Nanobody-Based Targeting of the Macrophage Mannose Receptor for Effective In Vivo Imaging of Tumor-Associated Macrophages

K Movahedi, S Schoonooghe, D Laoui, I Houbracken… - Cancer research, 2012 - AACR
K Movahedi, S Schoonooghe, D Laoui, I Houbracken, W Waelput, K Breckpot, L Bouwens
Cancer research, 2012AACR
Tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) are an important component of the tumor stroma and
exert several tumor-promoting activities. Strongly pro-angiogenic TAMs that reside in
hypoxic tumor areas highly express macrophage mannose receptor (MMR, CD206). In this
study, we targeted MMR+ TAMs using nanobodies, which are single-domain antigen-
binding fragments derived from Camelidae heavy-chain antibodies. MMR-specific
nanobodies stained TAMs in lung and breast tumor single-cell suspensions in vitro, and …
Abstract
Tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) are an important component of the tumor stroma and exert several tumor-promoting activities. Strongly pro-angiogenic TAMs that reside in hypoxic tumor areas highly express macrophage mannose receptor (MMR, CD206). In this study, we targeted MMR+ TAMs using nanobodies, which are single-domain antigen-binding fragments derived from Camelidae heavy-chain antibodies. MMR-specific nanobodies stained TAMs in lung and breast tumor single-cell suspensions in vitro, and intravenous injection of 99mTc-labeled anti-MMR nanobodies successfully targeted tumor in vivo. Retention of the nanobody was receptor-specific and absent in MMR-deficient mice. Importantly, co-injection of excess unlabeled, bivalent anti-MMR nanobodies reduced nanobody accumulation in extratumoral organs to background levels, without compromising tumor uptake. Within tumors, the 99mTc-labeled nanobodies specifically labeled MMR+ TAMs, as CCR2-deficient mice that contain fewer TAMs showed significantly reduced tumor uptake. Further, anti-MMR nanobodies accumulated in hypoxic regions, thus targeting pro-angiogenic MMR+ TAMs. Taken together, our findings provide preclinical proof of concept that anti-MMR nanobodies can be used to selectively target and image TAM subpopulations in vivo. Cancer Res; 72(16); 4165–77. ©2012 AACR.
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