delivery methods and doses, such as those descnbed herein for other
  • an antigenic molecule such as a peptide, or a suitable adjuvant
  • a bacteriophage whose surface comprises a peptide which is specific for Hsp47 can serve as a vector for the implementation of gene therapy Typical methods of phage display and affinity panning designed to obtain phage which can be used in such a method are described herein
  • a gene whose expression in a mammalian host is desired can be inserted into a mammalian expression cassette and then cloned into the phage genome Cassettes for mammalian gene expression are conventional in the art, as are methods for cloning such cassettes into a nucleic acid of interest, e g , the DNA of a filamentous phage
  • Methods to clone and express genes are routine for one of ordinary skill in the art See, e g , Sambrook, J et al (1989)
  • genes can be introduced into a cell, in a method of gene therapy, with such a vector.
  • Such genes can be translated into proteins, expressed as antisense nucleic acid sequences or ribozymes, or the like.
  • the genes can be integrated into the host genome, or can be stably maintained or transiently expressed in an unintegrated form.
  • genes which can be administered are well-known in the art and are disclosed, along with methods of using them for gene therapy, in, e.g., Culver et al
  • genes which enhance the immunogenicity of a tumor e.g., genes which encode foreign antigens
  • genes which initiate apoptosis genes which enhance immune cells to increase anti-tumor activity, e.g.
  • genes which encode cytokines such as IL-1, IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-12, TNF- ⁇ or ⁇ ; GM-CSF, G-CSF, M-CSF, IFN-oc, ⁇ or ⁇ , TGF- or ⁇ , TNF- ⁇ or ⁇ , NGF or the like; sensitivity or suicide genes (e.g., genes which encode HSV- or VZV-Tk, which confer sensitivity to gancyclovir; or which encode cytosine deaminase, which confers sensitivity to 5-fluorocytosine; or which encode a non-human purine cleavage enzyme, such as purine nucleoside phosphorylase, which confers sensitivity to a purine substrate which, when cleaved by the enzyme, becomes toxic to the cell); genes which block the expression of oncogenes, e.g., genes which encode antisense K-RAS message); wild type tumor suppressor genes
  • genes which block the mechanisms by which tumors evade immunological destruction e.g., the gene which encodes antisense IGF (insulin- like growth factor)- 1 message; genes which encode an engineered cytoplasmic variant of a nuclease ⁇ e.g., RNase A) or protease (e.g. trypsin, papain, proteinase K, carboxypeptidase, etc.); and genes which encode any of the proteinaceious toxins disclosed above.
  • any targeting moiety as above can be associated with (e g , bound to, covalently or noncovalently) a gene of interest and can serve to deliver it to a cell
  • the targeting moiety comprises part of a vector which also compnses one or more of a) a non-viral earner for the gene to be inserted, b) a fusion protein to enhance the penetration of the vector into the cytoplasm and, optionally, the nucleus, of the cell, and c) a therapeutic gene such as those descnbed above in reference to bactenophage-mediated gene therapy
  • Many varieties of components a) and b) will be known to those of skill in the art For a further discussion of these components, see, e g , in U S Pat 5,916,803 and the section below regarding the introduction of peptides and similar agents into a cell
  • agents can be administered at or near the site of a tissue or tumor to be treated (Of course, the routes of administration disclosed herein can be employed for methods of detecting (imaging) a target as well as for methods of treatment )
  • Methods of administration are conventional, and include parenteral and non- parenteral routes of administration
  • Parenteral routes include, e g , intravenous, mtraarte ⁇ al, intraportal, intramuscular, subcutaneous, intrapentoneal, mtraspinal, mtrathecal, mtracerebro ventricular, intracranial, mtrapleural or other routes of injection
  • Non-parenteral routes include, e g , oral, nasal, transdermal, pulmonary, rectal, buccal, vaginal, ocular
  • it may be desirable to use agents which enhance transcytosis of a cell-surface receptor/hgand complex, e g by administration of
  • Dosages to be administered can be determined by conventional procedures and, m general, will be known to those of skill m the art Factors to be considered include the activity of the specific agent involved, the metabolic stability and length of action of the agent, mode and time of administration, drug combination, rate of excretion, the species being treated, and the age, body weight, general health, sex, diet, and severity of the particular disease-states of the host undergoing therapy.
  • appropriate therapeutic regimens for an immunotoxin ⁇ i.e., a conjugate comprising an antibody, or variant or fragment thereof, conjugated to one or more toxin molecules) involve administration to a patient of a dose of between about 0.5 and 2 mg/kg.
  • a therapeutic agent can be internalized into any of a variety of locations in a cell or tissue. In some cases, it is desirable that a therapeutic agent is internalized into a cell by accompanying Hsp47 as it is recycled into the ER. In other cases, it is desirable that a therapeutic agent is endocytosed into an endosome or lysosome of a cell, e.g., a proteinacious toxin which must be proteolytically processed in order to become active. In still other cases, it is desirable that the agent evades enzymatic degradation and is transported into the cytoplasm and/or the nucleus. A variety of conventional procedures can be used to enhance the transport of a surface-bound entity into a cell and, in some cases, to avoid such proteolysis. It may be desirable, for example to associate the therapeutic agent, directly or indirectly, with a carrier and/or with a fusion protein, to generate a vector for delivery of the therapeutic agent.
  • the carrier exhibits a long half life in the body, allowing the maximum possible binding of a vector to a target cell.
  • the preferred earners are liposomes or cationic lipids, polypeptides, or proteins, or the like.
  • a earner can be associated directly (e.g., coupled) or indirectly to a therapeutic agent, by any of a variety of conventional means,
  • a variety of fusion proteins can enhance the penetration of a vector into a cell, and/or out of an endosome or lysosome and into the cytoplasm of a cell.
  • Such proteins will be well known to the skilled worker and are discussed, e.g., in U.S. Pat. 5,916,803; Hughson (1995). Current Biol. 5, 265; Iloekstra (1990). J. Bioenergetics Biomembranes 22, 675; and White (1990). Ann. Rev. Physiol. 52, 675.
  • a targeting moiety can be modified so that it binds more efficiently to an external domain of Hsp47 and/or is internalized more efficiently into a cell.
  • synthetically produced short peptides such as some of the 7-mer peptides shown in Table 3, sometimes bind to, but are not taken up by, target cells; whereas the same peptides are internalized when they are displayed at the pill terminus of a bacteriophage.
  • a short synthetic peptide one can add to the peptide a synthetic peptide linker having desirable properties, e.g., a linker which displays the short peptide in such a way that it can bind to and be internalized by a cell with Hsp47 on its surface, yet does not, itself, bind to cells other than those displaying Hsp47 on the surface; is stable in the circulation; can be processed following internalization, or the like.
  • desirable properties e.g., a linker which displays the short peptide in such a way that it can bind to and be internalized by a cell with Hsp47 on its surface, yet does not, itself, bind to cells other than those displaying Hsp47 on the surface; is stable in the circulation; can be processed following internalization, or the like.
  • Other such improvement modifications of target moieties will be evident to those skilled in the art.
  • a targeting moiety as above is associated with a detectable moiety that allows the detection (imaging, identification) of a cell which expresses Hsp47 on its surface, e.g., a carcinoma cell, a carcinoma in any stage of development, a tumor, a metastasis (including a micrometastasis), or the like.
  • An agent which comprises a targeting moiety and a detectable moiety is called herein a detectable agent or an imaging agent. Such detection can be accomplished in vitro or in vivo.
  • Detection methods can be quantitative. For example, the amount of Hsp47 expressed on the surface of a cell, or the number of cells which express Hsp47 on their surface, can be quantitated by exposing the cell, tumor, animal, patient or the like to a detection device which can identify and quantitate the detectable marker.
  • Detectable moieties encompassed by the invention include, e.g., signal generators
  • Entities which are capable of emitting a detectable amount of energy in the form of electromagnetic radiation include X-rays, UV-radiation, IR radiation, visible radiation and the like, and include phosphorescent and fluorescent entities, bioluminescent markers, gamma and X-ray emitters, or the like]; signal reflectors ⁇ e.g., paramagnetic entities); or signal absorbers (e.g., electron beam opacifier dyes).
  • a detectable moiety can be bound to (associated with) a targeting moiety by any of a variety of well-established methods, including those described above for binding therapeutic moieties to targeting moieties
  • a radioactive element e g , an ammo acid
  • a targeting moiety e g , a peptide chain
  • a fluoresent label can be associated with such a targeting moiety via biotin/avidin interaction, association with a fluorescem conjugated antibody, or the like, and detected by lmmunofluorescence microscopy, flow cytometry (FACscan), or the like
  • Target-enhancing metals are encompassed by the invention and are particularly suitable for in vivo imaging
  • Metals according to the invention include, e g , paramagnetic metals for MRI, heavy metal ions, e g , with atomic numbers of at least 37, preferably at least 50, for X-ray or ultrasound imaging, and ions of radioactive isotopes for scmtigraphy
  • radioactive ions include, e g , ions of lanthamdes or other metal ions, including isotopes and radioisotopes thereof, such as, e g , ⁇ od ⁇ ne ⁇ iodine 12 ', iodine 131 , technicium 99 " 1 , indium 111 , rhenium 188 , rhenium 186 , copper 67 , yttrium 90 , astatine 211 , gallium 67 , indium 192
  • a metal can be associated with a targeting moiety by any of a variety of means, which are well-known to one of ordinary skill in the art For methods of making image enhancing moieties, attaching them to targeting moieties, and using them for detection, see , e g , EP 481,526, GB-A-2169598, and EP 136,812
  • metals can be bound to (associated with, attached to) targeting moieties by chelatmg agents, including polychelants, bifunctional polychelants, and salts or macrocychc intermediates thereof
  • chelatmg agents including polychelants, bifunctional polychelants, and salts or macrocychc intermediates thereof
  • a variety of methods exist for multiplying the enhancement, e g using a compound composed of a backbone molecule, such as a polyamine, to which a plurality of chelatmg agents are attached
  • Imaging agents of the invention may be administered to patients for imaging m amounts sufficient to yield the desired contrast with the particular imaging techniques Generally, dosages of from about 0 001 to 5 0 mmoles of chelated imaging metal ion per kilogram of patient body weight are effective to achieve adequate contrast enhancements For most MRI applications, preferred dosages of imaging metal ions will be in the range of about 0.02 to 1.2 mmoles/kg body weight; while for X-ray applications, dosages from about 0.5 to 1.5 mmoles/kg are generally effective to achieve X-ray attenuation.
  • Prefened dosages for most X-ray applications are from 0.8 to 1 J mmoles of the lanthanide or heavy metal/kg body weight.
  • Another aspect of the invention is a method to screen for an agent which binds specifically to a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some of its cells, preferably wherein the agent is useful for treating a carcinoma in a patient or for diagnosing a carcinoma in a patient, comprising identifying an agent which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
  • Assays for determining if an agent binds to an external domain of Hsp47, and for determining the specificity and/or avidity of the binding are described elsewhere in this application. Routine procedures are available for screening agents of interest, using such methods.
  • kits for treating a patient suffering from a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some of the carcinoma cells, or for detecting a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some of the carcinoma cells comprising an agent which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47 in an amount effective to generate a cytostatic or cytolytic effect on the carcinoma, or to image the cell above a background of non-carcinoma cells.
  • the agent comprises, as a targeting moiety, an antibody or a fragment thereof, a peptide, or a bacteriophage on whose surface is a peptide, each of which moieties binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
  • the targeting moiety is a monoclonal antibody, a peptide which comprises the consensus motif XHyHyXXHyXXXHyHy (SEQ ID NO:
  • Hy can be any hydrophobic amino acid, a peptide having the sequence of any of SEQ ID NOJ to SEQ ID NO: 25 of Tables 1 and 2, or a bacteriophage on whose surface is a peptide which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
  • the agent comprises, as a therapeutic moiety, a toxin, a radioisotope or radionuc de, an antibody, or a nucleic acid which encodes a therapeutic gene
  • a kit for modulating a cell which expresses Hsp47 on its surface comprising an agent which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47, in an amount effective to modulate the cell
  • a kit of the invention will comprise one or more containers for the therapeutic and/or imaging agents
  • Example 1 Expression of Colligin/Hsp47 at the Surface of Oral Epidermoid Carcinoma Cells Studies are performed using established cell lines of human oral squamous cell carcinomas (SCC-4, SCC-9, SCC-15, and SCC-25) and a murme epidermoid cell line, Lewis Lung Carcinoma (LL/2), obtained from ATCC In addition, a primary gmgival fibroblast cell line is used as a control.
  • SCC-4, SCC-9, SCC-15, and SCC-25 a murme epidermoid cell line, Lewis Lung Carcinoma (LL/2), obtained from ATCC
  • LL/2 Lewis Lung Carcinoma
  • a primary gmgival fibroblast cell line is used as a control.
  • A. Flow Cytomet ⁇ c Analysis For these studies, the monoclonal antibody SPA-470 to colhgm/Hsp47,
  • the membrane fractions are charactenzed by the distribution of 5'-nucleos ⁇ dase activity, a marker of plasma membrane Protein is measured with the BCA protein assay kit (Pierce, Rockford, IL) Plasma membranes are directly subjected to PAGE and
  • NP1 [residues 23-108]
  • NP2 the globular domain + propeptide GlyXaaYaa domain
  • NP2 the globular domain + propeptide GlyXaaYaa domain
  • Fusion protein expression is induced by 0 1 mM IPTG after bactena reach mid-log phase
  • the fusion proteins are purified by glutathionme-Sepharose 4B beads (Pharmacia, Piscataway, NJ) according the manufacture's instructions The proteins are characterized by SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis as previously described (Hu et al , ibid)
  • NP1 and NP2 affinity beads are prepared, after the method of Hu et al (1995) ibid In essence, GST-fusion proteins are treated with thrombin, dialyzed and the GST protein removed from each reaction mixture by passing it over a column of glutathione-
  • Sepharose The eluates are collected and lyophihzed and coupled to CNBr activated Sepharose
  • the final beads contain 1-2 mg peptide per 250 ⁇ l Hsp47 surface binding experiments are earned out by mixing 250 ⁇ l of a 50%o (v/v) suspension of peptide- Sepharose (Pharmacia, Piscataway, NJ) with a suspension of plasma membranes from surface-biotinylated SCC cells After incubation at 4°C for lh the beads are collected by centnfugation and washed 3 times with an equal volume of Laemmli Buffer The beads are extracted with 250 ⁇ l Laemmli electrophoresis sample buffer by boiling the sample for 5 mm Following separation by SDS-PAGE, the proteins are transferred to nitrocellulose membranes and visualized with HRPO-conjugated ExtrAvidm (Sigma Chemical Co , St Louis, MO ) using Renaissance Chemiluminescent Reagents (NEN,
  • GST-fusion proteins (l ⁇ g/ml) are added to the culture medium of ⁇ 1 XI 0 6 SCC cells, plated in chambered slides (Nalgene NUNC, Milwaukee, WI), for 10 minutes at 37°C The cells are then washed in PBS fixed in paraformaldehyde as before, and cell associated fusion proteins (NP1 , NP2) are identified with HRPO- conjugated anti-GST antibodies, following the procedures of Sauk et al , (1994) / Biol Chem 262, 3941-3946
  • Example 3 Cell Surface Labeling and Immunoprecipitation The methods used were previously descnbed for the characterization of TM4SF complexes with integ ⁇ ns (Berditchevski et al , (1996) Molec Biol of the Cell 2, 193- 207) In essence, cells are labeled with NHS-LC-biotm (Pierce, Rockford, IL) according to kit protocol, and lysed in immunoprecipitation buffer [1% Bnj 96, 25 mM Hepes, pH 7 4, 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl 2 , 2 mM PMSF, 20 ⁇ g/ml apotinin, and 10 ⁇ g/ml leupeptm] Immune complexes are collected on protein A beads pre-bound with antibodies, followed by four washes with immunoprecipitation buffer For more "stringent" conditions, the immunoprecipitation buffer is supplemented with 0 2% SDS Immune complexes are eluted from protein A beads
  • cells are treated with DTSSP, a membrane impermeable cross- linker or DSP After solubihzation m immunoprecipitation buffer supplemented with 0 2% SDS protein complexes are immunoprecipitated as above and analyzed under reducing conditions
  • Membrane surface proteins are consistently co-precipitated with anti- coll ⁇ g ⁇ n/Hsp47 antibodies
  • SCC and LL/2 cells are first pre- treated with a cleavable cross-linker, DSP, then surface labeled with biotin or [ 12 ']-I, and subsequent immunoprecipitation is carried out under stringent conditions to disrupt the noncovalent association between Hsp and tetraspanm protein
  • a colhgm/Hsp47-CD9 complex is immunoprecipitated using either ant ⁇ -CD9 mAbs or anti-colhgm/Hsp47 antibodies
  • a characteristic 47K band is readily detected in all ant ⁇ -CD9 lmmunoprec pitates and protein band of ⁇ 22K, similar in size to CD9/or CD81 , is co- precipitated with anti-colligm/ Hsp47 Howevei, when similar experiments were performed with ant ⁇ -CD81 mAbs, colhgm/Hsp47 is not identified
  • Tumor cells are plated on chamber slides precoated with a mixture of 80 ⁇ g/ml type I collagen, 100 ⁇ g/ml Matrigel®, or 100 ⁇ g of laminin-5 and colloidal gold particles and incubated in medium with or without various antibodies.
  • Colloidal gold-coated chamber slides are prepared as described by Albrecht-Buehler ((1977). Cell 12, 333-339) with modification for keratinocytes and the inclusion of matrix proteins (Woodley et al, (1988) J. of Cellular Phys. 126, 140-146; Kim et al, (1994) Laboratory Investigation 21, 401-408; Kim et al, (1994) J. of Biol. Chem.
  • SCC or LL/2 cells are added to each chamber, and 20 minutes latter non-adherent cells are removed and the medium replaced. Cultures are maintained for 24 hr and then fixed in IX Histochoice (Amresco, Solon, OH) for 1 min, washed in PBS, and dehydrated through graded ethanols. Areas devoid of gold particles identify the phagokinetic tracks. A migration index is determined using image analysis software by measuring the area of phagokinetic tracks associated with cells in random fields under dark field illumination at 100 X
  • Noninvasive cells are removed from the upper surface of the membrane with a cotton swab and the chamber incubated in 3ml of Dispase (Collaborative Biomedical Products, Becton Dickinson, Bedford, MA) for 2 hours and the reaction stopped with 10 mM EDTA.
  • the resulting cells contained in Matrigel®, as well as the cells in the lower chamber, are counted in a Coulter counter. Data are expressed as the percent invasion through the matrix and membrane relative to the migration through the control membrane The "Invasion Index" is expressed as the ratio of the percent invasion of a test cell over the percent invasion of a control cell
  • SCC cells is greatest on lammm-5 followed by collagen and Matrigel®
  • the migration tracks are broader and longer on lammm-5 coated colloidal gold than those observed on collagen or Matrigel®
  • the phagokinetic migration indices on both collagen and Matrigel® matrices are noted to increase following treatment with anti- coll ⁇ g ⁇ n/Hsp47 antibodies, but are unaffected following treatment with ant-CD9 antibodies
  • the phagokinetic indices are unaffected following treatment with anti colhg ⁇ n/Hsp47 on lamm ⁇ n-5 coated surfaces
  • Affinity Panning of a Library of Peptides Two bacteriophage libraries, with random septapeptide (Ph D -7, New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) or random dodecapeptide (Ph D -12, New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) inserts at the N-terminus of pill protein are used.
  • the Ph.D. -7 library consists of -2.8 x 10 9 electroporated sequences amplified once to yield ⁇ 70 copies of each sequence in lO ⁇ l of supplied phage.
  • the Ph.D. -12 library consists of ⁇ 2.7 x 10 9 electroporated sequences amplified once to yield -55 copies/ 10 ⁇ l of supplied phage
  • phage are precomplexed with biotmylated Hsp47 by adding 0 1 ⁇ g biotmylated Hsp47 and 2 x 10 11 pfu of the input phage in 400 ⁇ l TBS-Tween and incubated for 60 min.
  • the phage-target complex solution is then added to the washed blocked plates and incubated at room temperature for 10 mm Biotin is added to a final concentration of 0J mM and incubated for 5 min to displace streptavidin-bindmg phage Non-bindmg phage are discarded and the plates washed 10 x with TBS-Tween (0 1%) The wells are then treated with 15 ⁇ l of 1 M Tns-HCl, pH 2.2, containing 1 mg/ml BSA for 5 minutes to elute Hsp47-phage The samples are neutralized with 1 M Tns-HCl, pH
  • a pellet is obtained by centnfugation for 15 min at 10,000 rpm, 4°C
  • the pellet is suspended in 1 ml of TBS and centnfuged for 5 mm, 10,000 rpm, 4°C.
  • the supernatant is transfened to a fresh tube and precipitated with 1/6 volume of PEG/NaCl on ice for 1 hr Following centnfugation the pellet is resuspended in 200 ⁇ l TBS
  • the eluate is titered and plated onto LB/IPTG/XGal plates and incubated overnight.
  • phage plaques appear blue when plated on media containing Xgal and IPTG. Blue colonies are selected for sequencing or used for a second round of panning. As a control streptavidin is used as a target and after three round of panning to verify a consensus sequence for streptavidin-binding peptides.
  • Hsp47-Binding Bacteriophages Clones of blue colonies from plates containing 50-200 colonies are transferred to nitrocellulose filters. The bacteria are washed from the filters with PBS containing 0.05%) Tween 20 and 1% bovine serum albumin, and the filters are then incubated for 30 min in the same buffer before washing three times with PBS-Tween. Following incubation for lhr in 5 ml of biotinylated Hsp47 (0J -2 ⁇ g/ml in PBS-Tween), the filters are again washed three times in PBS-Tween.
  • the positions of the clones that have secreted Hsp47-binding bacteriophages are then located by one of two methods: the filters are incubated with 5 ml of alkaline phosphatase-conjugated streptavidin (1/10,000 dilution in PBS-Tween; Pierce, Rockford, IL) for 1 hr at room temperature before extensive washing with PBS-Tween, or the filters are incubated for 1 hr in 5 ml of an anti-biotin antibody (1/50,000 dilution in PBS-Tween; Pierce, Rockford, IL), washed, and incubated with a rabbit anti-goat immunoglobulin antibody conjugated to alkaline phosphatase (1/5,000 dilution in PBS-Tween; Pierce, Rockford, IL).
  • alkaline phosphatase activity is revealed using a mixture of nitroblue tetrazolium/and 5 bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate tolidium (Bethesda Research Labs, Rockville, MD) as substrate.
  • the starting and selected libraries are compared in a position-dependent manner.
  • a statistical analysis is performed by maximum likelihood and bootstrap resampling.
  • septapeptide library 70 individual bacteriophage clones are picked at random from the unselected library, and the amino acid sequences of the variable septapeptide inserts are deduced from the nucleotide sequences of the conespondmg coding region All ammo acids are represented, although their frequencies do not always correspond to those expected from the relative numbers of codons encoding each residue
  • the sequences of septapeptides displayed by 54 Hsp47-bmd ⁇ ng bacteriophages obtained by panning are determined by DNA sequence analysis of the corresponding region of the bacteriophage genome
  • the peptide sequences from the 54 clones that bound Hsp47 are first considered as a single population and compared with those from the 70 clones picked randomly from the starting library
  • Tabulation of the hydrophihcities of the Hsp47-bmdmg bacteriophages reveals that two general populations of peptides that are selected by panning
  • One group of peptides is represented by hydrophilic peptides and the other by a smaller hydrophobic group of peptides
  • hydrophobic peptides are localized to regions within the N-propeptide region (residues 59-71) or the C-propeptide region (residues 1344-1445).
  • hydrophilic peptides are localized the regions with the helical region of procollagen (residues: 283-295, 470-482,666-678, 727-739, 1040-1052, and
  • HBP Hsp47 binding phage
  • Antibodies against Hsp47 are descnbed above, as are methods of conjugating them with fluorescem or Texas Red Ant ⁇ -M13 monoclonal antibody is procured from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech (Piscataway, NJ) Cytometnc analysis is conducted as described above
  • Immunofluorescence microscopy is earned out as described above
  • the cells are not permeabilized but treated and fixed with 1-% paraformaldehyde as described for cytometnc analyses Howevei, to prevent non-specific binding, the cells are blocked with 10% pig serum in PBS for 1 hr
  • the cells are then incubated with ant ⁇ -Hsp47 or ant ⁇ -M13 bacteriophage antibodies (Amersham Pharmacia-Biotech, Piscataway, NJ), washed with PBS, and incubated for 1 h with goat anti-rabbit IgG conjugated with either fluorescein or Texas red.
  • Coverslips are mounted in mounting media containing an antibleaching agent (Kirkegaard & Peny Laboratories, Inc.; Gaithersburg, MD). Cells are examined under a Zeiss II photomicroscope equipped with epifluorescence. Cells untreated with primary antibodies are used as negative controls.
  • an antibleaching agent Kirkegaard & Peny Laboratories, Inc.; Gaithersburg, MD. Cells are examined under a Zeiss II photomicroscope equipped with epifluorescence. Cells untreated with primary antibodies are used as negative controls.
  • Confocal images are collected using a Zeiss LSM410 confocal microscope.
  • a FT of 488/568 with a barrier filter of 590 is used to detect Texas red staining and a FT of 560 with a barrier at 515-540 is used to generate fluorescein labeled images.
  • Digital images are collected on a ZIP drive and figures generated using Adobe Photoshop 3.0 software (Adobe Systems Inc. Mountain View, CA). No fluorescence is associated with cells after incubation with secondary antibodies alone.
  • lysosomal compartment To label the lysosomal compartment, cells are incubated with 1 mg/ml lysine- fixable FITC-dextran (Molecular Probes; Eugene, OR) in growth medium for 4h at 37°C in 5% C0 2 . After washing, cells are incubated an additional 30 min to chase the dextran from the early endosomal to the lysosomal compartments. For identification of the early and recycling endosomal compartments, cells are incubated in serum-free medium containing 50 ⁇ g/ml FITC-transferrin (Molecular Probes; Eugene, OR) for 30 min al 37°C in 5% C0 2 .
  • FITC-transferrin Molecular Probes; Eugene, OR
  • cells are fixed and processed for immunofluorescence and/or confocal microscopy.
  • Cells are cultured in the presence of FITC-conjugated dextran, followed by a chase period of 30 min to remove the dextran from early endosomal compartments, before fixation and immunostaining with the Texas red conjugated anti-M13 antibodies.
  • SSC4 cells which are representative of the other cell lines, demonstrates a clear identification of FITC-dextran to vesicular structures, however, the HBP staining is primarily limited to punctate vesicles in the cytoplasm and a perinuclear zone.
  • SCC4 cells are fed latex beads and HBP and then fixed and processed by for immunofluorescence using anti-M13 antibodies.
  • Ml 3 signal cannot be located at the periphery of the bead, suggesting that there is minimal association with the phagosomes.
  • SCC4 and GMSM-K cells are cultured in the presence of FITC -conjugated or Texas red-conjugated transferrin before fixation and staining with anti-M13 antibodies.
  • Analysis by confocal microscopy indicates that transfemn stains both the plasma membrane (ring staining at the edge of cells) and recycling endosomes (subcellular punctate staining).
  • a very similar and overlapping pattern is observed for Ml 3 antibody staining, consequently superimposition of the two images indicates colocalization (yellow hues) of the two signals at the punctate subcellular region and plasma membrane.
  • GMSM-K cells provide like patterns of staining with conjugated dextran and transferrin but are not stained by anti-M13 antibodies.
  • Plasma membranes are fractionated as described above.
  • the membrane fractions are characterized by the distribution of 5'-nucleosidase activity, a marker of plasma membrane. Plasma membranes are directly subjected to
  • Setapeptides and dodecapeptides are prepared by continuos flow solid-phase synthesis and analyzed by high-pressure liquid chromatography and mass spectrophotometry as described in previously (Cwirla et al, ibid).
  • Example 7 Determination of the efficacy of Hsp47-binding peptides and Hsp47 monocolonal antibodies in homing chemotherapeutic drugs to tumor sites in oral squamous carcinoma xenografts.
  • Doxorubicin is used as a model compound to show that the homing of drug to cell surface Hsp47 in well-differentiated tumors effectively reduces the dose of drug required for a tumor response, or increases the effectiveness of drug on the chemofherpeutic index in a human oral squamous cell carcinoma xenograft model
  • Doxorubicin immunocongujates are formulated using a malonate linker
  • monoclonal antibody is conjugated to BAMME-CH DMB linker in 0 5 M borate buffer m the presence of dimethyl formamide
  • the functional antibody is deblocked by the addition of 100 mM carbohydrazide and purified chromatographically
  • the deblocked functional antibody is reacted with 10-mM doxorubicin and purified chromatographically
  • Similar lmmunoconjugates have been shown to maintain the lmmunoreactivity of the antibody and to have equivalent potency to unconjugated free doxorubicin without manifesting toxicity as measured by weight loss and deaths in a nude mouse xenograft mode C.
  • Hsp47 binding protein doxorubicin conjugates Hsp47 peptides are synthesized by the UM Biopolymei Laboratory Core Laboratory and purified by high- performance liquid chromatography The peptides are conjugated to doxorubicin (Aldrich) with 10ethyl-3-(3-d ⁇ methyl-ammopropyl)carbod ⁇ m ⁇ de hydrochloride (EDC, Sigma) and N-hydroxysuccmimide (NHS, Sigma) The conjugates are then freed of reactants by gel filtration on Sephadex G25 The presence of free drug is monitored by
  • mice Specific-pathogen-free, adult mice (5-6 weeks of age) are maintained under conventional housing conditions Intravenous bolus doses of drug, free doxorubicin, peptide-conjugate doxorubicin, and monoclonal antibody conjugated doxorubicin, are administered through a lateral tail vein 2.
  • Sampling Blood is sampled at 5, 10, 15, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240, 360, 480, 960, and 1440 min after dosing.
  • hearts, lungs, livers, kidneys, spleens, skeletal muscles, and tumors are collected at the same times notes for blood samples. In each study, blood and tissues from mice killed 5 min after delivery of vehicle serve as controls.
  • Plasma and tissue concentrations of doxorubicin are determined by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Plasma samples are extracted by conventional procedures.
  • Tissue samples are thawed, immediately transfened to 17 x 100 mm polypropylene tubes that are held in an ice bath, and homogenized, using a Polytron (Brinkman Instruments, Westbury, NY), in parts (weight to volume) of phosphate- buffered saline (lJmM KH 2 Po 4 , 2.9 mM Na 2 HPO 4 , 154mM NaCl, pH 7.4, Biofluids, Inc., Rockville, MD). One part of each homogenate is then mixed with internal standard, extracted with chloroform/2 -propanol, and prepared for injection into the HPLC system.
  • phosphate- buffered saline lJmM KH 2 Po 4 , 2.9 mM Na 2 HPO 4 , 154mM NaCl, pH 7.4, Biofluids, Inc., Rockville, MD.
  • the HPLC system used includes a Hewlett-Packard (Palo Alto, CA) model 1100 autosampler and a Waters (Milford, MA) M45 pump.
  • the column employed is an
  • ALLTECH (Deerfield, IL) 10 ⁇ m C 18 Econosil column (250 length, 4.6 mm i.d.).
  • the mobile phase consists of acetonitrile: 0J2 M ortho-phosphoric acid (27:43, v/v) and is pumped at 1 ml/min.
  • Column eluent is monitored with an Aminco fluoromonitor set at excitation wavelength of 470 nm and emission wavelength >500 nm.
  • mice beanng tumors with Hsp47 homing drugs.
  • Mice with size- matched tumors are randomized into six treatment groups of no less than six animals per group vehicle only, free doxorubicin, doxorub ⁇ cm-Hsp47 binding peptide, doxorubicm-control nonbmdmg peptide, doxorubicm-monoclonal conjugate, Hsp47 monoclonal antibody Power analyses indicate that at least 6 animals per group are required to see a 30% difference in survival Generally, doxorubicin dosage in nude mice with human xenographs is 50 to 200 ⁇ g/week) Since he homing of drug to tumoi is more effective than free drug, initial studies are performed with dosages of 5, 10 and 15 ⁇ g/week The concentration of doxorubicin as equivalents is adjusted by measuring the absorbency of drug and conjugates at 490 nm and a calibration curve established to ascertain equivalents for peptide and mono
  • mice are treated with doxorubicin- Hsp47 binding peptide and doxorubicin-conjugated Hsp47 monoclonal antibodies at a dose of 30 ⁇ g of doxorubicin equivalent every 21 days for 84 days.
  • a Kaplan-Meier survival curve is constructed.
  • the primary tumor weight and size are ascertained, and the presence of lymph node and pulmonary metastasis is determined. Lymph node weight and lung weight are also measured as a gross measure of metastasis supported by histological assessment.
  • doxorubicin-equivalent per mouse Mice receiving elevated doses of drug receive a single dose of free doxorubicin, doxorubicin-Hsp47 binding peptide, or doxorubicin-Hsp47 monoclonal antibody. Animals are then followed for 14 days and the mean fraction of animals depicted in a Kaplan-Meier survival curve. Animals treated with tumor homing doxorubicin-conjugates survive longer an at lower equivalent doses of drug than animals receiving free drug. In addition, along with a greater survival is a reduction in tumor size as weight, and lymph node and drug metastasis.
  • Hsp47 eludes its retention receptor, erd2P, resulting in the appearance of Hsp47 on the cell surface associated with the tetraspanin protein CD9.
  • Hsp47 possesses a highly restricted binding
  • CBP2 product may provide a molecular target for chemotherapy and/or imaging of malignancies.
  • CPB2 collagen binding protein 2
  • ER endoplasmic reticulum
  • ATCC American Type Culture Collection
  • TBS Tris buffered saline
  • PBS phosphate buffered saline
  • PEG polyethylene glycoi
  • FITC fluoresceinistothiocyanate
  • chromosome locus 11q13 ⁇ 14 is commonly amplified in human cancers that include cancers of the
  • CBP2 mapped to chromosome 11 q13.5, shares a locus with Spot 14 a key gene expressed in lipogenic neoplasms (Moncur, 1998).
  • Hsp47 the CBP2 gene product, Hsp47, is limited to the ER-Golgi where it is first associated with procollagen chains at a very early point during translation of nascent chains (Sauk et al., 1994). Hsp47 is retained within these cellular compartments by recycling of the erd2 gene product, KDEL receptor, that
  • Hsp47 associates with the COOH-terminus sequence RDEL of Hsp47 (Sauk et al., 1997). However, in some tumors Hsp47 is expressed independent of its chaperone properties and eludes or leaks from this surveillance mechanism and manifests on the cell surface, but is not secreted into the medium. Although previous studies have demonstrated that Hsps such as gp96 are tightly surface-
  • Hsp47 like gp96, lacks sequence characteristics for farnesylation, palmitation, isoprenyllation or myristylation; consequently covalent bonding also appears to be an unlikely anchoring mechanism (Tamura Y, 1997; Altmeyer et
  • Hsp47 has been shown to associates with the tetraspanin protein CD9 in some epidermoid carcinoma cell lines (Hebert et al., 1999). Moreover, in these instances Hsp47 has been shown to be easily recovered, even without the use of cross-linking, from membrane immunoprecipitates utilizing anti-CD9 antibodies, suggesting the presence of hydrophobic interactions between these proteins (Hebert et al., 1999).
  • Hsp47 unlike many other chaperones has been shown to possess a limited number of intracellular ligands (Nakai et al., 1989). Although previous studies have defined the Hsp47 binding to a region defined by the anti- propeptide antibody SP1.D8 (Hu et al., 1995), to a region of procollagen to N- propeptides of the ⁇ 1(l)-chains between residues 23-151 , and to gelatin (Nagata
  • MATERIAL & METHODS Cell Lines Studies were performed using a number of established cell lines of human oral squamous cell carcinomas [SCC4, SCC9, SCC15, and SCC25] were obtained from ATCC, and a transformed normal oral keratinocyte cell line GMSM-K was courtesy of Dr. V. Murrah (UNC, Chapel Hill, NC). Breast carcinomas [HTB126, HTB127], and HTB125 normal breast cells were likewise obtained from ATCC. In addition, prostate cell lines PC-3, LNCaP, and PZ-HPV were courtesy of Dr. R. Franklin (UM, Baltimore, MD).
  • Monoclonal antibody was procured from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech (Piscataway, NJ). Monoclonal antibodies for cytomet c analyses were directly conjugated with fluorescein using 5(6) carboxyfluorescein-N-hydroxy succinimide ester kit (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) or labeled with SA-Red670TM following biotinylation of the antibody using EZ-LinkTM Sulfo-NHS-LC- Biotinylation kit (Pierce, Rockville, III).
  • Ph.D. -7 library consists of -2.8 x 10 9 electroporated sequences amplified once to yield ⁇ 70 copies of each sequence in 10 ⁇ l of supplied phage.
  • the Ph.D.-12 library consisted of -2.7 x 10 9 electroporated sequences amplified once to yield -55 copies/10 ⁇ l of supplied phage.
  • Bacteriophages displaying peptides recognized by Hsp47 were identified using the Ph.D.-7 or Ph.D.-12 kits (New England Biolabs; Beverly, MA) and the protocols modified for a biotinylated target. In essence, 96 wells of a microtitration plate were coated with 15 ⁇ l of streptavidin (1 mg/ml) in 135 ⁇ l of OJ M NaHC0 3 pH 8.6, with gentle agitation in a humidified chamber overnight at 4°C .
  • phage was precomplexed with biotinylated Hsp47 by adding 0J ⁇ g biotinylated Hsp47 and 2 x 10 11 pfu of the input phage in 400 ⁇ l TBS-Tween and incubated for 60 min.
  • the phage-target complex solution was then added to the washed blocked plates and incubated at room temperature for 10 min.
  • Biotin was added to a final concentration of 0J mM and incubated for 5 min. to displace streptavidin-binding phage. Non-binding phage were discarded and the plates washed 10 x with TBS-Tween (0.1 %).
  • the wells were then treated with 15 ⁇ l of 1 M Tris-HCI; pH 2.2, containing 1 mg/ml BSA for 5 minutes to elute Hsp47-phage.
  • the samples were neutralized with 1 M Tris-HCI; pH 9J , and amplified by adding to 20 ml of ER 2537 culture incubated at 37°C with vigorous shaking for 4.5 hrs.
  • the cultures were then transferred to fresh tubes centrifuged at 10,000 rpm, 4°C, for 10 mins.
  • the supernatants were transferred to fresh tubes and phage precipitated with 1/6 volume of PEG/NaCl at 4°C, overnight.
  • phage plaques appear blue when plated on media containing Xgal and IPTG. Blue colonies were selected for sequencing or used for a second round of panning. As a control streptavidin was used as a target and after three round of panning a to verify a
  • Hsp47-Binding Bacteriophages Clones of blue colonies from plates containing 50-200 colonies were transferred to nitrocellulose filters. The bacteria were washed from the filters with PBS containing 0.05% Tween 20 and 1 % bovine serum albumin, and the filters were then incubated for 30 min in the same buffer before washing three times with PBS-Tween. Following incubation for 1 hr in 5 ml of biotinylated Hsp47 (0.1- 2 ⁇ g/ml in PBS-Tween), the filters were again washed three times in PBS-Tween.
  • the positions of the clones that had secreted Hsp47-binding bacteriophages were then located by one of two methods: the filters were incubated with 5 ml of alkaline phosphatase-conjugated streptavidin (1/10,000 dilution in PBS-Tween; Pierce, Rockford, IL) for 1 hr at room temperature before extensive washing with PBS-Tween, or the filters were incubated for 1 hr in 5 ml of an anti-biotin antibody (1/50,000 dilution in PBS-Tween; Pierce, Rockford, IL), washed, and incubated with a rabbit anti-goat immunoglobulin antibody conjugated to alkaline phosphatase (1/5,000 dilution in PBS-Tween; Pierce, Rockford, IL).
  • alkaline phosphatase activity was revealed using a mixture of nitroblue tetrazolium/and 5 bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate tolidium (Bethesda Research Labs, Rockville, MD) as substrate.
  • Hsp47-binding sequences To validate our scoring set of Hsp47-binding sequences, a second set of Hsp47-binding sequences not part of the database used to generate the scoring matrix is necessary. To accomplish this a second library consisting of independent recombinant bacteriophages displaying random dodecapeptides was used (Ph.D-12, New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA). Sequences were then compared by position specific iterated BLAST, pattern Hit Initiated BLAST, and BLAST 2 sequences against each other (NCBI). In addition, the hydropathic profiles of two peptides were compared using the Weizmann Institute of Sciences Genome and Bioinformatics database.
  • Propidium iodide was used to assess cell cycle and stain for dead cells.
  • Immunofluorescence microscopy was carried out after the method of Tang et al, (Tang et al., 1994; Tang et al., 1993). To visualize cell surface Hsp47 or M13 bacteriophage, the cells were not permeabilized but treated and fixed with 1-% paraformaldehyde as
  • the cells were blocked with 10% pig serum in PBS for 1 hr. The cells were then incubated with anti-Hsp47 or anti-M13 bacteriophage antibodies (Amersham Pharmacia-Biotech, Piscataway, NJ), washed with PBS, and incubated for 1 h with goat anti-rabbit IgG conjugated with either fluorescein or Texas red. Coverslips were mounted in mounting media containing an antibleaching agent (Kirkegaard & Perry Laboratories, Inc.; Gaithersburg, MD). Cells were examined under a Zeiss II photomicroscope equipped with epifluorescence. Cells untreated with primary antibodies were used as negative controls.
  • Confocal images were collected using a Zeiss LSM410 confocal microscope. A FT of 488/568 with a barrier filter of 590 was used to detect Texas red staining and a FT of 560 with a barrier at 515-540 were used to generate fluorescein labeled images. Digital images were collected on a ZIP drive and figures generated using Adobe Photoshop 3.0 software (Adobe Systems Inc. Mountain View, CA). No fluorescence was associated with cells after incubation with secondary antibodies alone.
  • lysosomal compartment To label the lysosomal compartment, cells were incubated with 1 mg/ml lysine-fixable FITC-dextran (Molecular Probes; Eugene, OR) in growth medium for 4h at 37°C in 5% C0 2 . After washing, cells were incubated an additional 30 min to chase the dextran from the early endosomal to the lysosomal compartments.
  • FITC-dextran Molecular Probes
  • the samples were treated with bacterial collagenase to eliminate the possibility of cytoplasmic derived procollagen-Hsp47_ binding to the cell surface integrin receptors as a result of cell fractionation.
  • the initial supernatant was centrifuged in a Sorvall SS34 rotor at 48,000 g at 4°C for 15 min. and the high-density microsome pellet was resuspended in 40 ⁇ l of buffer.
  • the supernatant was further centrifuged in a Beckman 70J rotor at 300,000 g at 4°C for 75 min. and the low-density microsome pellet was resuspended in 60 ⁇ l of buffer.
  • the membrane fractions were characterized by the distribution of 5'- nucleosidase activity, a marker of plasma membrane (Avruch and Wallach, 1971 ). Plasma membranes were directly subjected to PAGE and Western analysis. For Western blots, proteins run on SDS-PAGE were immediately electrotransferred to nitrocellulose paper and blocked with 10% non-fat dry milk
  • NFDM neuropeptide deficiency virus
  • Antiserum or perimmune serum was diluted 1 :2000 in the same buffer and incubated with gentle shaking overnight. The nitrocellulose was then rinsed three times for 5 min. in TBS/Tween.
  • Antibodies to Hsp47 and M13 bacteriophage were detected with [ 125 l]-labeled protein A (New England Nuclear, Boston, Mass) or Western blot analysis as described previously (Sauk et al., 1997)
  • nucleotide sequences of the corresponding coding region are represented, although their frequencies do not always correspond to those expected from the relative numbers of codons encoding each residue.
  • the sequences of septapeptides displayed by 54 Hsp47-binding bacteriophages obtained by panning were determined by DNA sequence analysis of the corresponding region of the bacteriophage genome.
  • the peptide sequences from the 54 clones that bound Hsp47 were first considered as a single population and compared with those from the 70 clones picked randomly from the starting library.
  • Tabulation of the hydrophilicities of the Hsp47-binding bacteriophages revealed that two general populations of peptides that were selected by panning. One group of peptides was represented by hydrophilic peptides and the other by a smaller hydrophobic group of peptides (Figure 1).
  • the five-residue spacer linking the variable septapeptides to the mature pill protein contained no enriched residues. Thus, indicating that the spacer residues are unlikely to contribute to the binding activity of selected bacteriophages, allowing us to look only within the variable septapeptide sequences for the presence of a binding motif. Inspection of the selected hydrophobic peptides revealed that a residue motif best described as XHyHyXXXHyHy, where Hy is a large hydrophobic amino acid (usually W,L, or F) and X is any amino acid. This core motif is also identified in selected residue from a Ph.D-12 library represented by a motif XHyHyXXHyXXXXHyHy.
  • procollagen I was a natural ligand for Hsp47
  • BLAST program analyses were performed to assess the sequence homology between bacteriophage-displayed peptides and procollagen I and the selected
  • procollagen molecule Interestingly, most of the hydrophobic peptides were localized to regions within the ⁇ /-propeptide region (residues 59-71 ) or the C- propeptide region (residues 1344-1445). Conversely, the most of the hydrophilic peptides were localized the regions with the helical region of procollagen (residues: 283-295, 470-482,666-678, 727-739, 1040-1052, and 1087-1099) with only one peptide localized to a sequence within the ⁇ /-propeptide region (residues 100-112) (figure 4).
  • HBP Hsp47-binding phage
  • GMSM-K an established epithelial cell line, treated in a like manner, revealed little or no staining.
  • Figure 5 depicts a representative tumor cell line, SCC4 cells, compared to GMSM-K cells. Results similar to those obtained for GMSM-K cells were also obtained for HTB125 and PZ-HPV normal beast and prostate cell lines respectively.
  • HBP staining was primarily limited to punctate vesicles in the cytoplasm and a perinuclear zone ( Figure 8).
  • SCC4 cells were feed latex beads and HBP and then fixed and processed by for immunofluorescence using anti-M13 antibodies.
  • M13 signal could not be located at the periphery of the bead, suggesting that there was minimal association with the phagosomes.
  • BiP binds type I procollagen pro alpha chains with mutations in the carboxyl-terminal propeptide synthesized by cells from patients with osteogenesis imperfecta. J. Biol. Chem. 268, 18226-18233.
  • the iron transport protein NRAMP2 is an integral membrane glycoprotein that colocalizes with transferrin in recycling endosomes. J.Exp.Med. 189, 831-841.
  • Endoplasmic reticulum protein Hsp47 binds specifically to the N- terminal globular domain of the amino-propeptide of the procollagen I alpha 1 (I)- chain. Journal of Cellular Biochemistry 59, 350-367.
  • HSP47 as a possible marker for malignancy of tumors in vivo. In Vivo 8, 285-288.
  • transformation-sensitive heat shock protein binds specifically to Fetuin. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 764, 259-264.
  • Hsp47 and the translation-translocation machinery cooperate in the production of alpha 1 (1) chains of type I procollagen. Journal of Biological Chemistry 269, 3941-3946.
  • Hsp47 binds to the KDEL receptor and cell surface expression is modulated by cytoplasmic and endosomal pH. Connect.Tissue Res. 37:105-119.
  • Hsp47 and cyclophilin B traverse the endoplasmic reticulum with procollagen into pre- Golgi intermediate vesicles.
  • Cytosolic factors block antibody binding to the C-terminal cytoplasmic tail of the KDEL receptor. European Journal of Cell Biology 65, 298-304.
  • Single stranded DNA was purified from 70 bacteriophage clones from the PhD library, and the sequences of the septapeptides displayed by these bacteriophages were deduced from the DNA sequence of the corresponding region of the bacteriophage genome.
  • the figure shows the frequency of occurrence of each amino acid calculated as the number observed divided by the total number of residues in the 70 septapeptides.
  • the amino acids are grouped according to the number of codons that specify them, and the frequency expected for each group if all codons were utilized with equal efficiency is shown by open bars (Cwirla et al., 1990) .
  • Figure 3 Schematic Model of the Peptide-Binding Site of Hsp47.
  • the peptide backbone is shown as an extended chain.
  • the side chains of two adjacent residues extend into deep pockets in the peptide-binding site that have overall preferences for large hydrophobic or aromatic side chains.
  • the data in figure 3 indicate that amino acids at position 2&3 in septa peptides and 2&3 and/or 11&12 make favorable contacts with Hsp47 side chains.
  • the hydrophobic pockets are flanked by regions that containing charged residues at position 4,5,6 in septapeptides and positions 4 &5 and 7,8,9 & 10 in
  • Figure 4 The Hydropathic Profile of Procollagen I Compared with Selected Peptides from PhD-12 Library.
  • FIG. 5 FITC-antiphage M13 Staining of GMSM-K (Control) and SCC-4 Cells.
  • Panel a and b represent control GMSM-K cells and SCC-4 cells respectively depicting membrane staining.
  • Panels c and d represent GMSM-K cells and SCC-4 cells respectively, in which the cells have been permeabilized to demonstrate intracellular staining.
  • the areas within the boxes represent FITC staining for phage-peptide.
  • FIG. 6 immunoprecipitation of Membrane Proteins by Anti-Phage M13 Antibodies.
  • Lanes a-f represent M13 clones selected from PhD-7 and Ph-D12 libraries. Lanes a-c depict PhD-7 clone 3,5,&7 respectively and lanes d-f depict PhD-12 clone 2,5,&9 respectively.
  • Figure 7 Confocal Microscopic Images of SCC-4 cells Stained with Anti- Hsp47 and Anti-M13 antibodies.
  • Panel a depicts tumor cell stained with FITC conjugated anti-M13 antibodies
  • panel b depicts Texas red conjugated anti-Hsp47 antibodies
  • panel c depicts spatial co-localization, yellow hues, of FITC and Texas red staining.
  • Figure 8 Confocal Microscopic Images of SCC-4 cells Stained with FITC- Dextran and Texas red -Anti -M 13 antibodies.
  • Panel a depicts tumor cell stained with FITC conjugated Dextran
  • panel b depicts Texas red conjugated anti-M13 antibodies
  • panel c depicts spatial co- localization of FITC and Texas red staining. Only a minor portion of anti-M13 antibodies co-localizes with FITC-Dextran, yellow hues.
  • Figure 9 Confocal Microscopic Images of SCC-4 cells Stained with FITC- Transferrin and Texas red-Anti-M13 antibodies.
  • Panel a depicts tumor cell stained with FITC conjugated Transferrin
  • panel b depicts Texas red conjugated anti-M13 antibodies
  • panel c depicts spatial co- localization, yellow hues, of FITC and Texas red staining.
  • Figure 10 Fluorescein isothiocyanate Conjugated Dodecapeptide Uptake in SCC Cells.
  • Dodecapeptide corresponding to a cloned peptide was synthesized and conjugated to fluorescein isothiocyanate as described in Methods.
  • the peptide was then incubated with SCC-4 cells for 30 min., washed and processed for fluorescence microscopy.
  • the green fluorescence depicted about the nuclear area and in punctate staining represent cellular distribution of the peptide uptake.

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Abstract

This invention relates, e.g., to colligin/Hsp47 molecules which are expressed on the surface of carcinoma cells and to the use of such expressed molecules as targets for, e.g., therapeutic agents or imaging agents. The invention also relates to peptides which bind specifically to external domains of such surface-localized Hsp47 molecules.

Description

SURFACE LOCALIZED COLLIGIN/Hsp47 IN CARCINOMA CELLS
This application claims the benefit of U. S. Provisional Application 60/124,481 , filed March 15, 1999, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Description of the Invention This invention relates, e.g., to colligin/Hsp47 molecules which are expressed on the surface of carcinoma cells and to the use of such expressed molecules as targets for, e.g., therapeutic agents or imaging agents. The invention also relates to peptides which bind specifically to external domains of such surface-localized Hsp47 molecules.
The heat shock protein colligin/CBP2/Hsp47 (sometimes referred to herein as Hsp47) can act as a molecular chaperone for collagen. In normal cells, Hsp47 becomes closely associated with nascent chains of procollagen early during its translation and accompanies the protein from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the Golgi, whereupon collagen dissociates and is secreted, and the chaperone is recycled back to the ER. It is disclosed herein that, surprisingly, in carcinoma cells Hsp47 is not efficiently recycled to the ER but, rather, is localized on (e.g., leaks onto) the surface of the cells.
Examples 1 and 6 show that Hsp47 is localized on the surface of a number of carcinoma cell lines, including human oral squamous cell carcinoma lines, a murine epidermal cell line, breast cancer carcinoma lines and prostate cancer cell lines, but is not expressed on the surface of control, non-carcinoma cells. Thus, cell-surface localized Hsp47 can serve as a marker and/or "homing target" for carcinoma cells. Example 2 shows that at least of portion of surface localized Hsp47 is available for binding to, e.g.. a procollagen propeptide to which it normally binds in the intracellular environment. By targeting carcinoma cells with an agent that interacts specifically with available portions of Hsp47 expressed on the surface of the cells, one can deliver therapeutic agents efficiently, allowing for reduced doses required to achieve therapeutic effects and reduced side effects; and one can sensitively detect or image carcinoma cells, or carcinomas or tumors containing them, above a background of non-carcinoma cells.
This invention relates to a method for modulating a cell which expresses Hsp47 on its surface, comprising administering to the cell an effective amount of an agent which binds to an (at least one) external domain of Hsp47. The invention also relates to a method for treating a patient suffering from a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some of the carcinoma cells, comprising administering to the patient an effective amount of an agent which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47. In a preferred embodiment, the agent comprises a targeting moiety which is specific for Hsp47, and a therapeutic moiety, e.g., a drug or toxic substance. In one embodiment, the targeting moiety comprises an antibody, or a fragment or variant thereof, which is specific for an external domain of Hsp47. In another embodiment, the targeting moiety comprises a peptide which is specific for an external domain of Hsp47 , e.g., a peptide having the consensus motif XHyHyXXHyXXXXHyHy (SEQ ID NO: 1) or the consensus motif HyXXXHyHyXXHyXXX (SEQ ID NO: 2). In a most preferred embodiment, the peptide has the sequence of one of SEQ ID NOs: 3 - 25. In yet another embodiment, the targeting moiety comprises a bacteriophage on whose surface is a peptide such as those disclosed above.
The invention also relates to a diagnostic imaging method of detecting a cell which expresses Hsp47 on its surface {e.g., a carcinoma cell, or a carcinoma or tumor comprising such a cell), comprising contacting the cell with an agent comprising a targeting moiety that binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47, and a detectable label (detectable moiety) {e.g., a label which is detectable by MRI, X-Ray, gamma scintigraphy, CT scanning, or the like). The targeting moiety can comprise, e.g., an antibody, a peptide or a bacteriophage as described above.
The invention also relates to a method of screening for an agent which binds specifically to a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some of the carcinoma cells, comprising identifying an agent which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47. In a preferred embodiment, the agent is useful for treating a carcinoma in a patient or for diagnosing a carcinoma in a patient.
The invention also relates to kits for detecting a carcinoma cell or for treating a carcinoma cell, comprising a targeting moiety which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47
The invention also relates to peptides which bind specifically to an external domain of Hsp47. In a preferred embodiment, the peptide contains the consensus motif
XHyHyXXHyXXXXHyHy (SEQ ID NO: 1) or the consensus motif HyXXXHyHyXXHyXXX (SEQ ID NO 2) In a most preferred embodiment, the peptide is one of SEQ ID NOs 3 - 25
Any type of cell which expresses Hsp47 on its surface can be modulated, treated and/or detected by the methods of the invention In a preferred embodiment, the cell is a carcinoma cell The term "carcinoma" as used herein means any of the various types of malignant neoplasms derived from epithelial tissue in any of several sites, e g , skm, basal cells, large intestine, lung, colon, breast, bladder, oral, head and neck, larynx, nasopharynx, adrenal cortex, apocπne gland, cloaca, embryonal cells, kidney, liver, pancreas, or prostate The term "carcinoma cell" as used herein applies to a carcinoma cell, in vivo or in vitro, whether it occurs as an individual cell or m the context of a tissue, carcinoma in any stage of development, a tumor, a metastasis (including a micrometastasis), or the like
Sarcoma cells are also encompassed by the invention The term "sarcoma" as used herein means any connective tissue neoplasm, formed by the proliferation of mesodermal cells Among the many types of sarcomas encompassed by the invention are fibrosarcomsa, rhabdosarcoma, neurofibrosarcoma and osteosarcoma The term "sarcoma cell" as used herein applies to a sarcoma cell, in vivo or in vitro, whether it occurs as an individual cell or in the context of a tissue, a sarcoma in any stage of development, a tumor, a metastasis (including a micrometastasis), or the like Methods to study sarcoma cells, particularly in relation to the expression of Hsp47, are disclosed, e g , in Monno et al (1997) In Vivo 11, 261-4, Moπno et al (1997) In Vivo l±, 17-21 , Shirakami et al (1995) In Vivo 2, 513-8, Shirakami et al (1995) In Vivo 9, 509-12, Monno et al (1995) In Vivo 9, 503-8, and Monno et al (1994) In Vivo &, 285-8
Methods and reagents such as those discussed herein in relation to carcinoma cells are, of course, applicable to any type of cell having surface expression of Hsp47, and to any physiological or pathological condition associated with such expression
Hsp47 has been cloned and/or sequenced from a number of organisms, including, e g , chicken (Hiroyashi et al (1991) Mol and Cell Biol 11, 4036-4044), mouse (Takechi et al (1992) Eur J of Biochem 206, 323-329), and human (e g , Nakamura. accession number #D83174 in the DDJB/EMBL/GenBank databases, Ikegawa et al
(1995) Cytogenet Cell Genet 21, 182-186), and Jam et al (1994) Arch Biochem & Bwphys 214, 23-30) The term "Hsp47," as used herein, encompasses, e.g., wild type Hsp47 from any mammalian source, preferably human, or a variant thereof. By "variant" of Hsp47 is meant, e.g., any insertion, deletion, mutant form or substitution, either conservative or non-conservative, in either an internal or external domain of the protein, wherein such changes do not substantially alter the binding of the external domain to a targeting moiety as defined herein. By "conservative substitutions" is meant by combinations such as Gly, Ala; Val, He, Leu; Asp, Glu; Asn, Gin; Ser, Thr; Lys, Arg; and Phe, Tyr. Variants can include, e.g., homologs, analogs, muteins and mimetics (mimotopes). Many types of protein modifications, including post-translational modifications, are included. See, e.g., modifications disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,935,835. Hsp47 molecules which are modified so that they possess properties not normally associated with wild type Hsp47 are included, provided that an external domain can bind specifically to a targeting moiety of the invention.
An agent which binds to Hsp47 expressed {e.g., localized, located) on the surface of a cell can bind to one or more of any portion(s) or fragment(s) of the Hsp47 molecule, of any length, which are available for binding. Such an available sequence is referred to herein as an "external domain" of the Hsp47 protein.
An agent or moiety which "binds specifically" to ("is specific for"; binds "preferentially" to) an external domain of Hsp47 interacts with it, or forms or undergoes a physical association with it, in an amount and for a sufficient time to allow detection of the cell, or to modulate it {e.g., to elicit a therapeutic response). By "specifically" or "preferentially" is meant that the agent has a higher affinity, e.g., a higher degree of selectivity, for an external domain of Hsp47 than for other molecules located on the surface of a cell. Similarly, an agent or moiety which binds specifically to a particular type of cell, e.g. a carcinoma cell, has a higher affinity, e.g., a higher degree of selectivity, for that type of cell than for a normal {e.g. , non-carcinoma) cell, such that the binding allows the carcinoma cell to be detected and distinguished from a background of normal cells, and/or allows for contacting a therapeutic moiety with a carcinoma cell but not (to a significant degree) with neighboring non-carconoma cells. The affinity or degree of specificity can be determined by any of a variety of routine procedures, e.g., competitive binding studies. See, e.g., Czerwinski et al. (1998) Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. 25. 11,520-11, 525 and Moe et al. (1998). Phar. Res. 21, 31-38. The portion of an agent which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47 can be referred to as a "targeting moiety," a "site-directed macromolecule," a "ligand" or an "affinity ligandJ
Any agent or moiety which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47 is encompassed by the invention. One type of targeting moiety comprises an antibody which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47. The term "antibody" as used herein can mean a polyclonal or, preferably, a monoclonal antibody, or a fragment (of any size) of a polyclonal or monoclonal antibody, e.g., Fv, Fab', Fab, F(ab')2, Fab'Fc, or the like. Single chain antibodies are also encompassed by the invention. Any form of immunoglobulin is included, e.g., immunoglobulins A,D,E,G or M. One may wish to employ an intact antibody {e.g., an IgG molecule), a bi- or multi-valent antibody which has specificity for at least two antigens, or a univalent antibody fragment. Antibodies of the invention can be isolated from natural sources; from hybridomas lymphomas, or the like; or they can be produced by synthetic and/or recombinant means. They can be partially or completely humanized, using conventional, art-recognized procedures, as described, e.g., in Jones et al. (1986). Nature 121,522; Riechmann et α/.(1988). Nature 232, 323 ; Verhoyen et α/.(1988). Science 229,1534; Carter et α/.(1992). Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA &9_, 4285; Sandhu (1992). Crit. Rev. Biotech. 12,437; and Singer et al. (1933). J. Immunol. 150-2844. Methods to screen for, isolate, purify, manipulate, etc. antibodies which exhibit the requisite specificity and/or affinity are conventional and routine in the art and are disclosed in, e.g., U.S. Pat. 4,196,265; Roitt I., (1994). Essential Immunology, Blackwell Scientific Publications, London; Coligan et al., Current Protocols in Immunology; Barnes et al, in Methods in Molecular Biology, Vol. 10, pages 79-104 (Humana Press 1992); Harlow et al, Antibodies: A Laboratory Manual, page 726 (Cold Spring Harbor
Pub. 1988); and Current Protocols in Immunology; Edited by John E. Coligan et al. , John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Another type of targeting moiety comprises a peptide which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47. Such a peptide can be of any size or amino acid composition effective to bind specifically to an external domain of Hsp47, so as to allow the formation of a detectable entity or the production of a therapeutic response. In a preferred embodiment, the peptide is not full length collagen, and is not naturally occurnng collagen or a fragment thereof In a preferred embodiment, the peptide is less than about 90 ammo acids, e g , about 80, 70, 60, 50, 40, 30, 20 or 10 amino acids, most preferably about 12-16 ammo acids The invention also encompasses larger polypeptides, which can be, e g , as long as a full-length procollagen, providing that the polypeptide can bind to an external domain of Hsp47, so as to allow the formation of a detectable entity or the production of a therapeutic response
Methods to determine if a peptide (or any other agent of interest) binds to a surface-expressed Hsp47 molecule are conventional and routine in the art See, e g , Takemoto et al (1992) Arch Biochem and Biophys 226, 323-329, Altemeyer et al (1996) International J of Cancer 62, 340-349, Ferranm et al (1992) International J of Cancer 51, 613-619, Ullrich et al (1986) Proc Natl Acad So. S2, 3121-3125, Vanburskirk et al (1989) J Exp Med 12Q, 1799-1809, Freedman et al (1992) J of Neuroimmunology 4 , 231-238, Sauk et al (1997) Connect Tissue Res 22, 105-119), and U S Patent 5,932,478 Such methods include, e g , detection of an agent which is tagged, directly or indirectly, with a fluorescent label by lmmunofluorescence microscopy, including confocal microscopy, or by flow cytometry (FACscan), detection of a radioactively labeled agent by autoradiography, electron microscopy, lmmunostammg, subcellular fractionation, or the like Examples 1 and 6 illustrate some typical methods A number of peptides or peptide sequences have been identified which interact with mtracellular Hsp47, and/or with the isolated protein These peptides include, e g , the region of procollagen defined by the anti-propeptide antibody SP1 D8 (Hu et al (1995) J of Cellular Biochemistry 5_2, 350-367), the N-propeptide region of procollagen of the αl(I)-chaιn between residues 23-151, in particular residues 23-108, Gly-Xaa-Yaa sequences of procollagen, where X and Y are, independently, any ammo acid, the (Pro-
Pro-Gly)n model sequences of collagen, and portions of gelatin (Nagata et al (1988) Biochem Biophys Res Comm 153, 428-434) Such peptides, or variants, mimetics (mimotopes), muteins, analogs or fragments thereof, can be tested readily for then ability to interact specifically with an external domain of Hsp47, and those which bind avidly and/or selectively can be used as targeting moieties m the invention
By "vanants" is meant any insertion, deletion, mutant form or substitution, either conservative or non-conservative, where such changes do not substantially alter the bindmg of the peptide to an external domain of Hsp47 Types of vanants include those discussed herein with reference to Hsp47 molecules Among the modified peptides which are encompassed by the invention are peptidomimetics, which can be generated and tested by routine, conventional means See, e g , al-Obeidi et al (1998) Mol Biotechnol 2, 205-23, ieber-Emmons et al (1997) Curr Opin Biotechnol &, 435-41 ,
Bowditch et al (1996) Blood &8_, 4579-4584, and Partidos et al (1997) Immunology Letters 51, 113-116
Methods to measure such binding constants/determine avidity are conventional in the art See, e g , Blond-Elgumdi et al (1993) Cell 25_, 111 '-728 In a preferred embodiment, the binding constant (avidity) of the peptide or peptide region with Hsp47 is 15-45 μm, most preferably, the binding constant is 20-30 μm
A technique for identifying peptides that can bind specifically and/or avidly to surface-expressed Hsp47 (external domains) is bacteriophage display (phage display) combined with affinity panning See, e g , Smith et al (1993) Methods Enzvmol 217. 228-57, Smith et al (1995) J Biol Chem 22D, 18,323-328, Krtamura et α/ (1992) Cell
62, 823-831, Burkhardt et α/ (1991) Proc Natl Acad Sci 8_&, 7410-7414, Pasqualim et al (1996) Brazilian J of Med & Biol Res 22, 1151-1 158 , Pasqualim et al (1996) Molecular Psychiatry 1, 423, Ruoslahti (1996) Ann Rev of Cell <£ Developmental Biology 12, 697-715, Ruoslahti (1997) Kidney International 51, 1413-1417, Hutchcroft et al (1992) J Biol Chem 262, 8613-8619, and Borst et al (1993) Immunological
Reviews 122, 49-84 Among the types of phage which can be used are single stranded filamentous phage, e g , fd, F2, F5, Ml 3, and variants thereof Briefly, a set of random peptides of a chosen length (e g , 7-mers or 12-mers) are cloned into and displayed on the surface of bacteriophage, and phage are selected which bind preferentially to cells bearing surface-expressed Hsp47, following one or moie cycles of selection
A demonstration of such panning is shown in Example 5 Phage-displayed 12- mer peptides identified m this Example contain, in general, either the consensus motif, XHyHyXXHyXXXXHyHy (SEQ ID NO 1) oi the consensus motif HyXXXHyHyXXHyXXX (SEQ ID NO 2), where X is independently any ammo acid and Hy is independently any hydrophobic ammo acid In a preferred embodiment, the hydrophobic ammo acid is a large one, e g , W (Trp), L(Leu) or F(Phe) Among the peptides having the consensus motif SEQ ID NO 1 are those having the sequence of SEQ ID NOJ to SEQ ID NO: 13, as shown in Table 1. These peptides can be characterized as predominantly hydrophobic peptides.
TABLE 1 PREDOMINANTLY HYDROPHOBIC PEPTIDES WHWQWTPWSIQP (SEQ. ID NO. 3)
WHYPWFQNWAMA (SEQ. ID NO. 4)
WHWNGWKYPVVD (SEQ. ID NO. 5)
FHWPTLYNMYIP (SEQ. ID NO. 6)
FHWSWYTPSRPS (SEQ. ID NO. 7) WHWSYPLWGPLE (SEQ. ID NO. 8)
NWTLPTAQFAYL (SEQ. ID NO. 9)
VLIPVKALRAVW (SEQ. ID NO. 10)
TPQPNMMLRISP (SEQ. ID NO. 11 )
ANFTFFKLMPVS (SEQ. ID NO. 12) KVPPALPSPWTS (SEQ. ID NO. 13)
Among the peptides having the consensus motif SEQ ID NO: 2 are those having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 14 to SEQ ID NO: 25, as shown in Table 2. These peptides can be characterized as predominantly hydrophobic peptides.
TABLE 2 PREDOMINANTLY HYDROPHILIC PEPTIDES
GLYMHPPTHTMR (SEQ. ID NO. 14)
EGRSTLTSLTII (SEQ. ID NO. 15)
SGAANQPSATSG (SEQ. ID NO. 16)
KHNEQTFHPKVP (SEQ. ID NO. 17) TVLHSLAHQTFI (SEQ. ID NO. 18)
AQSMDVYSRQPF (SEQ. ID NO. 19)
NTPTAPWHPGES (SEQ. ID NO. 20)
RYMNDHKSPTDS (SEQ. ID NO. 21 )
SNAQEDVHDLSS (SEQ. ID NO. 22) TPSPNKSTVSPG (SEQ. ID NO. 23)
KFMQAQAGMTHN (SEQ. ID NO. 24)
LDSRYSLQAAMY (SEQ. ID NO. 25)
The predominantly hydrophobic peptides identified in Example 5 surprisingly do not exhibit specific sequence identity to regions of procollagen, which is known to bind to Hsp47 but, taking into account the hydropathic profile of the amino acids (see discussion in Example 5), nevertheless map primarily to regions within the N-propeptide region of collagen (residues 59-71) or the C-propeptide region (residues 1344-1445). The predominantly hydrophilic peptides also do not exhibit specific sequence identity to regions of procollagen, but generally map to regions within the helical region of procollagen.
Among the phage-displayed 7-mer peptides identified in Example 5 are those having the sequence of SEQ ID NOJ6 to SEQ ID NO: 62, as shown in Table 3.
TABLE 3 7-MER PEPTIDES
GITSLLS (SEQ. ID NO. 26) FHSGWPQ (SEQ. ID NO. 27)
TTNYYTN (SEQ. ID NO. 28)
EPAHRSY (SEQ. ID NO. 29)
SNAATEY (SEQ. ID NO. 30)
KLSMTIP (SEQ. ID NO. 31 ) LVNMPTP (SEQ. ID NO. 32)
SPNPWYG (SEQ. ID NO. 33)
SLSTTQK (SEQ. ID NO. 34)
TDTPRRQ (SEQ. ID NO. 35)
KLTNTVL (SEQ. ID NO. 36) NWVPRTN (SEQ. ID NO. 37)
TATSLQW (SEQ. ID NO. 38)
KLPNVNS (SEQ. ID NO. 39)
NVPYVVH (SEQ. ID NO. 40)
DRFSPMP (SEQ. ID NO. 41 ) HFQPRHH (SEQ. ID NO. 42)
HSTSTPH (SEQ. ID NO. 43)
YVASPWQ (SEQ. ID NO. 44)
FRYDTFP (SEQ. ID NO. 45)
HNYLNLT (SEQ. ID NO. 46) ISQGTTP (SEQ. ID NO. 47)
EFLPVQL (SEQ. ID NO. 48)
HNYLNLT (SEQ. ID NO. 49)
HPSLN P (SEQ. ID NO. 50)
HSTSVTQ (SEQ. ID NO. 51 ) YVASWPO (SEQ. ID NO. 52)
ITVQKNT (SEQ. ID NO. 53)
VAGNPLQ (SEQ. ID NO. 54)
FTIPSNL (SEQ. ID NO. 55)
NVMIKGQ (SEQ. ID NO. 56) QKPPPYD (SEQ. ID NO. 57)
NVPYGVH (SEQ. ID NO. 58)
AFLPSKL (SEQ. ID NO. 59)
HFQPRHH (SEQ. ID NO. 60) NTSPLEL (SEQ. ID NO. 61 )
DFNYNPL (SEQ. ID NO. 62)
Peptides according to the invention include the SEQ IDs disclosed herein, as well as peptides which are extended by as many as, e.g., 20 additional amino acids {e.g., about 1 , 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 or 18) on either or both ends of the peptide, provided that the extended peptide exhibits the requisite specificity/avidity for an external domain of Hsp47.
Preferably, a peptide of the invention is "isolated ' e.g., is in a form other than it occurs in nature, e.g., in a buffer, in a dry form awaiting reconstitution, as part of a kit, etc. In some embodiments, the peptide is substantially purified. The term "substantially purified", as used herein, refers to a molecule, such as a peptide, that is substantially free of other proteins, lipids, carbohydrates, nucleic acids, and other biological materials with which it is naturally associated. For example, a substantially pure molecule, such as a peptide, can be at least about 60%, by dry weight, preferably about 70%, 80%, 90%, 95% or 99%) the molecule of interest. One skilled in the art can purify peptides using standard protein purification methods and the purity of the peptides can be determined using standard methods including, e.g., polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (e.g., SDS-PAGE), column chromatography {e.g., high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), and amino-terminal amino acid sequence analysis.
Once peptides exhibiting a specificity for surface-expressed Hsp47 are identified, free energy calculations or other properties can be determined for each, and this information can be used to design other agents or drugs, e.g., organic compounds, which bind preferentially to surface expressed Hsp47. Such methods are conventional. See, e.g., Rejyo et al. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 22, 8945-8950; Gabius et al. (1998) Phar. Res. 15., 23-30; and Selz et al. (1998) Biophysical Jol. 25_, 2332-2343. Phage display/panning techniques can not only serve to identify peptides which can be used in the invention, but can also provide bacteriophage bearing such peptides on their surface which can be used in the invention. That is, a targeting moiety of the invention can be the peptide-bearing bacteriophage, itself. Such bacteriophage exhibit the advantage that they are readily internalized into the ER of cells to which they adhere. See, e.g., Example 6. In one aspect of the invention, a targeting moiety as above is used to deliver a therapeutic moiety (e g , a drug or toxic substance) to a cell which expresses Hsp47 on it surface {e g , a carcinoma cell, for example one which constitutes part of a tissue or a tumor) A therapeutic agent of the invention preferably comprises a targeting moiety and, associated with it, a therapeutic moiety A therapeutic agent can modulate a cell either positively or negatively, providing that it has a net therapeutic effect on the environment in which the cell resides (e g , a tissue, tumor, metastasis, patient, or the like) By "modulate" is meant that any physiological response of the cell, e g , a metabolic activity, a response to an internal or external environmental factor, a synthetic or catabohc process, activation, repression, etc , is altered The therapeutic agent can achieve inhibition or suppression of growth, killing, destruction, elimination, control, modification, etc of the cell or tissue Cytostatic, cytolytic, cytotoxic, and carcmostatic effects are included A therapeutic agent can suppress a neoplastic phenotype, or it can interfere with normal function of, or otherwise incapacitate, a cell to which it is delivered In one embodiment, the therapeutic agent can prevent the establishment, growth or metastasis of a carcinoma, e g , can prevent the reccurrence of a carcinoma Representative examples of antitumor agents, such as, e g , immune activators and tumor proliferation inhibitors, are disclosed, e g , in U S Patent No 5,662,896 "Treatment" of, or the ehcitation of a "therapeutic response" in, a cell, tissue, tumor, metastasis, patient, or the like, by a therapeutic agent (e g , comprising a drug or toxic agent) is defined herein as an action which can bring about a response such as those discussed above By an "effective amount" of a therapeutic agent is meant an amount which is sufficient to bring about such a response
Methods to assay whether an agent elicits a therapeutic effect are routine and conventional, and can be performed in vitro or in vivo A typical method for performing pharmacokinetics in an animal model is shown in Example 7 A typical animal model for testing the effect of an agent on tumors is the human oral squamous cell carcinoma xenograft model, is shown in Example 7 Among the factors which can be assayed are survival rate of the animal, reduction in size of a treated tumor, and the presence oi absence of metastases, such as lymph node oi lung metastasis
Any of a wide variety of therapeutic moieties is encompassed by the invention, including therapeutic compounds which are used currently, but are delivered to cells by other methods The therapeutic moieties can be isolated from natural sources, or can be produced by synthetic and/or recombinant means, all of which are well-known to one of ordinary skill in the art Among the drugs or therapeutic moieties which can be used in the invention are chemotherapeutic and/or cytotoxic agents such as, e g , steroids, antimetabohtes, anthracychne, vmcaalkaloids, neocarzinostatm (NCS), adnamycm, dideoxycytidme, cisplatm, doxorubicin, pirarubicm, melphalan and daunomycm, or the like Methods to attach such moieties to targeting moieties are routine and conventional For example, Example 7 illustrates methods to attach doxorubicin to an antibody or peptide targeting agent In one embodiment, the therapeutic moiety comprises a toxin such as, e g , ncm
(e g , the A and/or B chain thereof, or the deglycosylated form), poisonous lectms, diphtheria toxm, exotoxm from Psuedomonas aeruginosa, abrm, modeccm, botuhna toxm, alpha-amanitan, pokeweed antiviral protein (PAP, including PAPI, PAPII and PAP-S), nbosome inhibiting proteins, especially the nbosome inhibiting proteins of barley, wheat, corn, rye, or gelonin, or πbosome-inactivatmg glycoprotein (GPIR)
Fragments, subunits, muteins, mimetics, vanants and/or analogues of such toxins are, of course, known to those of skill in the art and are encompassed by the invention It is contemplated that all such vanants or mutants which retain their toxic properties will be of use in accordance with the present invention Methods of selecting toxins and binding (e g , associating, attaching oi conjugating) them with a targeting moiety (e g , a peptide or antibody), are routine and conventional in the art See, e g , U S patents 5,840,522, 5,079,163, 4,520,01 1 , 5,667,786, 5,686,072, 4,340,535, 6,020,145, 5,254,342, 4,911,912, 4,450,154, and 5,928,873 Methods of attaching a peptide or polypeptide toxm to, e g , a peptide or antibody targeting moiety, include, for example, covalent binding, affinity binding, intercalation, coordinate binding and complexation Covalent binding can be achieved either by direct condensation of existing side chains or by the incorporation of external bndging molecules Many bivalent or polyvalent agents are useful in coupling protein molecules to other proteins, peptides or amine functions, etc For example, the literature is replete with coupling agents such as carbodnmides, dnsocyanates, glutaraldehyde, diazobenzenes, and hexamethylene diamines In some embodiments, one may first wish to denvatize the targeting moiety and then attach the toxm component to the deπvatized product Suitable cross-linking agents for use in this manner include, e g , SPDP (N- succmιmιdyl-3-(2-pyndylthιo)propιonate) and SMPT (4-succιmmιdyl-oxycarbonyl-α- methyl α(2-pyndylthιo)toluene) In one embodiment, a toxin and a targeting moiety can be covalently bonded by forming a disulfide bond between naturally occurnng free thiol groups (e g , in the A chain of a ncin) and/or a thiol or activated disulfide group which has been introduced into an analogue of a peptide chain (e g , an analogue of gelonm having a cysteine available for disulfide bonding)
In another embodiment, the therapeutic moiety can comprise any of a variety of art-recognized radioisotopes or radionuclides Methods of radiotherapy (nuclear medicine), m which cytotoxic doses of radioactivity are delivered to cells, are conventional in the art and are described, e g , in EP 481 ,526, U S Pat 5,962,424, Roeske et al (1990) Int J Radiation Oncology Biol Phys 12, 1539-48, and Leichner et al (1993) Med Phys 20 (2 Pt 2), 569-77 Such radioactive compounds can affect the targeted cell as well as adjacent tumor cells which, for one reason or another, do not display Hsp47 on their surface Further disclosure of the types of radioactive agents which can be used, and how to attach them to targeting moieties, is discussed below in reference to imaging agents Among the most preferred radiation sources are Tc-99 and In-I l l
In another embodiment, the therapeutic moiety can compnse an antibody, and can be used as a basis for conventional types of immuno therapy, e g , as discussed below m regard to antibodies that are not associated with an additional therapeutic moiety
Of course, combinations of the vanous therapeutic moieties can be coupled to one targeting moiety, thereby accommodating vanable cytotoxicity In another embodiment, two or more different therapeutic agents are administered together Many variations of treatment are encompassed by the invention For example, it may be desirable to treat a patient preliminarily with an amount of a toxm (or other therapeutic agent) effective to generate an immune response, thereby providing systemic protection from the toxm to the patient Subsequently, one can administer the toxm to the patient in an amount effective to kill tumor cells See, e g , U S patent 5,667,786 In another embodiment, an antι-Hsp47 antibody which is not associated with an additional therapeutic moiety can be used to treat, e g , a carcinoma, in a method of immunotherapy Any of the types of antibodies described herein as targeting moieties can be used for immunotherapy Methods of immunotherapy are conventional and are descnbed, e g , in U.S. Patents 6,015,567, 5,478,556 and 6,017,540
In one such embodiment, the antibody bnngs about an effect by virtue of its association with Hsp47 on the cell surface Example 3 demonstrates that cell surface localized Hsp47 is associated with the tetraspanm protein, CD9, and thus can be involved in the interaction of cells with the cellular matnx Therefore, an antibody directed against Hsp47 can modulate the interaction of a cell, e g , a carcinoma cell, with the mtracellular matnx Furthermore, cell surface expression of Hsp47 can be conelated with cell mvasiveness and phagokmesis (mobility) which, m turn, can be correlated with metastatic potential of a carcinogenic cell Example 4 demonstrates a negative conelation in several cell lines between cell surface expression of Hsp47 and mvasiveness/phagokmesis Without wishing to be held to any particular mechanism, the invention encompasses methods of treatment with an antι-Hsp47 antibody to modulate (increase or decrease a physiological activity or property of) a cell (e g , carcinoma cell, a tumor, etc ), for example to modulate invasion, migration/motihty of tumor (e g , carcinoma) cells, and/or metastasis of a tumor cell (e g , carcinoma cell)
In cases in which Hsp47 cell surface expression is negatively correlated with tumor mvasiveness and/or metastasis, the detection of surface-expressed Hsp47 can serve as the basis of a diagnostic method to identify tumors (e g , carcinomas) which are substantially non-metastatic and/or which are associated with a better prognosis than tumors on whose surface the expression of Hsp47 is substantially lowei
In another such embodiment, the antibody can elicit an immunological effect Without wishing to be bound by any particular mechanism, the invention encompasses situations in which an antibody recruits NK cells for antibody-mediated cell-mediated cytotoxicity Bifunctional antibodies can bnng effectors such as NK and Tc close to the tumor target Many vanations of immunotherapy will be evident to those of skill in the art For example, two bispecific heteroantibodyconjugates, e g , antι-tumor/antι-CD3 and antι-tumor/antι-CD28, can be co-admimstered Without wishing to be bound by any particular mechanism, it is proposed that two such heteroconjugates can act synergistically to induce contact between a T-cell and a tumoi to activate direct cytotoxicity even if the T-cell, itself, does not have conventional specificity for the tumor target Immunotherapy can be carried out by introducing an antibody directly into a patient, using conventional delivery methods and doses, such as those descnbed herein for other therapeutic agents Alternatively, one or more external domains of Hsp47, or fragments thereof, which contain an immune epitope can be introduced into a patient as a vaccine, in order to elicit a cell-mediated immune response In a preferred embodiment, the external domain is "isolated," e g , is essentially free of transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains The external domain or fragment thereof can be of any size, providing it compnses at least one lmmunoepitope If desired, the external domain can be co-admmistered with, or conjugated to, one or more other reagents which can enhance the immune response, e g , a costimulatory molecule such as B7 or cytokmes IFNγ,
GMCSF, L2/4 and 7, an antigenic molecule, such as a peptide, or a suitable adjuvant
In another embodiment, a bacteriophage whose surface comprises a peptide which is specific for Hsp47 can serve as a vector for the implementation of gene therapy Typical methods of phage display and affinity panning designed to obtain phage which can be used in such a method are described herein A gene whose expression in a mammalian host is desired can be inserted into a mammalian expression cassette and then cloned into the phage genome Cassettes for mammalian gene expression are conventional in the art, as are methods for cloning such cassettes into a nucleic acid of interest, e g , the DNA of a filamentous phage Methods to clone and express genes are routine for one of ordinary skill in the art See, e g , Sambrook, J et al (1989)
Molecular Cloning, a Laboratory Manual Cold Spnng Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spnng Harbor, NY, Ausubel, F M et al {1995) Current Protocols in Molecular Biology , N Y , John Wiley & Sons, and Davis et al (1986), Basic Methods m Molecular Biology , Elsevir Sciences Publishing, Inc , New York In particular, methods of using phage as gene delivery vehicles for mammalian cells are conventional and are described, e g , m
Larocca et al (1999) FASEB Journal 12, 727-734, Barry et al (1996) Nat Biotechnology 1282, 771 1 , Larocca et al (1998) Hum Gene Ther 2, 2393-2399, Poul et al (1999) J Mol Biol 2&S, 203-11, and Kassner et / (1999) Biochem Bwplns Res Comm 264, 921-8 For many of the molecular biology techniques referred to in this application, including isolating, cloning, modifying, labeling, manipulating, sequencing, and otherwise treating or analyzing nucleic acid and/or protein, see, e g ,Hames et al (1985), Nucleic Acid Hybridization, IL Press. Dracopoli, N.C. et al, Current Protocols in Human Genetics, John Wiley & Sons, Inc.; and Coligan, J.E. et al, Current Protocols in Protein Science, John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Any of a variety of therapeutic genes can be introduced into a cell, in a method of gene therapy, with such a vector. Such genes can be translated into proteins, expressed as antisense nucleic acid sequences or ribozymes, or the like. The genes can be integrated into the host genome, or can be stably maintained or transiently expressed in an unintegrated form.
The types of genes which can be administered are well-known in the art and are disclosed, along with methods of using them for gene therapy, in, e.g., Culver et al
(1994). TIG 10, 1744-178 and U.S. Patents 6,017,896; 5,916,803; 5,871,726; 5,688,773; 5,496,731 ; 5,631,236; 5,962,424; 5,922,685; 5,789,244; 5,662,896; 5,532,220; 5,888,502; 5,888,814; 5,932,210; and 5,916,803. The genes can be introduced into cells ex vivo and reintroduced into a patient, or introduced in vivo. Among the general classes of genes which can be administered are: genes which enhance the immunogenicity of a tumor, e.g., genes which encode foreign antigens; genes which initiate apoptosis; genes which enhance immune cells to increase anti-tumor activity, e.g. , genes which encode cytokines, such as IL-1, IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-12, TNF-α or β; GM-CSF, G-CSF, M-CSF, IFN-oc, β or γ, TGF- or β, TNF-α or β, NGF or the like; sensitivity or suicide genes (e.g., genes which encode HSV- or VZV-Tk, which confer sensitivity to gancyclovir; or which encode cytosine deaminase, which confers sensitivity to 5-fluorocytosine; or which encode a non-human purine cleavage enzyme, such as purine nucleoside phosphorylase, which confers sensitivity to a purine substrate which, when cleaved by the enzyme, becomes toxic to the cell); genes which block the expression of oncogenes, e.g., genes which encode antisense K-RAS message); wild type tumor suppressor genes
(e.g., p53; pi 6; retinoblastoma (RB)gene, either full-length pi 10RB or mutant proteins such as p94RB or p56RB; mitosin; or H-NUC); genes which block the mechanisms by which tumors evade immunological destruction, e.g., the gene which encodes antisense IGF (insulin- like growth factor)- 1 message; genes which encode an engineered cytoplasmic variant of a nuclease {e.g., RNase A) or protease (e.g. trypsin, papain, proteinase K, carboxypeptidase, etc.); and genes which encode any of the proteinaceious toxins disclosed above. Many other types of gene therapy are encompassed by the invention and will be evident to one of ordinary skill in the art For example, any targeting moiety as above can be associated with (e g , bound to, covalently or noncovalently) a gene of interest and can serve to deliver it to a cell In one embodiment, the targeting moiety comprises part of a vector which also compnses one or more of a) a non-viral earner for the gene to be inserted, b) a fusion protein to enhance the penetration of the vector into the cytoplasm and, optionally, the nucleus, of the cell, and c) a therapeutic gene such as those descnbed above in reference to bactenophage-mediated gene therapy Many varieties of components a) and b) will be known to those of skill in the art For a further discussion of these components, see, e g , in U S Pat 5,916,803 and the section below regarding the introduction of peptides and similar agents into a cell
Methods to deliver (administer, introduce) therapeutic agents into a cell, tissue or tumor, or into a patient, in vitro or in vivo, and to monitor the effects so induced, will be evident to one of ordinary skill in the art See, e g , references cited herein, and Vitetta et al (1991) Cancer Res 51, 4052 Agents to be administered in vivo can be formulated with pharmaceutically acceptable earners, excipients or vehicles and, m addition, can be supplemented with other medicinal agents such as, e g , adjuvants, stabilizers, enhancers, or the like
The specificity of targeting which is engendered by the invention allows foi systemic administration Alternatively, agents can be administered at or near the site of a tissue or tumor to be treated (Of course, the routes of administration disclosed herein can be employed for methods of detecting (imaging) a target as well as for methods of treatment ) Methods of administration are conventional, and include parenteral and non- parenteral routes of administration Parenteral routes include, e g , intravenous, mtraarteπal, intraportal, intramuscular, subcutaneous, intrapentoneal, mtraspinal, mtrathecal, mtracerebro ventricular, intracranial, mtrapleural or other routes of injection Non-parenteral routes include, e g , oral, nasal, transdermal, pulmonary, rectal, buccal, vaginal, ocular For non-parenteral delivery, it may be desirable to use agents which enhance transcytosis of a cell-surface receptor/hgand complex, e g , by administration of brefeldm A or monensm See, e g , U S patent 5,254,342
Dosages to be administered can be determined by conventional procedures and, m general, will be known to those of skill m the art Factors to be considered include the activity of the specific agent involved, the metabolic stability and length of action of the agent, mode and time of administration, drug combination, rate of excretion, the species being treated, and the age, body weight, general health, sex, diet, and severity of the particular disease-states of the host undergoing therapy. For example, appropriate therapeutic regimens for an immunotoxin {i.e., a conjugate comprising an antibody, or variant or fragment thereof, conjugated to one or more toxin molecules) involve administration to a patient of a dose of between about 0.5 and 2 mg/kg.
A therapeutic agent can be internalized into any of a variety of locations in a cell or tissue. In some cases, it is desirable that a therapeutic agent is internalized into a cell by accompanying Hsp47 as it is recycled into the ER. In other cases, it is desirable that a therapeutic agent is endocytosed into an endosome or lysosome of a cell, e.g., a proteinacious toxin which must be proteolytically processed in order to become active. In still other cases, it is desirable that the agent evades enzymatic degradation and is transported into the cytoplasm and/or the nucleus. A variety of conventional procedures can be used to enhance the transport of a surface-bound entity into a cell and, in some cases, to avoid such proteolysis. It may be desirable, for example to associate the therapeutic agent, directly or indirectly, with a carrier and/or with a fusion protein, to generate a vector for delivery of the therapeutic agent.
A variety of appropriate carriers (e.g. , non-viral carriers) are well-known in the art and are described, e.g., in U.S. Pat. 5,916,803; Cotten et al (1993). Curr. Biol. 4, 705;
Behr (1993). Ace. Chem. Res. 26, 274; Feigner (1990). Adv. Deliv. Rev. 5, 163; Behr (1994). Bioconjugate Chem. 5, 382; and Ledley (1995). Hum. Gene Ther. 6, 1129. In a preferred embodiment, the carrier exhibits a long half life in the body, allowing the maximum possible binding of a vector to a target cell. Among the preferred earners are liposomes or cationic lipids, polypeptides, or proteins, or the like. A earner can be associated directly (e.g., coupled) or indirectly to a therapeutic agent, by any of a variety of conventional means,
A variety of fusion proteins can enhance the penetration of a vector into a cell, and/or out of an endosome or lysosome and into the cytoplasm of a cell. Many proteins, or fragments or variants thereof, possess fusiogenic properties, including a number of viral proteins. Such proteins will be well known to the skilled worker and are discussed, e.g., in U.S. Pat. 5,916,803; Hughson (1995). Current Biol. 5, 265; Iloekstra (1990). J. Bioenergetics Biomembranes 22, 675; and White (1990). Ann. Rev. Physiol. 52, 675.
In some cases, a targeting moiety can be modified so that it binds more efficiently to an external domain of Hsp47 and/or is internalized more efficiently into a cell. For example, synthetically produced short peptides, such as some of the 7-mer peptides shown in Table 3, sometimes bind to, but are not taken up by, target cells; whereas the same peptides are internalized when they are displayed at the pill terminus of a bacteriophage. To enhance the internalization of, e.g. , a short synthetic peptide, one can add to the peptide a synthetic peptide linker having desirable properties, e.g., a linker which displays the short peptide in such a way that it can bind to and be internalized by a cell with Hsp47 on its surface, yet does not, itself, bind to cells other than those displaying Hsp47 on the surface; is stable in the circulation; can be processed following internalization, or the like. Other such improvement modifications of target moieties will be evident to those skilled in the art. In another aspect of the invention, a targeting moiety as above is associated with a detectable moiety that allows the detection (imaging, identification) of a cell which expresses Hsp47 on its surface, e.g., a carcinoma cell, a carcinoma in any stage of development, a tumor, a metastasis (including a micrometastasis), or the like. An agent which comprises a targeting moiety and a detectable moiety is called herein a detectable agent or an imaging agent. Such detection can be accomplished in vitro or in vivo.
Detection methods can be quantitative. For example, the amount of Hsp47 expressed on the surface of a cell, or the number of cells which express Hsp47 on their surface, can be quantitated by exposing the cell, tumor, animal, patient or the like to a detection device which can identify and quantitate the detectable marker. Detectable moieties encompassed by the invention include, e.g., signal generators
[entities which are capable of emitting a detectable amount of energy in the form of electromagnetic radiation (such as X-rays, UV-radiation, IR radiation, visible radiation and the like), and include phosphorescent and fluorescent entities, bioluminescent markers, gamma and X-ray emitters, or the like]; signal reflectors {e.g., paramagnetic entities); or signal absorbers (e.g., electron beam opacifier dyes).
A detectable moiety can be bound to (associated with) a targeting moiety by any of a variety of well-established methods, including those described above for binding therapeutic moieties to targeting moieties For example, in methods particularly suited for in vitro detection, a radioactive element (e g , an ammo acid) can be incorporated directly into a targeting moiety (e g , a peptide chain), and detected by autoradiography, or a fluoresent label can be associated with such a targeting moiety via biotin/avidin interaction, association with a fluorescem conjugated antibody, or the like, and detected by lmmunofluorescence microscopy, flow cytometry (FACscan), or the like
Target-enhancing metals are encompassed by the invention and are particularly suitable for in vivo imaging Metals according to the invention include, e g , paramagnetic metals for MRI, heavy metal ions, e g , with atomic numbers of at least 37, preferably at least 50, for X-ray or ultrasound imaging, and ions of radioactive isotopes for scmtigraphy The choice of metal will be determined by the desired diagnostic (oi therapeutic) application Examples of radioactive ions include, e g , ions of lanthamdes or other metal ions, including isotopes and radioisotopes thereof, such as, e g , ιodιne \ iodine12', iodine131, technicium99"1, indium111 , rhenium188, rhenium186, copper67, yttrium90, astatine211, gallium67, indium192, cobalt60, radium226, gold198, cesium137, phosphorous3', carbon14, and tritium ions Examples of fluorogemc agents include gadolinium and renagraphin
A metal can be associated with a targeting moiety by any of a variety of means, which are well-known to one of ordinary skill in the art For methods of making image enhancing moieties, attaching them to targeting moieties, and using them for detection, see , e g , EP 481,526, GB-A-2169598, and EP 136,812 For example, metals can be bound to (associated with, attached to) targeting moieties by chelatmg agents, including polychelants, bifunctional polychelants, and salts or macrocychc intermediates thereof A variety of methods exist for multiplying the enhancement, e g , using a compound composed of a backbone molecule, such as a polyamine, to which a plurality of chelatmg agents are attached
Routes by which imaging agents can be administered are disclosed abo\ e with reference to delivering therapeutic agents Imaging agents of the invention may be administered to patients for imaging m amounts sufficient to yield the desired contrast with the particular imaging techniques Generally, dosages of from about 0 001 to 5 0 mmoles of chelated imaging metal ion per kilogram of patient body weight are effective to achieve adequate contrast enhancements For most MRI applications, preferred dosages of imaging metal ions will be in the range of about 0.02 to 1.2 mmoles/kg body weight; while for X-ray applications, dosages from about 0.5 to 1.5 mmoles/kg are generally effective to achieve X-ray attenuation. Prefened dosages for most X-ray applications are from 0.8 to 1 J mmoles of the lanthanide or heavy metal/kg body weight. Another aspect of the invention is a method to screen for an agent which binds specifically to a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some of its cells, preferably wherein the agent is useful for treating a carcinoma in a patient or for diagnosing a carcinoma in a patient, comprising identifying an agent which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47. Assays for determining if an agent binds to an external domain of Hsp47, and for determining the specificity and/or avidity of the binding, are described elsewhere in this application. Routine procedures are available for screening agents of interest, using such methods.
Another aspect of the invention is a kit for treating a patient suffering from a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some of the carcinoma cells, or for detecting a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some of the carcinoma cells, comprising an agent which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47 in an amount effective to generate a cytostatic or cytolytic effect on the carcinoma, or to image the cell above a background of non-carcinoma cells. In a prefened embodiment, the agent comprises, as a targeting moiety, an antibody or a fragment thereof, a peptide, or a bacteriophage on whose surface is a peptide, each of which moieties binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47. In a most prefened embodiment, the targeting moiety is a monoclonal antibody, a peptide which comprises the consensus motif XHyHyXXHyXXXXHyHy (SEQ
ID NO: 1) or the consensus motif HyXXXHyHyXXHyXXX (SEQ ID NO: 2), wherein X, independently, can be any amino acid, and Hy, independently, can be any hydrophobic amino acid, a peptide having the sequence of any of SEQ ID NOJ to SEQ ID NO: 25 of Tables 1 and 2, or a bacteriophage on whose surface is a peptide which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47. In one embodiment, the agent comprises, as a therapeutic moiety, a toxin, a radioisotope or radionuc de, an antibody, or a nucleic acid which encodes a therapeutic gene The invention also encompasses a kit for modulating a cell which expresses Hsp47 on its surface, comprising an agent which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47, in an amount effective to modulate the cell Of course, a kit of the invention will comprise one or more containers for the therapeutic and/or imaging agents
EXAMPLES
Data which are disclosed in the following Examples 1 - 6 are presented m the manuscripts 1) Hebert et al (1999) J Cellular Biochemistry 22, 248-258, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety, and 2) Sauk et al (2000) J Cellulai
Biochemistry, accepted in January, 2000, which is included herein as Appendix I and is incorporated by reference in its entirety
Example 1 Expression of Colligin/Hsp47 at the Surface of Oral Epidermoid Carcinoma Cells: Studies are performed using established cell lines of human oral squamous cell carcinomas (SCC-4, SCC-9, SCC-15, and SCC-25) and a murme epidermoid cell line, Lewis Lung Carcinoma (LL/2), obtained from ATCC In addition, a primary gmgival fibroblast cell line is used as a control. A. Flow Cytometπc Analysis. For these studies, the monoclonal antibody SPA-470 to colhgm/Hsp47,
(StressGen, Victoria, BC) and a colhgιn Hsp47 rabbit polyclonal antibody, prepared against a 22-mer peptide corresponding to the N-termmal sequence of mouse colhgm/Hsp47, are used Monoclonal antibodies for cytometric analyses are directly conjugated with fluorescem using 5(6) carboxyfluorescem-N-hydroxy succimmide ester kit (Boehrmger Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) or labeled with SA-Red670™ following biotinylation of the antibody using EZ-Link™ Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biot ylation kit (Pierce, Rockville, 111)
Cells grown in vitro are washed and incubated in a 0 5% solution of Polyglobm N to block unsaturated Fc receptors and reduce non-specific binding of monoclonal antibodies Next, 50ml of the cell suspension (1X106 cell/ml) is incubated with 2 5 ml (lmg) of antibodies, conjugated with fluorescem, or SA-Red670™ (GibcoBRL, Gaithersburg, MD) After washing, the cell pellet is resuspended in PBS containing BSA for flow cytometnc assay To assess mtracellular colhgm/Hsp47, cells are first permeabilized with 0 1% Saponm Samples are then analyzed on a FACScan flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA) The 488 nm Argon laser is run at 15 nW of power The data from fluorescem conjugates are collected after a 530/30 BP filter For two-color flow cytometnc analysis either fluorescem or Red670™ are employed with propidium iodide The filters used are 600 nm dichroic SP, 525 ± 15nm BP (fluorescem) and 645 LP (Red670™) Propidium iodide is used to assess cell cycle and stam for dead cells For these studies a hypotonic citrate solution containing PI is added to ~ 1X106 washed cells to a concentration of ImM Cells are labeled for 20 minutes, then analyzed on the FACScan in their staining solution Orange PI fluorescence is collected after a 585/42 nm BP filter Electronic compensation is used among fluorescence channels collecting emissions to remove residual spectral overlap Fluorescence data are displayed on a four-decade long scale A minimum of 10,000 events is collected on each sample Analysis of the data is performed with LYSYS II software (Becton Dickinson, Mansfield, MA) Fluorescence dual parameter contour plots are used for exclusion of debris and clumps This method of gating allows ready discrimination of debris from dead cells (low forward light scatter and high PI fluorescence) The percentage of cells with a G1/0, S, of G2/M DNA complement is determined from a DNA histogram by region integration using onboard Multicycle® data analysis routines (Phoenix Flow Systems, San Diego, CA) Flow-cytometnc analysis of SCC cell lines, the LL/2 munne cell line and human gmgival fibroblasts reveals that all of the cell lines possess mtracellular colhgιn/Hsp47 Cell cycle analysis further reveals that colhgm/Hsp47 expression is not limited to any phase of the cell cycle in either gmgival fibroblasts or epidermoid carcinoma cells However, when cell cycle analysis is performed only for cell surface expression, collιgm/Hsp47 is only limited to epidermoid carcinoma cell lines
B. Immunofluorescence Studies. Immunofluorescence microscopy is earned out after the method of Tang et al (Tang et al (1994) Eur J Cell Biology 65, 298-304 Tang et al (1993) Eur J Cell Biology 12Q, 325-328) To visualize cell surface colhgm/Hsp47, the cells are not permeabilized but treated and fixed with 1% paraformaldehyde as described for cytometnc analyses The cells are then stained with antι-colhgm/Hsp47 antibodies as a pnmary antibody followed by FITC goat-anti-rabbit or anti-mouse IgG
Immunofluorescence microscopy of non-permeabi zed cells, prepared for flow- cytometnc analysis, confirms anti-colhgm Hsp47 staining at the surface
C. Subcellular Membrane Fractionation. The method for fractionating plasma membranes is modified after the methods descnbed by Weber et al (1988) "Subcellular distnbution of Insulin Receptors" in Insulin Receptors Kahn CR and Hanson LS, eds
(New York Alan R Liss, Inc), pp 171-187 In essence, after incubating 5 ml of cells [(2-5) x 106 cells per ml] with or without 1 mM amilonde, the cell suspension is centnfuged at 100 g for 60 s at room temperature The cell pellets are suspended in 10 ml of tns/EDTA/sucrose buffer (20 mM Tns/HCl, ImM EDTA and 255 mM sucrose, pH 7 4) at 18-20°C The pellet is resuspended in 500 μl of Tns/EDTA/sucrose buffer by using a glass-Teflon homogemzer, layered on a 600μl cushion of 1 2 M sucrose in 20 mM Tris/ ImM EDTA buffer (pH 7 4), and centnfuged in a Beckman TLS55 rotor at 8J50g at 4°C for 30 min Plasma membranes collected at the cushion interface are suspended in 2 5 ml of Tns/EDTA /sucrose buffer and centnfuged in a Beckman TLA 100 3 rotor at 410,000 g at 4°C for 20 mm The final plasma membrane pellet is resuspended in 60 μl of buffer The samples are then treated with bacterial collagenase to eliminate the possibility of cytoplasmic derived procollagen-collιgm/Hsp47 binding to the cell surface mtegnn receptors as a result of cell fractionation The initial supernatant is centnfuged in a Sorvall SS34 rotor at 48,000 g at 4°C for 15 min and the high-density microsome pellet is resuspended in 40μl of buffer The supernatant is further centnfuged in a Beckman 70 1 rotor at 300,000 g at 4°C for 75 mm and the low density microsome pellet is resuspended in 60 μl of buffer
The membrane fractions are charactenzed by the distribution of 5'-nucleosιdase activity, a marker of plasma membrane Protein is measured with the BCA protein assay kit (Pierce, Rockford, IL) Plasma membranes are directly subjected to PAGE and
Western analysis For Western blots, proteins run on SDS-PAGE are immediately electrotransferred to nitrocellulose paper and blocked with 10% NFDM m 10 mM Tπs- HC1 pH 7 4, 0 9 mMNaCl (TBS) for 2hr and then in TBS/NFDM with 2% NGS (GIBCO, Grand Island, NY) Antiserum or penmmune serum is diluted 1 2000 m the same buffer and incubated with gentle shaking overnight The nitrocellulose is then nnsed three times for 5 mm in TBS/Tween Hsp47 is detected with [12J]-labeled protein A (New England Nuclear, Boston, MA)
Subcellular membrane fractionation of amiloπde and control cells to obtain a plasma membrane fraction, followed by Western blot analysis confirms the presence of colhgιn/Hsp47 in the plasma membrane 5'-nucleosιdase fraction
Example 2 Binding of Cell Surface ColIigin/Hsp47 to αl (I)-N-propeptide: The cDNA sequences encoding the pro αl(I) N-propeptide globular domain
(NP1) [residues 23-108], and the globular domain + propeptide GlyXaaYaa domain (NP2) [residues 23-151 ] are prepared as GST-fusion proteins as previously descnbed (Hu et al (1995) Cellular Biochemistry 52, 350-367) Fusion protein expression is induced by 0 1 mM IPTG after bactena reach mid-log phase The fusion proteins are purified by glutathionme-Sepharose 4B beads (Pharmacia, Piscataway, NJ) according the manufacture's instructions The proteins are characterized by SDS-PAGE and Western blot analysis as previously described (Hu et al , ibid)
NP1 and NP2 affinity beads are prepared, after the method of Hu et al (1995) ibid In essence, GST-fusion proteins are treated with thrombin, dialyzed and the GST protein removed from each reaction mixture by passing it over a column of glutathione-
Sepharose The eluates are collected and lyophihzed and coupled to CNBr activated Sepharose The final beads contain 1-2 mg peptide per 250 μl Hsp47 surface binding experiments are earned out by mixing 250μl of a 50%o (v/v) suspension of peptide- Sepharose (Pharmacia, Piscataway, NJ) with a suspension of plasma membranes from surface-biotinylated SCC cells After incubation at 4°C for lh the beads are collected by centnfugation and washed 3 times with an equal volume of Laemmli Buffer The beads are extracted with 250 μl Laemmli electrophoresis sample buffer by boiling the sample for 5 mm Following separation by SDS-PAGE, the proteins are transferred to nitrocellulose membranes and visualized with HRPO-conjugated ExtrAvidm (Sigma Chemical Co , St Louis, MO ) using Renaissance Chemiluminescent Reagents (NEN,
Cambridge) To demonstrate the availability of cell surface colhgιn/Hsp47 to bind procollagen propeptides in living cells, GST-fusion proteins (l μg/ml) are added to the culture medium of ~1 XI 06 SCC cells, plated in chambered slides (Nalgene NUNC, Milwaukee, WI), for 10 minutes at 37°C The cells are then washed in PBS fixed in paraformaldehyde as before, and cell associated fusion proteins (NP1 , NP2) are identified with HRPO- conjugated anti-GST antibodies, following the procedures of Sauk et al , (1994) / Biol Chem 262, 3941-3946
Binding expenments performed with biotm labeled plasma membranes and Sepharose bound pro αl(l) globular domain (residues 23-108) or pro αl(l) globular domain + propeptide GlyXaaYaa domain (residues 23-151) give similar results In both instances bands migrating at 46K and 47K are identified Western blot analysis confirms that both the 46K, unglycosylated colhgιn/Hsp47, (Hirayoshi et al , 1991) and 47 K bands react with antι-Hsp47 antibodies These findings are consistent for all of the cell lines Immunoperoxide cytochemical staining of GST-fusion proteins bound to cells in culture reveal that cells lines with a higher percentage of cells expressing surface colhgιn/Hsp47 display a higher percentage of bound GST-NP1 and GST-NP2 fusion proteins
Example 3 Cell Surface Labeling and Immunoprecipitation: The methods used were previously descnbed for the characterization of TM4SF complexes with integπns (Berditchevski et al , (1996) Molec Biol of the Cell 2, 193- 207) In essence, cells are labeled with NHS-LC-biotm (Pierce, Rockford, IL) according to kit protocol, and lysed in immunoprecipitation buffer [1% Bnj 96, 25 mM Hepes, pH 7 4, 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 2 mM PMSF, 20 μg/ml apotinin, and 10 μg/ml leupeptm] Immune complexes are collected on protein A beads pre-bound with antibodies, followed by four washes with immunoprecipitation buffer For more "stringent" conditions, the immunoprecipitation buffer is supplemented with 0 2% SDS Immune complexes are eluted from protein A beads with Laemmli elution buffer and proteins are separated by SDS-PAGE Proteins are transferred to nitrocellulose membranes and visualized with HRPO-conjugated ExtrAvidm (Sigma Chemical Co , St
Louis MO) using Renaissance Chemiluminescent Reagents (NEN, Cambridge) Reprecipitations are preformed from Bnj 96 lysates prepared from surface-biotmylated SCC cells After five washes with the immunoprecipitation buffer, the protein complexes are dissociated with 0 5% SDS added to the immunoprecipitation buffer The eluates are subsequently diluted 1 1 with immunoprecipitation buffer and re-precipitated with the appropriate antibodies directly coupled to Sepharose beads The samples are then processed as described above
For cross-linking, cells are treated with DTSSP, a membrane impermeable cross- linker or DSP After solubihzation m immunoprecipitation buffer supplemented with 0 2% SDS protein complexes are immunoprecipitated as above and analyzed under reducing conditions
Membrane surface proteins are consistently co-precipitated with anti- collιgιn/Hsp47 antibodies In cross-linking studies, SCC and LL/2 cells are first pre- treated with a cleavable cross-linker, DSP, then surface labeled with biotin or [12']-I, and subsequent immunoprecipitation is carried out under stringent conditions to disrupt the noncovalent association between Hsp and tetraspanm protein A colhgm/Hsp47-CD9 complex is immunoprecipitated using either antι-CD9 mAbs or anti-colhgm/Hsp47 antibodies A characteristic 47K band is readily detected in all antι-CD9 lmmunoprec pitates and protein band of ~22K, similar in size to CD9/or CD81 , is co- precipitated with anti-colligm/ Hsp47 Howevei, when similar experiments were performed with antι-CD81 mAbs, colhgm/Hsp47 is not identified in the immunoprecipitates However, re-immunoprecipitation of the CD9 lmmunoprecipitates with antι-colhgιn/Hsp47 results in a 47 K band in all SCC cells and LL/2 cell lines To verify whether extracellular regions of Hsp47 and CD9 interact directly, similar cioss linking expenments are performed using DTSSP, a membrane impermeable cross-linker Treatment of intact SCC and LL/2 cells with either DSP or DTSSP results in co- lmmunoprecipitation of CD9 and collιgιn/Hsp47 Treatment with ImM amilonde greatly enhancs the amount of colhgm/Hsp47 recovered following immunoprecipitation without altering the profile of proteins precipitated Example 4 Tumor Cell Invasion and Phagokinesis:
A: Colloidal Gold Migration Assay:
Tumor cells are plated on chamber slides precoated with a mixture of 80 μg/ml type I collagen, 100 μg/ml Matrigel®, or 100 μg of laminin-5 and colloidal gold particles and incubated in medium with or without various antibodies. Colloidal gold-coated chamber slides are prepared as described by Albrecht-Buehler ((1977). Cell 12, 333-339) with modification for keratinocytes and the inclusion of matrix proteins (Woodley et al, (1988) J. of Cellular Phys. 126, 140-146; Kim et al, (1994) Laboratory Investigation 21, 401-408; Kim et al, (1994) J. of Biol. Chem. 262, 26,926-26,932.) SCC or LL/2 cells are added to each chamber, and 20 minutes latter non-adherent cells are removed and the medium replaced. Cultures are maintained for 24 hr and then fixed in IX Histochoice (Amresco, Solon, OH) for 1 min, washed in PBS, and dehydrated through graded ethanols. Areas devoid of gold particles identify the phagokinetic tracks. A migration index is determined using image analysis software by measuring the area of phagokinetic tracks associated with cells in random fields under dark field illumination at 100 X
(Pilcher et al, 1997) J. Cell Biol. 122, 1445-1457. All cells in a field are counted and 25 cells are counted for each experiment. For each experiment, all conditions are done in triplicate.
B: Tumor Cell Invasion Assays: An in vitro assay is modified after that described previously by Chu et al. (1993 )
Proc. Nat ' Acad. Sci. 2Q, 4261-4265, utilizing Matrigel®, a reconstituted basement membrane. In essence, a modified Boyden chamber containing an 8μm-porosity polyvinylpyrolidone- free polycarbonate filter is precoated with Matrigel® (Collaborative Biomedical Products, Becton Dickinson, Bedford, MA). The lower well of the chamber is then filled with serum free medium containing 500 μl of 3T6 cell-conditioned medium as a chemoattractant. The upper well is then seeded with 200 μl of cell suspension at 1.0 xlO4 cells/chamber plus additives as indicated. The chambers are then incubated at 37 °C for 24 hrs. Noninvasive cells are removed from the upper surface of the membrane with a cotton swab and the chamber incubated in 3ml of Dispase (Collaborative Biomedical Products, Becton Dickinson, Bedford, MA) for 2 hours and the reaction stopped with 10 mM EDTA. The resulting cells contained in Matrigel®, as well as the cells in the lower chamber, are counted in a Coulter counter. Data are expressed as the percent invasion through the matrix and membrane relative to the migration through the control membrane The "Invasion Index" is expressed as the ratio of the percent invasion of a test cell over the percent invasion of a control cell
Overall treatment and group effects are assessed using an analysis of variance (ANOVA), with post-hoc compansons based on the Newman-Keuls test (p < 0 05) The association of mean HSP47 fluorescence labeling with the invasion index is evaluated using the nonparametnc Spearman's rank-order correlation coefficient (rho)
Using modified Boyden chambers to assess tumor cell invasion reveals that SCC cells and LL/2 cells show a significant variance in the invasion indices among the cell lines This vanance is associated with the level of colhgm/Hsp47 expressed on the cell surface Chamber assays are then performed where the cells are incubated in the presence of antibodies directed to CD9, CD81 and colhgm/Hsp47 Cells incubated in Matrigel® chambers with antι-collιgιn/Hsp47 result in an increase m the invasion index, while incubation with antι-CD9 or antι-CD81 antibodies are without effect and similar to controls Treatment with amiloπde m each instant dramatically decreases the invasion index in all tumor cell lines However, amilonde treated cells are unaffected by treatment with antι-colhgm Hsp47 antibodies
The results of SCC cell migration on colloidal gold assays parallel the results obtained from Boyden chamber assays, but are dependent upon whether the colloidal gold contains Matrigel®, collagen, or lammm-5 The phagokinetic migration index of
SCC cells is greatest on lammm-5 followed by collagen and Matrigel® In particular, the migration tracks are broader and longer on lammm-5 coated colloidal gold than those observed on collagen or Matrigel® The phagokinetic migration indices on both collagen and Matrigel® matrices are noted to increase following treatment with anti- collιgιn/Hsp47 antibodies, but are unaffected following treatment with ant-CD9 antibodies The phagokinetic indices are unaffected following treatment with anti colhgιn/Hsp47 on lammιn-5 coated surfaces
Example 5 Identification and Analysis of Hsp47-Binding Peptides:
A. Affinity Panning of a Library of Peptides. Two bacteriophage libraries, with random septapeptide (Ph D -7, New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) or random dodecapeptide (Ph D -12, New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) inserts at the N-terminus of pill protein are used. The Ph.D. -7 library consists of -2.8 x 109 electroporated sequences amplified once to yield ~ 70 copies of each sequence in lOμl of supplied phage. The Ph.D. -12 library consists of ~2.7 x 109 electroporated sequences amplified once to yield -55 copies/ 10 μl of supplied phage B. Selection of Hsp47-Bmdιng Bacte ophages by Affinity Panning.
Bactenophages displaying peptides recognized by Hsp47 are identified using the Ph.D -7 or Ph.D. -12 kits and protocols modified for a biotmylated target. In essence, 96 wells of a microtitration plate are coated with 15 μl of streptavidin (lmg/ml) in 135 μl of 0 IM NaHC03 pH 8.6, with gentle agitation in a humidified chamber overnight at 4°C After removal of the streptavidin solution the wells are washed three times with TBS containing 0.05% Tween 20 (TBS-Tween) and then blocked by incubation for 1 hr at 37°C with 1% BSP in PBS containing 0J μg/ml streptavidin
Next, phage are precomplexed with biotmylated Hsp47 by adding 0 1 μg biotmylated Hsp47 and 2 x 1011 pfu of the input phage in 400 μl TBS-Tween and incubated for 60 min. The phage-target complex solution is then added to the washed blocked plates and incubated at room temperature for 10 mm Biotin is added to a final concentration of 0J mM and incubated for 5 min to displace streptavidin-bindmg phage Non-bindmg phage are discarded and the plates washed 10 x with TBS-Tween (0 1%) The wells are then treated with 15 μl of 1 M Tns-HCl, pH 2.2, containing 1 mg/ml BSA for 5 minutes to elute Hsp47-phage The samples are neutralized with 1 M Tns-HCl, pH
9J, and amplified by adding to 20 ml of ER 2537 culture incubated at 37°C with vigorous shaking for 4.5 hrs The cultures are then transferred to fresh tubes centnfuged at 10,000 rpm, 4°C, for 10 mins The supernatants are transfened to fresh tubes and phage precipitated with 1/6 volume of PEG/NaCl at 4°C, overnight. To 4 ml of LB media a single colony of ER2537 is inoculated and then incubated at 37°C with vigorous shaking until the culture reaches mid-log phase (O.D.600 ~0 5) A pellet is obtained by centnfugation for 15 min at 10,000 rpm, 4°C The pellet is suspended in 1 ml of TBS and centnfuged for 5 mm, 10,000 rpm, 4°C. The supernatant is transfened to a fresh tube and precipitated with 1/6 volume of PEG/NaCl on ice for 1 hr Following centnfugation the pellet is resuspended in 200 μl TBS The eluate is titered and plated onto LB/IPTG/XGal plates and incubated overnight. Since the library phage are derived from the common cloning vector Ml 3mp 19, which carnes the lacZ gene, phage plaques appear blue when plated on media containing Xgal and IPTG. Blue colonies are selected for sequencing or used for a second round of panning. As a control streptavidin is used as a target and after three round of panning to verify a consensus sequence for streptavidin-binding peptides.
C. Screening for Hsp47-Binding Bacteriophages: Clones of blue colonies from plates containing 50-200 colonies are transferred to nitrocellulose filters. The bacteria are washed from the filters with PBS containing 0.05%) Tween 20 and 1% bovine serum albumin, and the filters are then incubated for 30 min in the same buffer before washing three times with PBS-Tween. Following incubation for lhr in 5 ml of biotinylated Hsp47 (0J -2 μg/ml in PBS-Tween), the filters are again washed three times in PBS-Tween. The positions of the clones that have secreted Hsp47-binding bacteriophages are then located by one of two methods: the filters are incubated with 5 ml of alkaline phosphatase-conjugated streptavidin (1/10,000 dilution in PBS-Tween; Pierce, Rockford, IL) for 1 hr at room temperature before extensive washing with PBS-Tween, or the filters are incubated for 1 hr in 5 ml of an anti-biotin antibody (1/50,000 dilution in PBS-Tween; Pierce, Rockford, IL), washed, and incubated with a rabbit anti-goat immunoglobulin antibody conjugated to alkaline phosphatase (1/5,000 dilution in PBS-Tween; Pierce, Rockford, IL). In each case, alkaline phosphatase activity is revealed using a mixture of nitroblue tetrazolium/and 5 bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate tolidium (Bethesda Research Labs, Rockville, MD) as substrate.
D. Determination of the Sequence of Bacteriophage-Displayed Peptides: Single-stranded bacteriophage DNAs are purified and sequenced as -96 primer an oligonucleotide (5'-CCCTCATAGTTAGCGTAACG-3') (SEQ ID NO: 63).
Sequencing reactions are carried out using an ABI Prism Model 373 Version 3.0. E. Program to Score Hsp47-Binding Peptides:
The starting and selected libraries are compared in a position-dependent manner.
A statistical analysis is performed by maximum likelihood and bootstrap resampling.
This reveals the distribution of residues by position in Hsp47-binding peptides compared to peptides in the original library. To codify the preferences obtained above we use a scoring system previously described for BiP (Cwirla et al. (1990) Proc. Nat 7. Acacl. Sci.
87, 6378-82) to predict Hsp47-binding sites in synthetic and naturally occuning polypeptides. In so doing a score is given to each of the possible 20 amino acids at each position of the seven-residue core sequence These scores are denved from the fold difference in the overall abundance of each residue in the peptides displayed by the selected and nonselected bacteriophage populations The sconng for each of the seven- residue sequences present in each septapeptide is determined as previously described (Cwirla et al , ibid)
To validate the sconng set of Hsp47-bmdιng sequences, a second set of Hsp47- bmding sequences not part of the database used to generate the sconng matrix is necessary To accomplish this a second library consisting of independent recombinant bacteriophages displaying random dodecapeptides is used (Ph D-12, New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) Sequences are then compared by position specific iterated
BLAST, pattern Hit Initiated BLAST, and BLAST 2 sequences against each other (NCBI) In addition, the hydropathic profiles of two peptides are compared using the Weizmann Institute of Sciences Genome and Biomformatics database F. Analysis of the Hsp47-Bmdιng Peptides. Two bacteriophage libraries with random septapeptide or dodecapeptide inserts at the N-termmus of pill protein are used, the first to be studied is the septapeptide library 70 individual bacteriophage clones are picked at random from the unselected library, and the amino acid sequences of the variable septapeptide inserts are deduced from the nucleotide sequences of the conespondmg coding region All ammo acids are represented, although their frequencies do not always correspond to those expected from the relative numbers of codons encoding each residue
The sequences of septapeptides displayed by 54 Hsp47-bmdιng bacteriophages obtained by panning are determined by DNA sequence analysis of the corresponding region of the bacteriophage genome The peptide sequences from the 54 clones that bound Hsp47 are first considered as a single population and compared with those from the 70 clones picked randomly from the starting library Tabulation of the hydrophihcities of the Hsp47-bmdmg bacteriophages reveals that two general populations of peptides that are selected by panning One group of peptides is represented by hydrophilic peptides and the other by a smaller hydrophobic group of peptides
Comparison of the overall amino acid composition of the two populations, selected and unselected, of septapeptides reveals that asparagme (N), thieonme (T), tyrosine (Y) and proline (P) are particularly enriched, while phenylalanine (F), aspartic acid (D), and arginine (R) are significantly depleted. However, when considered individually, the hydrophobic group of peptides is noticeably enriched in tryptophan, and leucine as well as valine and alanine. The five-residue spacer linking the variable septapeptides to the mature pill protein contains no enriched residues. Inspection of the selected hydrophobic peptides reveals that a residue motif best described as XHyHyXXXHyHy, where Hy is a large hydrophobic amino acid (usually W,L, or F) and X is any amino acid. This core motif is also identified in selected residue from a Ph.D-12 library represented by a motif XHyHyXXHyXXXXHyHy. The peptide motif described as XXHyHyXXX best describes the selected hydrophilic peptides selected from the library. Interestingly, a similar core motif (HyXXXHyHyXXHyXXX) can also be identified in selected resides from the dodecapeptide library. However, a small number of peptides are completely lacking in hydrophobic residues although they are selected during panning of Hsp47. BLAST program analyses are performed to assess the sequence homology between bacteriophage-displayed peptides and procollagen I and the selected dodecapeptides. Little specific homology is observed based on sequence alone. However, when the hydropathic profile of procollagen I (1) is compared with the dodecapeptides obtained from three rounds of panning, using Kyte-Doolittle method of calculating hydrophilicity over a window length of 7, all of the phage displayed peptides are represented by specific regions within the procollagen molecule. Most of the hydrophobic peptides (see Table 1) are localized to regions within the N-propeptide region (residues 59-71) or the C-propeptide region (residues 1344-1445). Conversely, most of the hydrophilic peptides (see Table 2) are localized the regions with the helical region of procollagen (residues: 283-295, 470-482,666-678, 727-739, 1040-1052, and
1087-1099) with only one peptide localized to a sequence within the N-propeptide region (residues 100-112).
Example 6 Subcellular localization of Hsp47 binding phage (HBP) on tumor cells: Studies are performed using the cell lines SCC4, SCC9, SCC 15 and SCC25 as described above, and a transformed normal oral keratinocyte cell line GMSM-K which IS courtesy of Dr V Murrah (UNC, Chapel Hill, NC) Breast carcinomas [HTB126, HTB127] and HTB125 normal breast cells are obtained from ATCC In addition, prostate cell lines PC-3, LNCaP and PZ-HPV are courtesy of Dr R Fianklm (UM, Baltimore, MD) A. Flow Cytometnc Analysis. Antibodies against Hsp47 are descnbed above, as are methods of conjugating them with fluorescem or Texas Red Antι-M13 monoclonal antibody is procured from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech (Piscataway, NJ) Cytometnc analysis is conducted as described above
25μl of HBP are incubated with 106 cells (SCC4, SCC9,SCC15, SCC25, HTB126, HTB127, PC-3 and LNCaP) in media for a 1 hr at 37°C The cells are then washed 3 times with TBS-Tween and the HBP stained with FITC-antι-M13 antibodies and analyzed by flow cytometry These studies reveal that non-permeabihzed tumor cell lines (SCC4, SCC9, SCC15, SCC25, HTB126, and PC-3) possess varying levels of M13 phage staining on their cell surfaces Furthermore, if the cells are permeabilzed prior to the addition of antibody, then cell surface staining coupled with internalized phage reveals enhanced staining However, GMSM-K, an established epithelial cell line, treated in a like manner, reveals little or no staining Results similar to those obtained for GMSM-K cells are also obtained for HTB125 and PZ-HPV normal breast and prostate cell lines respectively B. Immunoprecipitation Analysis To verify the association of Ml 3-bmdmg phage with specific cell lines SCC4 and GMSM-K cells are treated with an HBP for 1 hr, then washed 3 times with TBS-Tween and the plasma membranes are isolated and immunoprecipitated with antι-M13 antibodies This results in two protein bands one band with a Mr=47k and another band with a Mr=27k The 47k band is identified as Hsp47 by Western blot analysis
C. Immunofluorescence and Confocal Microscopy. 1 Immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy.
Immunofluorescence microscopy is earned out as described above To visualize cell surface Hsp47 or Ml 3 bactenophage, the cells are not permeabilized but treated and fixed with 1-% paraformaldehyde as described for cytometnc analyses Howevei, to prevent non-specific binding, the cells are blocked with 10% pig serum in PBS for 1 hr The cells are then incubated with antι-Hsp47 or antι-M13 bacteriophage antibodies (Amersham Pharmacia-Biotech, Piscataway, NJ), washed with PBS, and incubated for 1 h with goat anti-rabbit IgG conjugated with either fluorescein or Texas red. Coverslips are mounted in mounting media containing an antibleaching agent (Kirkegaard & Peny Laboratories, Inc.; Gaithersburg, MD). Cells are examined under a Zeiss II photomicroscope equipped with epifluorescence. Cells untreated with primary antibodies are used as negative controls.
Confocal images are collected using a Zeiss LSM410 confocal microscope. A FT of 488/568 with a barrier filter of 590 is used to detect Texas red staining and a FT of 560 with a barrier at 515-540 is used to generate fluorescein labeled images. Digital images are collected on a ZIP drive and figures generated using Adobe Photoshop 3.0 software (Adobe Systems Inc. Mountain View, CA). No fluorescence is associated with cells after incubation with secondary antibodies alone.
Confocal microscopy shows the fate and co-localization of HBP. These studies reveal that when tumor cell lines are treated with HBP, there is a distribution of staining at the cell surface, in microvesicles, and an intense staining in a perinuclear region that is coincident with the ER. Cells are then treated with Ml 3 bacteriophage followed by double staining with Texas red-anti-Hsp47 antibodies and FITC-M13 antibodies. The localization of Hsp47 is similar to that of Ml 3 phage staining and co-localization of antibodies reveals superimposition, yellow hues, of both Ml 3 staining and Hsp47 staining patterns.
2. Lysosomes and the ER
To label the lysosomal compartment, cells are incubated with 1 mg/ml lysine- fixable FITC-dextran (Molecular Probes; Eugene, OR) in growth medium for 4h at 37°C in 5% C02. After washing, cells are incubated an additional 30 min to chase the dextran from the early endosomal to the lysosomal compartments. For identification of the early and recycling endosomal compartments, cells are incubated in serum-free medium containing 50 μg/ml FITC-transferrin (Molecular Probes; Eugene, OR) for 30 min al 37°C in 5% C02. After treatments to identify the specific subcellular compartments, cells are fixed and processed for immunofluorescence and/or confocal microscopy. Cells are cultured in the presence of FITC-conjugated dextran, followed by a chase period of 30 min to remove the dextran from early endosomal compartments, before fixation and immunostaining with the Texas red conjugated anti-M13 antibodies. SSC4 cells, which are representative of the other cell lines, demonstrates a clear identification of FITC-dextran to vesicular structures, however, the HBP staining is primarily limited to punctate vesicles in the cytoplasm and a perinuclear zone. To verify that HBP is not significantly targeted to lysosomes, SCC4 cells are fed latex beads and HBP and then fixed and processed by for immunofluorescence using anti-M13 antibodies. In SCC4 cells, Ml 3 signal cannot be located at the periphery of the bead, suggesting that there is minimal association with the phagosomes.
To label endosomes, SCC4 and GMSM-K cells are cultured in the presence of FITC -conjugated or Texas red-conjugated transferrin before fixation and staining with anti-M13 antibodies. Analysis by confocal microscopy indicates that transfemn stains both the plasma membrane (ring staining at the edge of cells) and recycling endosomes (subcellular punctate staining). A very similar and overlapping pattern is observed for Ml 3 antibody staining, consequently superimposition of the two images indicates colocalization (yellow hues) of the two signals at the punctate subcellular region and plasma membrane. Noteworthy is that GMSM-K cells provide like patterns of staining with conjugated dextran and transferrin but are not stained by anti-M13 antibodies.
D. Subcellular Fractionation
Plasma membranes are fractionated as described above.
The membrane fractions are characterized by the distribution of 5'-nucleosidase activity, a marker of plasma membrane. Plasma membranes are directly subjected to
PAGE and Western analysis. For Western blots, proteins run on SDS-PAGE are immediately electrotransferred to nitrocellulose paper and blocked with 10% non-fat dry milk (NFDM). Antiserum or perimmune serum is diluted 1 J000 in the same buffer and incubated with gentle shaking overnight. The nitrocellulose is then rinsed three times for 5 min. in TBS/Tween. Antibodies to Hsp47 and M13 bacteriophage are detected with
[125I]-labeled protein A (New England Nuclear, Boston, Mass) or Western blot analysis.
E. Peptide Synthesis
Setapeptides and dodecapeptides are prepared by continuos flow solid-phase synthesis and analyzed by high-pressure liquid chromatography and mass spectrophotometry as described in previously (Cwirla et al, ibid). Example 7 Determination of the efficacy of Hsp47-binding peptides and Hsp47 monocolonal antibodies in homing chemotherapeutic drugs to tumor sites in oral squamous carcinoma xenografts.
A. Effect of Doxorubicin Conjugated Hsp47 Tumor-HormngPeptides and Hsp47 Monoclonal Antibodies on Tumor Progression. Doxorubicin is used as a model compound to show that the homing of drug to cell surface Hsp47 in well-differentiated tumors effectively reduces the dose of drug required for a tumor response, or increases the effectiveness of drug on the chemofherpeutic index in a human oral squamous cell carcinoma xenograft model B. Hsp47 monoclonal antibody doxorubicin conjugates. Doxorubicin immunocongujates are formulated using a malonate linker In essence, monoclonal antibody is conjugated to BAMME-CH DMB linker in 0 5 M borate buffer m the presence of dimethyl formamide After chromatographic purification, the functional antibody is deblocked by the addition of 100 mM carbohydrazide and purified chromatographically Finally, the deblocked functional antibody is reacted with 10-mM doxorubicin and purified chromatographically Similar lmmunoconjugates have been shown to maintain the lmmunoreactivity of the antibody and to have equivalent potency to unconjugated free doxorubicin without manifesting toxicity as measured by weight loss and deaths in a nude mouse xenograft mode C. Hsp47 binding protein doxorubicin conjugates. Hsp47 peptides are synthesized by the UM Biopolymei Laboratory Core Laboratory and purified by high- performance liquid chromatography The peptides are conjugated to doxorubicin (Aldrich) with 10ethyl-3-(3-dιmethyl-ammopropyl)carbodιmιde hydrochloride (EDC, Sigma) and N-hydroxysuccmimide (NHS, Sigma) The conjugates are then freed of reactants by gel filtration on Sephadex G25 The presence of free drug is monitored by
HPLC and nuclear magnetic resonance to be <5% of the preparation
D. Pharmacokinetics of doxorubicin distnbution as free drug, peptide conjugate, and monoclonal antibody conjugate.
1 Animals and Drug Administration. Specific-pathogen-free, adult mice (5-6 weeks of age) are maintained under conventional housing conditions Intravenous bolus doses of drug, free doxorubicin, peptide-conjugate doxorubicin, and monoclonal antibody conjugated doxorubicin, are administered through a lateral tail vein 2. Sampling: Blood is sampled at 5, 10, 15, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120, 180, 240, 360, 480, 960, and 1440 min after dosing. In addition, hearts, lungs, livers, kidneys, spleens, skeletal muscles, and tumors are collected at the same times notes for blood samples. In each study, blood and tissues from mice killed 5 min after delivery of vehicle serve as controls. Blood is collected by cardiac puncture into heparinized syringes, transfened to Eppendorf microcentrifuge tubes and stored on ice until centrifuged at 13,000 x g for 5 min to obtain plasma. Tissues are rapidly dissected, kept on ice until weighed, and then snap frozen in liquid nitrogen. Plasma, tissues, and dosing solutions are stored frozen at -70°C until analysis. 3. Analysis of Doxorubicin: Plasma and tissue concentrations of doxorubicin are determined by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Plasma samples are extracted by conventional procedures. Two hundred μl samples of plasma are mixed with internal standard (4'-epidoxorubicin) and then mixed vigorously with 0.6 ml of chloroform 2 -propanol (1 :1, v/v) for 15 sec. Ammonium Sulfate (approximately 0.5 g) is added to the resulting gel and mixed thoroughly. The triphasic mixture is centrifuged for 15 min at 13,000 x g. The resulting upper phase is transfened to a conical test tube and dried unde a N2 jet. The dried residue is redissolved in lOOμl of mobile phase, transfened to autosampler vials, and 75 μl is injected into the HPLC system described below. Tissue samples are thawed, immediately transfened to 17 x 100 mm polypropylene tubes that are held in an ice bath, and homogenized, using a Polytron (Brinkman Instruments, Westbury, NY), in parts (weight to volume) of phosphate- buffered saline (lJmM KH2Po4, 2.9 mM Na2HPO4, 154mM NaCl, pH 7.4, Biofluids, Inc., Rockville, MD). One part of each homogenate is then mixed with internal standard, extracted with chloroform/2 -propanol, and prepared for injection into the HPLC system.
The HPLC system used includes a Hewlett-Packard (Palo Alto, CA) model 1100 autosampler and a Waters (Milford, MA) M45 pump. The column employed is an
ALLTECH (Deerfield, IL) 10 μm C18 Econosil column (250 length, 4.6 mm i.d.). The mobile phase consists of acetonitrile: 0J2 M ortho-phosphoric acid (27:43, v/v) and is pumped at 1 ml/min. Column eluent is monitored with an Aminco fluoromonitor set at excitation wavelength of 470 nm and emission wavelength >500 nm. With this method, good separation of doxorubicin, doxorubicinol, and internal standard is achieved, with retention times of 12 5, 7, and 15 min, respectively The lower limit of quantitation is 0 1 nm The detector signal is processed with a Hewlett-Packard 3392 A integrator so as to integrate the area undei each peak Doxorubicin concentration in each sample is calculated by determining the ratio of doxorubicin peak area to that of the conesponding internal standard peak and comparing that ratio to a concomitantly performed standard curve prepared in the appropriate matrix
4 Pharmacok etic Analysis. Time courses of plasma concentrations of doxorubicin verses time are analyzed by both non-compartmental and compartmental methods Area under the curve from zero to lnfinty (AUC) and terminal half-life (t, ,) are estimated by non-compartmental analysis with the LaGrange function as implemented by the LAGRAN computer program CLtb is calculated from the definition
CLTB=Dose/AUC and steady-state volume of distribution (VDSS) is calculated from the formula vDSS = cykei In addition, individual concentrations of doxorubicin m plasma versus time are fit to comparmental models with the program ADAPT II, which uses a Nelder Mead simplex as the algorithm Two- and three-compartment, open, linear models are fit to the data Model discrimination is based on Akaike's Information Criteria (AIC), defined as
AIC - 2p + n(lnWSSR), where p represents the number of parameters m the model, n equals the number of observations, and WSSR represents the weighted sum of squares residuals
E. Treatment of mice beanng tumors with Hsp47 homing drugs. Mice with size- matched tumors (~ 1 cm3) are randomized into six treatment groups of no less than six animals per group vehicle only, free doxorubicin, doxorubιcm-Hsp47 binding peptide, doxorubicm-control nonbmdmg peptide, doxorubicm-monoclonal conjugate, Hsp47 monoclonal antibody Power analyses indicate that at least 6 animals per group are required to see a 30% difference in survival Generally, doxorubicin dosage in nude mice with human xenographs is 50 to 200 μg/week) Since he homing of drug to tumoi is more effective than free drug, initial studies are performed with dosages of 5, 10 and 15 μg/week The concentration of doxorubicin as equivalents is adjusted by measuring the absorbency of drug and conjugates at 490 nm and a calibration curve established to ascertain equivalents for peptide and monoclonal conjugates The fraction of surviving animals is determined over a course of 40 days and plotted as a Kaplan-Meier survival curve. Survival is determined by examining animals daily to determine mortality. Next, a dose escalating experiment is performed in which mice are treated with doxorubicin- Hsp47 binding peptide and doxorubicin-conjugated Hsp47 monoclonal antibodies at a dose of 30 μg of doxorubicin equivalent every 21 days for 84 days. A Kaplan-Meier survival curve is constructed. In addition, following necropsy, the primary tumor weight and size are ascertained, and the presence of lymph node and pulmonary metastasis is determined. Lymph node weight and lung weight are also measured as a gross measure of metastasis supported by histological assessment. To assess toxicity, drug dosage is escalated to 200 μg of doxorubicin-equivalent per mouse. Mice receiving elevated doses of drug receive a single dose of free doxorubicin, doxorubicin-Hsp47 binding peptide, or doxorubicin-Hsp47 monoclonal antibody. Animals are then followed for 14 days and the mean fraction of animals depicted in a Kaplan-Meier survival curve. Animals treated with tumor homing doxorubicin-conjugates survive longer an at lower equivalent doses of drug than animals receiving free drug. In addition, along with a greater survival is a reduction in tumor size as weight, and lymph node and drug metastasis. If unconjugated Hsp47 monoclonal antibody itself has an immunotherapeutic effect in mediating a response against tumor, this is evident only in the C57BL model, as immunodeficient nude mice do not respond in such a manner and the use of unconjugated controls.
From the foregoing description, one skilled in the art can easily ascertain the essential characteristics of this invention, and without departing from the spirit and scope thereof, can make changes and modifications of the invention to adapt it to various usage and conditions.
Without further elaboration, it is believed that one skilled in the art can, using the preceding description, utilize the present invention to its fullest extent. The preceding prefened specific embodiments are, therefore, to be construed as merely illustrative, and not limitative of the remainder of the disclosure in any way whatsoever. The entire disclosure of all applications, patents and publications, cited above and in the figures are hereby incorporated by reference. APPENDIX I
BINDING MOTIFS OF CPB2 A POTENTIAL CELL
SURFACE TARGET FOR CARCINOMA CELLS
Previously we have shown (J. Cellular Biochem., 1999) that among many cell lines the CPB2 gene product, Hsp47, eludes its retention receptor, erd2P, resulting in the appearance of Hsp47 on the cell surface associated with the tetraspanin protein CD9. In that Hsp47 possesses a highly restricted binding
cleft, random peptide display libraries were used to characterize peptides binding to Hsp47 and then to target this protein on carcinoma cell lines in vitro. Comparison of the clones obtained from panning revealed little specific homology based on sequence alone. To determine whether carcinoma cells expressing Hsp47 could selectively take up the selected bacteriophages, traditional immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy were employed. These studies revealed that phage-displaying Hsp47 binding peptides bound to cell lines expressing Hsp47 and that the peptides were rapidly taken up to a location coincident with Hsp47 staining. These observations were confirmed by
cytometric analyses. These data indicate that CBP2 product may provide a molecular target for chemotherapy and/or imaging of malignancies.
Abbreviations: CPB2 , collagen binding protein 2; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; ATCC, American Type Culture Collection; TBS, Tris buffered saline; PBS, phosphate buffered saline; PEG, polyethylene glycoi, FITC, fluoresceinistothiocyanate. There is an on going quest to identify specific cell surface targets by which to direct treatment or to image neoplastic cells. For example, one group of proteins that has been used as targets for drug delivery is chimeric molecules created by cancer-associated chromosomal abnormalities. However, such molecules are usually unique to a particular tumor (Baron et al., 1997; Diez de Medina SG et al., 1997). In addition to the aforementioned proteins, potential sources of such targets are the products of genes that are amplified at a particular chromosome locus in malignancy. For example the chromosome locus 11q13→14 is commonly amplified in human cancers that include cancers of the
head and neck, lung, esophagus, bladder and breast (Schuuring et al., 1992). This amplicon is large, spanning 2.5-5 Mb and harbors several genes with known oncogenic potential (Bekri, 1997). In breast cancer, this locus is amplified in -13% of primary tumors while in head and neck cancers amplification may represent 40%-76% of tumors. A more detailed map of this region has evolved indicating that as many as five distinct amplification units exist on 11q13. Among these units is a genomic area encompassing the GARP gene at 11 q13.5→q14.L
Assessment of this region, located telomeric to CCDN1 and EMS1, has revealed a number of genes in the regional map, namely CBP2 (Hsp47) and "spot 14 "at chromosome locus 11 q13.5 with, CLNS1A, UVRAG, and PAK1 located telomeric to this later region. Thus, narrowing the core of the 11 q13→q14 amplicon to a
350-kb area encompassing D11 S533 on its telomeric side (Bekri, 1997; Moncur, 1998).
In assessing this amplicon it became evident that the gene product of CBP2 was associated with, and may distinguish a group of malignant tumors (Morino et al., 1997; Morino et al., 1995; Morino et al., 1994; Shirakami et al., 1995a; Shirakami et al., 1995b; Shirakami et al., 1995), as well as, being localized to extravillous cytotrophoblasts and decidual cells at the fetal maternal interface (Pak et al., 1997; Shirakami et al., 1995b; Morino et al., 1995; Morino et al., 1994; Morino et al., 1997; Shirakami et al., 1995). Interestingly, CBP2, mapped to chromosome 11 q13.5, shares a locus with Spot 14 a key gene expressed in lipogenic neoplasms (Moncur, 1998).
Normally, the CBP2 gene product, Hsp47, is limited to the ER-Golgi where it is first associated with procollagen chains at a very early point during translation of nascent chains (Sauk et al., 1994). Hsp47 is retained within these cellular compartments by recycling of the erd2 gene product, KDEL receptor, that
associates with the COOH-terminus sequence RDEL of Hsp47 (Sauk et al., 1997). However, in some tumors Hsp47 is expressed independent of its chaperone properties and eludes or leaks from this surveillance mechanism and manifests on the cell surface, but is not secreted into the medium. Although previous studies have demonstrated that Hsps such as gp96 are tightly surface-
bound peripheral membrane proteins, the precise mechanism of anchorage was unclear, albeit ionic interactions with other proteins could be excluded (Tamura Y, 1997). Hsp47, like gp96, lacks sequence characteristics for farnesylation, palmitation, isoprenyllation or myristylation; consequently covalent bonding also appears to be an unlikely anchoring mechanism (Tamura Y, 1997; Altmeyer et
al., 1996; Tamura Y, 1997). Interestingly, Hsp47 has been shown to associates with the tetraspanin protein CD9 in some epidermoid carcinoma cell lines (Hebert et al., 1999). Moreover, in these instances Hsp47 has been shown to be easily recovered, even without the use of cross-linking, from membrane immunoprecipitates utilizing anti-CD9 antibodies, suggesting the presence of hydrophobic interactions between these proteins (Hebert et al., 1999).
Hsp47 unlike many other chaperones has been shown to possess a limited number of intracellular ligands (Nakai et al., 1989). Although previous studies have defined the Hsp47 binding to a region defined by the anti- propeptide antibody SP1.D8 (Hu et al., 1995), to a region of procollagen to N- propeptides of the α1(l)-chains between residues 23-151 , and to gelatin (Nagata
et al., 1988), specific peptide motifs have yet to be determined for this binding (Hu et al., 1995).
Here, we report on a repertoire of bacteriophage-peptides obtained from panning experiments with Hsp47. Colocalization of some of these peptides with Hsp47 in a number of tumor cell lines demonstrates that the peptides can be directed to an intracellular location spatially coincident with Hsp47. These results indicate that cell surface Hsp47 is not permanently anchored to the cell surface and that this protein undergoes recycling with an intracellular pool. In addition, these studies suggest that expression of the CBP2 in tumors may provide a target for phage directed gene therapy, a mechanisms by which to deliver drugs, or a means of imaging occult disease and metastases.
MATERIAL & METHODS Cell Lines: Studies were performed using a number of established cell lines of human oral squamous cell carcinomas [SCC4, SCC9, SCC15, and SCC25] were obtained from ATCC, and a transformed normal oral keratinocyte cell line GMSM-K was courtesy of Dr. V. Murrah (UNC, Chapel Hill, NC). Breast carcinomas [HTB126, HTB127], and HTB125 normal breast cells were likewise obtained from ATCC. In addition, prostate cell lines PC-3, LNCaP, and PZ-HPV were courtesy of Dr. R. Franklin (UM, Baltimore, MD). In the studies presented here, cells were cultured in a 1 :1 mixture of Ham's F12 and Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 10% fetal calf serum, hydrocortisone (0.4μg/ml, Sigma) at 37 °C in a 5% C02air atmosphere. For breast carcinoma cell lines 10
μg/ml of insulin was added to the medium as prescribed by ATCC and PZ-HPV cells were grown in KSF medium. Cells were subcultured by dissaggregation with trypsin (0J %)-EDTA (0.01 %) in phosphate buffered saline [PBS] at pH 7.5. Antibodies: The monoclonal antibody SPA-470 to Hsp47 (StressGen, Victoria, BC) was used, as well as, a Hsp47 rabbit polyclonal antibody prepared against a 22-mer peptide corresponding to the N-terminal sequence of mouse Hsp47 that was conjugated to Keyhole Limpet hemocyanin (Sauk et al., 1994). The anti-M13
monoclonal antibody was procured from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech (Piscataway, NJ). Monoclonal antibodies for cytomet c analyses were directly conjugated with fluorescein using 5(6) carboxyfluorescein-N-hydroxy succinimide ester kit (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) or labeled with SA-Red670™ following biotinylation of the antibody using EZ-Link™ Sulfo-NHS-LC- Biotinylation kit (Pierce, Rockville, III). Affinity Panning of a Library of Peptides: To study the binding specificity of Hsp47, we utilized two bacteriophage libraries with random septapeptide Ph.D.- 7, New England Biolabs; Beverly, MA) or dodecapeptide (Ph.D. -12, New England Biolabs; Beverly, MA) inserts at the N-terminus of pill protein. The Ph.D. -7 library consists of -2.8 x 109 electroporated sequences amplified once to yield ~ 70 copies of each sequence in 10μl of supplied phage. The Ph.D.-12 library consisted of -2.7 x 109 electroporated sequences amplified once to yield -55 copies/10 μl of supplied phage.
Selection of Hsp47 -Binding Bacteriophages by Affinity Panning:
Bacteriophages displaying peptides recognized by Hsp47 were identified using the Ph.D.-7 or Ph.D.-12 kits (New England Biolabs; Beverly, MA) and the protocols modified for a biotinylated target. In essence, 96 wells of a microtitration plate were coated with 15 μl of streptavidin (1 mg/ml) in 135 μl of OJ M NaHC03 pH 8.6, with gentle agitation in a humidified chamber overnight at 4°C . After removal of the streptavidin solution the wells were washed three times with TBS containing 0.05% Tween 20 (TBS-Tween) and then blocked by incubation for 1 hr at 37°C with 1 % BSP in PBS containing 0J μg/ml streptavidin.
Next, phage was precomplexed with biotinylated Hsp47 by adding 0J μg biotinylated Hsp47 and 2 x 1011 pfu of the input phage in 400 μl TBS-Tween and incubated for 60 min. The phage-target complex solution was then added to the washed blocked plates and incubated at room temperature for 10 min. Biotin was added to a final concentration of 0J mM and incubated for 5 min. to displace streptavidin-binding phage. Non-binding phage were discarded and the plates washed 10 x with TBS-Tween (0.1 %). The wells were then treated with 15 μl of 1 M Tris-HCI; pH 2.2, containing 1 mg/ml BSA for 5 minutes to elute Hsp47-phage. The samples were neutralized with 1 M Tris-HCI; pH 9J , and amplified by adding to 20 ml of ER 2537 culture incubated at 37°C with vigorous shaking for 4.5 hrs. The cultures were then transferred to fresh tubes centrifuged at 10,000 rpm, 4°C, for 10 mins. The supernatants were transferred to fresh tubes and phage precipitated with 1/6 volume of PEG/NaCl at 4°C, overnight. To 4 ml of LB media a single colony of ER2537 was inoculated and then incubated at 37°C with vigorous shaking until the culture reached mid-log phase (O.D.600~0.5). A pellet was obtained by centnfugation for 15 min at 10,000 rpm, 4°C. The pellet was suspended in 1 mi of TBS and centrifuged for 5 min, 10,000 rpm, 4°C. The supernatant was transferred to a fresh tube and precipitated with 1/6 volume of PEG/NaCl on ice for 1 hr. Following centnfugation the pellet was resuspended in 200 μl TBS. The eluate was titered and plated onto LB/IPTG/XGal plates and incubated overnight. Since the library phage are derived from the common cloning vector M13mp19, which carries the lacz gene, phage plaques appear blue when plated on media containing Xgal and IPTG. Blue colonies were selected for sequencing or used for a second round of panning. As a control streptavidin was used as a target and after three round of panning a to verify a
consensus sequence for streptavidin-binding peptides.
Screening for Hsp47-Binding Bacteriophages: Clones of blue colonies from plates containing 50-200 colonies were transferred to nitrocellulose filters. The bacteria were washed from the filters with PBS containing 0.05% Tween 20 and 1 % bovine serum albumin, and the filters were then incubated for 30 min in the same buffer before washing three times with PBS-Tween. Following incubation for 1 hr in 5 ml of biotinylated Hsp47 (0.1- 2μg/ml in PBS-Tween), the filters were again washed three times in PBS-Tween. The positions of the clones that had secreted Hsp47-binding bacteriophages were then located by one of two methods: the filters were incubated with 5 ml of alkaline phosphatase-conjugated streptavidin (1/10,000 dilution in PBS-Tween; Pierce, Rockford, IL) for 1 hr at room temperature before extensive washing with PBS-Tween, or the filters were incubated for 1 hr in 5 ml of an anti-biotin antibody (1/50,000 dilution in PBS-Tween; Pierce, Rockford, IL), washed, and incubated with a rabbit anti-goat immunoglobulin antibody conjugated to alkaline phosphatase (1/5,000 dilution in PBS-Tween; Pierce, Rockford, IL). In each case, alkaline phosphatase activity was revealed using a mixture of nitroblue tetrazolium/and 5 bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate tolidium (Bethesda Research Labs, Rockville, MD) as substrate.
Determination of the Sequence of Bacteriophage-Displayed Peptides: Single-stranded bacteriophage DNAs were purified and sequenced as -96 primer an oligonucleotide (5'-CCCTCATAGTTAGCGTAACG-3'). Sequencing reactions were carried out using an ABI Prism Model 373 Version 3.0. Program to Score Hsp47 -Binding Peptides: To characterize peptides that bind to Hsp47 we compared the starting and selected libraries in a position-dependent manner. A statistical analysis was performed by maximum likelihood and bootstrap resampling. This revealed the distribution of residues by position in Hsp47-binding peptides compared to peptides in the original library. To codify the preferences obtained above we used a scoring system previously described for BiP (Cwirla et al., 1990) that would be used to predict Hsp47-binding sites in synthetic and naturally occurring polypeptides. In so doing a score is given to each of the possible 20 amino acids at each position of the seven-residue core sequence. These scores were derived from the fold difference in the overall abundance of each residue in the peptides displayed by the selected and nonselected bacteriophage populations. The scoring for each of the seven residue sequences present in each septapeptide was determined as previously described (Cwirla et al., 1990).
To validate our scoring set of Hsp47-binding sequences, a second set of Hsp47-binding sequences not part of the database used to generate the scoring matrix is necessary. To accomplish this a second library consisting of independent recombinant bacteriophages displaying random dodecapeptides was used (Ph.D-12, New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA). Sequences were then compared by position specific iterated BLAST, pattern Hit Initiated BLAST, and BLAST 2 sequences against each other (NCBI). In addition, the hydropathic profiles of two peptides were compared using the Weizmann Institute of Sciences Genome and Bioinformatics database. Peptide Synthesis: Setapeptides and dodecapeptides were prepared by continuos flow solid-phase synthesis and analyzed by high-pressure liquid chromatography and mass spectrophotometry as described in previously (Cwirla et al., 1990). Cytometnc Analyses:
Cells grown in vitro, as described above, were washed and incubated in a 0.5% solution of Polyglobin N to block unsaturated Fc receptors and reduce nonspecific binding of monoclonal antibodies (Takeshita et al., 1995). Next, 50 ml of the cell suspension (1X106 cell/ml) was incubated with 2.5 ml (1 mg) of antibodies, conjugated with fluorescein, or SA-Red670™ (GibcoBRL, Gaithersburg, MD). After washing, the cell pellet was resuspended in PBS containing BSA for flow cytometric assay. To assess intracellular Hsp47 and M13 bacteriophage, cells were first permeabilized with 0.1 % Saponin as previously described (Tang et al., 1994; Tang et al., 1993). Samples were then analyzed on a FACScan flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA). The 488 nm Argon laser was run at 15 nW of power. The data from fluorescein conjugates were collected after a 530/30 BP filter. For two-color flow cytometric analysis either fluorescein or Red670™ were employed with propidium iodide. The filters used were 600 nm dichroic SP; 525 ± 15nm BP (fluorescein) and 645
LP (Red670™).
Propidium iodide was used to assess cell cycle and stain for dead cells.
For these studies a hypotonic citrate solution containing PI was added to - 1X106 washed cells to a concentration of 1 mM. Cells were labeled for 20 minutes, then analyzed on the FACScan in their staining solution. Orange PI fluorescence was collected after a 585/42 nm BP filter. Electronic compensation was used among fluorescence channels collecting emissions to remove residual spectral overlap. Fluorescence data were displayed on a four-decade long scale. A minimum of 10,000 events was collected on each sample. Analysis of the data was performed with LYSYS II software (Becton Dickinson, Mansfield, MA). Fluorescence dual parameter contour plots were used for exclusion of debris and clumps. This method of gating allowed ready discrimination of debris from dead cells (low forward light scatter and high PI fluorescence).
Immunofluorescence and Confocal Microscopy: Immunofluorescence microscopy was carried out after the method of Tang et al, (Tang et al., 1994; Tang et al., 1993). To visualize cell surface Hsp47 or M13 bacteriophage, the cells were not permeabilized but treated and fixed with 1-% paraformaldehyde as
described for cytometric analyses. However, to prevent non-specific binding, the cells were blocked with 10% pig serum in PBS for 1 hr. The cells were then incubated with anti-Hsp47 or anti-M13 bacteriophage antibodies (Amersham Pharmacia-Biotech, Piscataway, NJ), washed with PBS, and incubated for 1 h with goat anti-rabbit IgG conjugated with either fluorescein or Texas red. Coverslips were mounted in mounting media containing an antibleaching agent (Kirkegaard & Perry Laboratories, Inc.; Gaithersburg, MD). Cells were examined under a Zeiss II photomicroscope equipped with epifluorescence. Cells untreated with primary antibodies were used as negative controls.
Confocal images were collected using a Zeiss LSM410 confocal microscope. A FT of 488/568 with a barrier filter of 590 was used to detect Texas red staining and a FT of 560 with a barrier at 515-540 were used to generate fluorescein labeled images. Digital images were collected on a ZIP drive and figures generated using Adobe Photoshop 3.0 software (Adobe Systems Inc. Mountain View, CA). No fluorescence was associated with cells after incubation with secondary antibodies alone.
To label the lysosomal compartment, cells were incubated with 1 mg/ml lysine-fixable FITC-dextran (Molecular Probes; Eugene, OR) in growth medium for 4h at 37°C in 5% C02. After washing, cells were incubated an additional 30 min to chase the dextran from the early endosomal to the lysosomal compartments. For
identification of the early and recycling endosomal compartments, cells were incubated in serum-free medium containing 50 μg/ml FITC-transferrin (Molecular Probes; Eugene, OR) for 30 min at 37°C in 5% C02. After treatments to identify the specific subcellular compartments, cells were fixed and processed for immunofluorescence and/or confocal microscopy. Subcellular Fractionation of Plasma Membranes: The method for fractionating plasma membranes was modified after the methods described by Weber et al. (Weber TM et al., 1988). The samples were treated with bacterial collagenase to eliminate the possibility of cytoplasmic derived procollagen-Hsp47_ binding to the cell surface integrin receptors as a result of cell fractionation. The initial supernatant was centrifuged in a Sorvall SS34 rotor at 48,000 g at 4°C for 15 min. and the high-density microsome pellet was resuspended in 40μl of buffer. The supernatant was further centrifuged in a Beckman 70J rotor at 300,000 g at 4°C for 75 min. and the low-density microsome pellet was resuspended in 60 μl of buffer.
The membrane fractions were characterized by the distribution of 5'- nucleosidase activity, a marker of plasma membrane (Avruch and Wallach, 1971 ). Plasma membranes were directly subjected to PAGE and Western analysis. For Western blots, proteins run on SDS-PAGE were immediately electrotransferred to nitrocellulose paper and blocked with 10% non-fat dry milk
(NFDM). Antiserum or perimmune serum was diluted 1 :2000 in the same buffer and incubated with gentle shaking overnight. The nitrocellulose was then rinsed three times for 5 min. in TBS/Tween. Antibodies to Hsp47 and M13 bacteriophage were detected with [125l]-labeled protein A (New England Nuclear, Boston, Mass) or Western blot analysis as described previously (Sauk et al., 1997)
RESULTS
To elucidate the binding motifs of Hsp47, we utilized two bacteriophage libraries with random septapeptide or dodecapeptide inserts at the N-terminus of pill protein. Because peptides containing at least seven or eight residues are generally required for efficient binding we first chose a library of bacteriophages that displayed septameric peptides (Ph.D. -7, New England Biolabs; Beverly, MA). To begin to characterize these peptides, 70 individual bacteriophage clones were picked at random from the unselected library, and the amino acid sequences of the variable septapeptide inserts were deduced from the
nucleotide sequences of the corresponding coding region. All amino acids are represented, although their frequencies do not always correspond to those expected from the relative numbers of codons encoding each residue.
The sequences of septapeptides displayed by 54 Hsp47-binding bacteriophages obtained by panning were determined by DNA sequence analysis of the corresponding region of the bacteriophage genome. The peptide sequences from the 54 clones that bound Hsp47 were first considered as a single population and compared with those from the 70 clones picked randomly from the starting library. Tabulation of the hydrophilicities of the Hsp47-binding bacteriophages revealed that two general populations of peptides that were selected by panning. One group of peptides was represented by hydrophilic peptides and the other by a smaller hydrophobic group of peptides (Figure 1).
Comparison of the overall amino acid composition of the two populations, selected and unselected, of septapeptides revealed that asparagine (N), threonine (T), tyrosine (Y) and proline (P) were particularly enriched, while phenylalanine (F), aspartic acid (D), and arginine (R) were significantly depleted (Figure 2a, 2b). However, when considered individually, the hydrophobic group of peptides was noticeably enriched in tryptophan, and leucine as well as valine and alanine.
The five-residue spacer linking the variable septapeptides to the mature pill protein contained no enriched residues. Thus, indicating that the spacer residues are unlikely to contribute to the binding activity of selected bacteriophages, allowing us to look only within the variable septapeptide sequences for the presence of a binding motif. Inspection of the selected hydrophobic peptides revealed that a residue motif best described as XHyHyXXXHyHy, where Hy is a large hydrophobic amino acid (usually W,L, or F) and X is any amino acid. This core motif is also identified in selected residue from a Ph.D-12 library represented by a motif XHyHyXXHyXXXXHyHy. Taken together these data suggest that the peptide-binding site contain a deep hydrophobic pocket separated by charged hydrophilic residues (Figure 3). The peptide motif described as XXHyHyXXX best described the selected hydrophilic peptides selected from the library. Interestingly, a similar core motif (HyXXXHyHyXXHyXXX) could also be identified in selected resides from the dodecapeptide library. However, a small number of peptides were completely lacking in hydrophobic residues although they were selected during panning of Hsp47.
Recognizing that procollagen I was a natural ligand for Hsp47, BLAST program analyses were performed to assess the sequence homology between bacteriophage-displayed peptides and procollagen I and the selected
dodecapeptides . Interestingly, little specific homology was observed based on sequence alone. However, when the hydropathic profile of procollagen I (1 ) was compared with the dodecapeptides obtained from three rounds of panning, using Kyte-Doolittle method of calculating hydrophilicity over a window length of 7, all of the phage displayed peptides were represented by specific regions within the
procollagen molecule. Interestingly, most of the hydrophobic peptides were localized to regions within the Λ/-propeptide region (residues 59-71 ) or the C- propeptide region (residues 1344-1445). Conversely, the most of the hydrophilic peptides were localized the regions with the helical region of procollagen (residues: 283-295, 470-482,666-678, 727-739, 1040-1052, and 1087-1099) with only one peptide localized to a sequence within the Λ/-propeptide region (residues 100-112) (figure 4).
To gain insight into the subcellular localization of Hsp47-binding phage (HBP) on tumor cells, we incubated 25μl of HBP with 106 cells (SCC4,
SCC9,SCC15, SCC25, HTB126, HTB127, PC-3 and LNCaP) in media for a 1 hr at 37oC. The cells were then washed 3 times with TBS-Tween and the HBP stained with FITC-anti-M13 antibodies and analyzed by flow cytometry. These studies revealed that non-permeabilized tumor cell lines (SCC4, SCC9, SCC15, SCC25, HTB126, and PC-3) possessed varying levels of M13 phage staining on their cell surfaces. Furthermore, if the cells were permeabilzed prior to the addition of antibody, then cell surface staining coupled with internalized phage revealed enhanced staining. However, GMSM-K, an established epithelial cell line, treated in a like manner, revealed little or no staining. Figure 5 depicts a representative tumor cell line, SCC4 cells, compared to GMSM-K cells. Results similar to those obtained for GMSM-K cells were also obtained for HTB125 and PZ-HPV normal beast and prostate cell lines respectively.
To verify the association of M13-binding phage with specific cell lines SCC4 and GMSM-K cells were treated with an HBP for 1 hr, then washed 3 times with TBS-Tween and the plasma membranes were isolated and immunoprecipitated with anti-M13 antibodies. This resulted in two protein bands
one band with a Mr=47k and another band with a Mr=27k (Figure 6). The 47k band was identified as Hsp47 by Western blot analysis.
Confocal microscopy was also employed to determine the fate and co- localization of HBP. These studies revealed that when tumor cell lines were treated with HBP that there was a distribution of staining at the cell surface, in microvesicles and an intense staining in a perinuclear region that was coincident with the ER (Hebert et al., 1999). Cells were then treated with M13 bacteriophage followed by double staining with Texas red-anti-Hsp47 antibodies and FITC-M13 antibodies. The localization of Hsp47 was similar to that of M13 phage staining and co-localization of antibodies revealed superimposition, yellow hues, of both M13 staining and Hsp47 staining patterns (Figure 7).
Next, we determined whether HBP localized to the late endosomal/lysosomal compartment. To label the lysosomal compartment, cells were cultured in the presence of FITC-conjugated dextran, followed by a chase period of 30 min to remove the dextran from early endosomal compartments, before fixation and immunostaining with the Texas red conjugated anti-M13 antibodies. SSC4 cells, which were representative of the other cell lines, demonstrated a clear identification of FITC-dextran to vesicular structures, however, the HBP staining was primarily limited to punctate vesicles in the cytoplasm and a perinuclear zone (Figure 8).To verify that HBP was not
significantly targeted to lysosomes SCC4 cells were feed latex beads and HBP and then fixed and processed by for immunofluorescence using anti-M13 antibodies. In SCC4 cells, M13 signal could not be located at the periphery of the bead, suggesting that there was minimal association with the phagosomes.
Since we had previously shown that Hsp47 was expressed on the cell surface we considered whether HBP bound to cell surface Hsp47 might be present in recycling endosomes. To label these compartments SCC4 and GMSM-K cells were cultured in the presence of FITC-conjugated or Texas red- conjugated transferrin before fixation and staining with anti-M13 antibodies. Analysis by confocal microscopy indicated that transferrin stained both the
plasma membrane (ring staining at the edge of cells) and recycling endosomes (subcellular punctate staining). A very similar and overlapping pattern was observed for M13 antibody staining, consequently superimposition of the two images indicated colocalization (yellow hues) of the two signals at the punctate subcellular region and plasma membrane (Figure 9). Noteworthy was that GMSM-K cells provided like patterns of staining with conjugated dextran and transferrin but were not stained by anti-M13 antibodies (not shown). Based on the sequence of peptides isolated by panning, septapeptides and dodecapeptides consistent with the predicted models obtained from scoring were synthesized, labeled with FITC and incubated with SCC cells that were shown to bind and take-up HBP. Although none of the cell lines took up the septapeptides all of the synthesized dodecapeptides could be noted in the cytoplasm of tumor cells after 15 min. of incubation (Figure 10).
DISCUSSION:
The use of random peptide libraries has been shown to be a valuable tool for identifying novel therapeutic molecules. The libraries represent an enormous number of peptide sequences displayed either on the virion surface of filamentous phage clones or on a solid phase synthetic support. Central to this strategy is the observation that peptides isolated by affinity selection from such libraries typically interact with biologically relevant domains of the target proteins (Smith and Scott, 1993; Kitamura et al., 1992; Burkhardt et al., 1991 ; Smith et al., 1995; Pasqualini et al., 1996; Pasqualini and Ruoslahti, 1996; Ruoslahti, 1997; Ruoslahti, 1996; Hutchcroft et al., 1992; Borst et al., 1993). This strategy often results in a number of peptides that apparently bind to a single domain of a protein or receptor. Curiously, the peptides often lack sequence similarity and are thus reminiscent of the discovery of mimotopes (Bowditch et al., 1996; Partidos et al., 1997; Bowditch et al., 1996), where short peptides bind to the antigen-binding site of antibodies even though they differ in sequence from the antigen. Clearly, this appears to be the case here, where myriads of peptides were localized from both libraries. These peptides, however, could be divided into two groups. One group characterized by a prevalence of hydrophobic residues and a second group characterized by a preponderance of charged hydrophilic residues. The enrichment of valine and alanine as well as tryptophan and leucine in peptides displayed by this selected group of bactiophages is consistent with the affinity of Hsp47 to a region that is determined by its hydrophobic character. In addition, the demonstration of HBP binding by dodecapeptides with a motif of XXXXXHyXXHyXHyHy indicates that the hydrophobic domains of the ligand need not be located at the pill terminus. Thus, our data suggests that these selected peptides describe a peptide binding site for Hsp47 that contains at a long pocket which can accommodate the side chains of large hydrophobic and aromatic amino acids and that contain adjacent regions that can interact with charged residues. These conclusions are supported by three-dimensional structural modeling studies which reveal that mature Hsp47 possesses a binding region as a long, deep cleft, which at physiologic pH, the base is formed by a β-sheet with sides formed by helices. The helices project hydrophobic amino acid residue side chains in toward the cleft while β-sheet project hydrophobic amino acid residue side chains up from the bottom. (Davids et al., 1995). Moreover, this model explains the ability of Hsp47 to bind to hydrophobic regions within the Λ/-propeptide as described previously (Hu et al., 1995) and likewise to the backbone of denatured collagen (gelatin) (Nagata et al., 1988). Interesting, was the discovery that regions within the C-propeptide region of procollagen might also provide a binding site for Hsp47, since carboxyterminal association of procollagen chains are implied in
chain assembly (Chessler, 1993b; Lees, 1997; Oliver, 1996; Lees, 1994; Chessler, 1993a).
To gain further understanding into the nature and fate of Hsp47 displayed on the cell surface of cancer cells we localized M13-phage selected from the bacteriophage libraries to the cell surface of a number of oral cancer, breast and prostate cell lines utilizing flow cytometric analyses. In so doing, we demonstrated that permeabilization of the cells prior to antibody staining enhanced the FACS signaling, suggesting that M13 was internalized into the cells. Immunoprecipitation of the plasma membranes of the tumor cells exposed to selected bacteriophages displaying Hsp47 binding peptides revealed that Hsp47 was immunoprecipitated with the M13 bacteriophage as well as another 27kD protein which may represent CD9 (Hebert et al., 1999), thus, substantiating that the selected HBP were associated with cell surface Hsp47 complexes. Confocal imaging was then employed to begin to localize the fate of the internalized selected peptide displaying bacteriophage. These studies revealed that short-term incubation resulted in selected peptides being localized to the cell surface and recycling endosomes. This was not unexpected since membrane turnover of cell surface proteins and receptors normally follow such a course. However, surprisingly only a small amount of the internalized peptides could be identified in lysosomes distinguished by FITC-dextran staining. Antithetically, when the cells were stained for both M13 displayed HBP and Hsp47 there was a concurrent localization, yellow hues, of both antibodies to coincident intracellular locations represented by recirculating endosomes and the ER.
Collectively, these data indicate that unlike cell surface peptide hormone receptors that undergo internalization by endocytosis upon binding to ligands, which are then sorted in endosomes to lysosomes where they are presumably degraded (Gruenheid, 1999). Cell surface ER proteins are routed with their ligands back to the ER with only a small amount of the ligand destined for lysosomal processing. Conceivably, the use of an ER protein with a binding capacity to a restricted number of ligands will permit targeting of drug conjugates or imaging compounds directly to tumor cells expressing these proteins. Such targeting offers the possibility of minimizing nonselective toxic effects. Moreover, one would expect that multidrug resistance would be less important in the case of cell surface ER-mediated transport of the drug across the cell membrane
(Czerwinski et al., 1998). Although these in vitro data indicate that a cell surface expressed Hsp47 contain elements that might be able to deliver a very selective tumor agent, elements that may have importance in determining this activity have yet to be tested in this model. These elements include the type of toxic
moiety which could deliver its effect in the ER and the necessary level of Hsp47 expressed on the cell surface to deliver drug and the ability to recycle for additional ligand binding and transport (Czerwinski et al., 1998). In that septapeptides displayed at the pill terminus of bacteriophage were taken up by tumor cells while their synthetic homologues were not internalized, indicates that the use of such peptides would necessitate peptide linkers , that are stable in the circulation, capable of displaying the peptides for binding and are yet able to be processed following internalization. Ongoing research in our laboratory is directed to resolving these issues and to the application of our findings to clinically relevant tumors.
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Tamura Y, P.P.L.K.D.M.S.P. (1997). Immunotherapy of tumors with autologous tumor-derived heat shock protein preparations. Science 278, 117-120.
Tang, B.L., Wong, S.H., Low, S.H., Subramaniam, V.N., and Hong, W. (1994). Cytosolic factors block antibody binding to the C-terminal cytoplasmic tail of the KDEL receptor. European Journal of Cell Biology 65, 298-304.
Tang, B.L., Wong, S.H., Qi, X.L., Low, S.H., and Hong, W. (1993). Molecular cloning, characterization, subcellular localization and dynamics of p23, the mammalian KDEL receptor. Journal of Cell Biology 720, 325-328.
Weber TM, Joost HG, Simpson IA, and Cushman SW (1988). Subcelluar distribution of Insulin Receptors. In Insulin Receptors. Kahn CR and Harison LC, eds. (New York: Alan R. Liss, Inc), pp. 171-187.
FIGURE LEGENDS
Figure 1. Distribution of Hydophobicity Scores Computed for Peptides Displayed by Bacteriophages Selected from the PhD-7 Library Following Panning Against Hsp47.
The distribution of overall hydrophobicity scores calculated for each peptide using the hydropathy scale of Kyte and Doolittle (1982) are shown for 54 peptides displayed by bacteriophages obtained from Hsp47 binding following three rounds of panning.
Figure 2. Relative Abundance of the 20 Amino Acids In Septapeptides Displayed by the Library of PhD-7 Bacteriophages.
Single stranded DNA was purified from 70 bacteriophage clones from the PhD library, and the sequences of the septapeptides displayed by these bacteriophages were deduced from the DNA sequence of the corresponding region of the bacteriophage genome. The figure shows the frequency of occurrence of each amino acid calculated as the number observed divided by the total number of residues in the 70 septapeptides. The amino acids are grouped according to the number of codons that specify them, and the frequency expected for each group if all codons were utilized with equal efficiency is shown by open bars (Cwirla et al., 1990) . (B) The overall amino acid composition of 54 septapeptides from the Hsp47-binding PhD-7 bacteriophages was compared with that of 70 septapeptides from clones picked randomly from the PhD-7 starting library. The fold increases or fold decrease in the abundance is shown.
Figure 3: Schematic Model of the Peptide-Binding Site of Hsp47.
The peptide backbone is shown as an extended chain. The side chains of two adjacent residues extend into deep pockets in the peptide-binding site that have overall preferences for large hydrophobic or aromatic side chains. The data in figure 3 indicate that amino acids at position 2&3 in septa peptides and 2&3 and/or 11&12 make favorable contacts with Hsp47 side chains. The hydrophobic pockets are flanked by regions that containing charged residues at position 4,5,6 in septapeptides and positions 4 &5 and 7,8,9 & 10 in
dodecapeptides.
Figure 4: The Hydropathic Profile of Procollagen I Compared with Selected Peptides from PhD-12 Library.
Using the Kyte Doolittle method of calculating hydrophilicity (1982) over a window length of 7, selected phage from the PhD-12 library were compared with procollagen I alpha chains. The resides indicated in the boxes above the procollagen I profile indicate the residues similar to Hsp47 binding peptides selected from the PhD-12 library after three rounds of panning. Arrows at the C- propeptide regions indicate amino acids critical for the association and assembly of procollagen (Chessler, 1993b; Lees, 1997; Oliver, 1996; Lees, 1994; Chessler, 1993a).
Figure 5: FITC-antiphage M13 Staining of GMSM-K (Control) and SCC-4 Cells.
Panel a and b represent control GMSM-K cells and SCC-4 cells respectively depicting membrane staining. Panels c and d represent GMSM-K cells and SCC-4 cells respectively, in which the cells have been permeabilized to demonstrate intracellular staining. The areas within the boxes represent FITC staining for phage-peptide.
Figure 6: immunoprecipitation of Membrane Proteins by Anti-Phage M13 Antibodies.
Bands represent anti-M13 phage binding proteins immunoprecipitated as described in Methods. Lanes a-f represent M13 clones selected from PhD-7 and Ph-D12 libraries. Lanes a-c depict PhD-7 clone 3,5,&7 respectively and lanes d-f depict PhD-12 clone 2,5,&9 respectively.
Figure 7: Confocal Microscopic Images of SCC-4 cells Stained with Anti- Hsp47 and Anti-M13 antibodies.
Panel a depicts tumor cell stained with FITC conjugated anti-M13 antibodies, panel b depicts Texas red conjugated anti-Hsp47 antibodies, and panel c depicts spatial co-localization, yellow hues, of FITC and Texas red staining.
Figure 8: Confocal Microscopic Images of SCC-4 cells Stained with FITC- Dextran and Texas red -Anti -M 13 antibodies.
Panel a depicts tumor cell stained with FITC conjugated Dextran, panel b depicts Texas red conjugated anti-M13 antibodies, and panel c depicts spatial co- localization of FITC and Texas red staining. Only a minor portion of anti-M13 antibodies co-localizes with FITC-Dextran, yellow hues.
Figure 9:Confocal Microscopic Images of SCC-4 cells Stained with FITC- Transferrin and Texas red-Anti-M13 antibodies.
Panel a depicts tumor cell stained with FITC conjugated Transferrin, panel b depicts Texas red conjugated anti-M13 antibodies, and panel c depicts spatial co- localization, yellow hues, of FITC and Texas red staining.
Figure 10: Fluorescein isothiocyanate Conjugated Dodecapeptide Uptake in SCC Cells. Dodecapeptide corresponding to a cloned peptide was synthesized and conjugated to fluorescein isothiocyanate as described in Methods. The peptide was then incubated with SCC-4 cells for 30 min., washed and processed for fluorescence microscopy. The green fluorescence depicted about the nuclear area and in punctate staining represent cellular distribution of the peptide uptake.
Figure imgf000076_0001
-30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30
Hydrophobicity/Hydrophϊlicity
0.14 ω 0.12 c Observed Frequency Expected Frequency v. 3 0.10 O O
O 0.08
0.06
O c
0.04
3 σ o 0.02
Li.
0.00 i r r — "r r — "r r — -r r — -r — "r — r — ΎJ — -r — T1 — -r — ~ι ' ~ ' — "Ϊ
R L S A G P T Q V N D C E H I K M F WY
Amino Acids
Figure imgf000077_0001
Fold Decrease / Fold Increase
Figure imgf000078_0001
-91- /X3d 508 5/00 OΛV
Figure imgf000079_0001
Figure imgf000079_0002
Figure imgf000080_0002
Figure imgf000080_0001
Figure imgf000081_0001
Propidium Iodide (Fluorescence)

Claims

What is claimed is:
1. A method for treating a patient suffering from a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some of cells, comprising administering to the patient an effective amount of an agent comprising a targeting moiety which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
2. The method of claim 1 , wherein the targeting moiety is an antibody, or a fragment thereof.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the antibody is a monoclonal antibody.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the targeting moiety is a peptide.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the peptide is XHyHyXXHyXXXXHyHy (SEQ
ID NO: 1 ) or HyXXXHyHyXXHyXXX (SEQ ID NO: 2), wherein X, independently, can be any amino acid, and Hy, independently, can be any hydrophobic amino acid.
6. The method of claim 4, wherein the peptide is one of SEQ ID NOJ to SEQ ID NO: 25 of Tables 1 and 2.
7. The method of claim 1 , wherein the targeting moiety is a bacteriophage on whose surface is a peptide which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
8. The method of claim 1 , wherein the agent further comprises a therapeutic moiety which is a toxin, a radioisotope or radionuclide, an antibody, or a nucleic acid which encodes a therapeutic gene.
9. The method of claim 1, for modulating the interaction of a tumor cell with an intracellular matrix, tumor cell invasion, migration or motility of malignant cells, or tumor cell metastasis.
10. A method for modulating a cell which expresses Hsp47 on its surface, comprising administering to the cell an effective amount of an agent comprising a targeting moiety which binds to an external domain of Hsp47.
11. The method of claim 1 , wherein the Hsp47 is human.
12. A method for detecting a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some cells, comprising contacting the carcinoma with a detectable agent comprising a targeting moiety which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the targeting moiety is an antibody or a fragment thereof, a peptide, or a bacteriophage on whose surface is a peptide, each of which moieties binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
14. The method of claim 12, wherein the detectable agent is detectable by MRI, X- Ray, gamma scintigraphy, or CT scanning.
15. A method for detecting a cell which expresses Hsp47 on it surface, comprising administering to the cell a detectable agent comprising a targeting moiety which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
16. The method of claim 12, wherein the Hsp47 is human.
17. A method to screen for an agent which binds specifically to a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some cells, comprising identifying an agent comprising a targeting moiety which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein the agent is useful for treating a carcinoma in a patient.
19. The method of claim 17, wherein the agent is useful for diagnosing a carcinoma in a patient.
20. A kit for treating a patient suffering from a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some cells, or for detecting a carcinoma in which Hsp47 is expressed on the surface of at least some cells, comprising an agent comprising a targeting moiety which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47 in an amount effective to generate a cytostatic or cytolytic effect on the carcinoma, or to image the cell above a background of non-carcinoma cells.
21. The kit of claim 20, wherein the targeting moiety is an antibody or a fragment thereof, a peptide, or a bacteriophage on whose surface is a peptide, each of which moieties binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47.
22. The kit of claim 20, wherein the agent further comprises a therapeutic moiety, which is a toxin, a radioisotope or radionuclide, an antibody, or a nucleic acid which encodes a therapeutic gene.
23. A kit for modulating a cell which expresses Hsp47 on its surface, comprising an agent comprising a targeting moiety which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47, in an amount effective to modulate an activity of the cell.
24. A peptide which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47 expressed on the surface of a cell, comprising XHyHyXXHyXXXXHyHy (SEQ ID NO: 1) or HyXXXHyHyXXHyXXX (SEQ ID NO: 2), wherein X, independently, can be any amino acid, and Hy, independently, can be any hydrophobic amino acid, and wherein the binding is effective to modulate the cell..
25. A peptide which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47 expressed on the surface of a carcinoma, comprising XHyHyXXHyXXXXHyHy (SEQ ID NO: 1) or HyXXXHyHyXXHyXXX (SEQ ID NO: 2), wherein X, independently, can be any amino acid, and Hy, independently, can be any hydrophobic amino acid, and wherein the binding is effective to generate a cytostatic or cytolytic effect on the carcinoma or to image the carcinoma above a background of non-carcinoma cells.
26. A peptide of claim 24, wherein said peptide is not full-length collagen, and is not naturally occurring collagen or a fragment thereof.
27. The peptide: SEQ ID NOs: 3- 13 of Table 1.
28. The peptide: SEQ ID NOs: 14-25 of Table 2.
29. An agent comprising a targeting moiety which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47 expressed on the surface of a cell, in an amount effective to modulate the activity of the cell.
30. A pharmaceutical composition, comprising a peptide of claim 24 and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
31. A pharmaceutical composition, comprising an agent of claim 29 and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
32. A pharmaceutical composition, comprising an agent comprising a targeting moiety which binds specifically to an external domain of Hsp47 located on the surface of a carcinoma, in an amount effective to generate a cytolytic or cytostatic effect on the carcinoma, and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
PCT/US2000/006588 1999-03-15 2000-03-15 SURFACE LOCALIZED COLLIGIN/HsP47 IN CARCINOMA CELLS WO2000054805A1 (en)

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AU38809/00A AU3880900A (en) 1999-03-15 2000-03-15 Surface localized colligin/hsp47 in carcinoma cells
US09/936,565 US7361730B1 (en) 1999-03-15 2000-03-15 Surface localized colligin/Hsp47 in carcinoma cells
JP2000604877A JP2002539175A (en) 1999-03-15 2000-03-15 Collidine / Hsp47 present on the surface in cancer cells
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EP1411061A1 (en) * 2002-10-16 2004-04-21 Centre National De La Recherche Scientifique (Cnrs) Poly-alpha2,8-sialic acid mimetic peptides and their application
EP2339351A1 (en) 2003-09-08 2011-06-29 The Government of the United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services Non-peptide agonists and antagonists of adrenomedullin and gastrin releasing peptide
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