Engineering apoferritin for targeted delivery of peptides or proteins for the treatment of breast cancer

Ferreira, Lenny (2023) Engineering apoferritin for targeted delivery of peptides or proteins for the treatment of breast cancer. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.

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Abstract

Ferritin is a universal intracellular protein that stores iron and accounts for the majority of iron storage in the body. Ferritin is produced by almost all living organisms, including archaea, bacteria, algae, higher plants, and animals. Human ferritin is comprised of 24 subunits, which can self-assemble into a protein cage above pH 4.5. Human apoferritin, which is ferritin void of its iron core, has many characteristics that make it favourable as a drug delivery system: its biocompatibility: its biodegradability: and its capacity for spatially defined multivalent ligand display. The major focus of this PhD study is targeted delivery of human heavy chain apoferritin to breast cancer cells. The study initially focused on removing the ferroxidase ability of human heavy chain apoferritin (human heavy chain apoferritin 222). This is because highly reactive hydroxy radicals are produced during ferroxidation. Given that there is a risk that hydroxy radicals could affect encapsulated payloads, it was essential that this function be removed. Following removal of the ferroxidase residues, circular dichroism and native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed no major changes to both the secondary and tertiary structure compared to its parent human heavy chain apoferritin. Kinetic studies of human heavy chain apoferritin 222 showed a slower iron core formation time than its parent protein. Following this, potential residues on human heavy chain apoferritin that could be involved in transferrin receptor 1 receptor binding were identified. Human heavy chain apoferritin has the innate ability to target transferrin receptor 1, a membrane protein expressed on most normal cells and overexpressed in many cancers, including breast cancers. However, this innate ability can cause problems when human heavy chain apoferritin is primed with other ligands, e.g., affibodies, for targeting alternative biomarkers such as the human epidermal growth receptor 2. One of the possible issues when attaching new targeting ligands is where secondary non-specific uptake by transferrin receptor 1 is undesirable. Therefore potential residues along the BC loop that could be involved in transferrin receptor 1 binding were removed (giving the TfR- mutant). A mutant cysteine residue was also introduced in the interior of human heavy chain apoferritin for conjugation of fluorescent probes. Maleimide conjugation of fluorescent probes was achieved using 8 M urea to disassemble the apoferritin cage and make the cysteine accessible. The tagged apoferritin was then evaluated by confocal microscopy, and results indicated that TfR- was not taken up by SKBR3, a high transferrin receptor 1 expressing breast cancer cell line. Reduced uptake by TfR- confirmed that mutations along the BC loop (residues 80-82) considerably reduce uptake of human heavy chain apoferritin via transferrin 9 receptor 1 receptor. This finding was quantitatively confirmed using flow cytometry. To evaluate the effect of a new targeting ligand on human heavy chain apoferritin on transferrin receptor 1 binding, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 targeting ligand (affibody) was engineered onto the N-terminus of the apoferritin subunits. Native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis confirmed that the targeting ligand did not affect the tertiary structure or assembly of human heavy chain apoferritin. Homology modelling studies of affibody-human heavy chain apoferritin indicated only partial obstruction of the transferrin receptor 1 receptor binding site by the affibody ligand. Flow cytometry studies using breast cancer cell lines BT474 (HER2+), SKBR3 (HER2+), MDA-MB-231 (HER2 normal) and MDA-MB-468 (HER2-) showed that the addition of affibodies onto human heavy chain apoferritin does not obstruct transferrin receptor 1 binding completely.

The second part of this PhD study focused on delivering therapeutic proteins using human heavy chain apoferritin. Human heavy chain apoferritin’s ability to encapsulate various anti-cancer drugs stems from its characteristic 8 nm diameter hollow core and self-assembly properties. In vitro, apoferritin has been shown to disassemble at very acidic pH (2-3) or in the presence of 8 M urea and reassembles above pH 4.0 or after removing the denaturant. At the time this research was conducted, there were no reports describing protein encapsulation in human heavy chain apoferritin. Therefore, initial studies evaluated human heavy chain apoferritin’s capacity to encapsulate therapeutic proteins such as bovine heart cytochrome C. An encapsulation value of ~3 cytochrome C molecules per apoferritin cage was calculated using the urea- and pH based encapsulation methods. The next step involved engineering human heavy chain apoferritin to disassemble at moderate pH (4-7). The last 23 amino acids of human heavy chain apoferritin were removed (giving the ΔDE mutant), and native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and dynamic light scattering confirmed ΔDE had a disassembly point at pH 4. Computational modelling using PyMol showed a drastic change i n electrostatic charge and channel diameter around thefour-fold channel of ΔDE compared to human heavy chain apoferritin. Encapsulation studies using a pH-based method confirmed that ΔDE can successfully encapsulate cytochrome C at pH 4. MTT assays also showed that delivery of ΔDE encapsulated cytochrome C at 406 + 42 nM reduced SKBR3 cell growth by 50%; in contrast, MRC-5 cell proliferation was not significantly affected, suggesting that differential cellular targeting is possible.

Item Type: Thesis (University of Nottingham only) (PhD)
Supervisors: Thomas, Neil
Bradshaw, Tracey
Keywords: breast cancer, chemotherapeutics, drug delivery systems, apoferritin
Subjects: R Medicine > RC Internal medicine > RC 254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer)
R Medicine > RM Therapeutics. Pharmacology
Faculties/Schools: UK Campuses > Faculty of Science > School of Chemistry
Item ID: 71203
Depositing User: Ferreira, Lenny
Date Deposited: 23 Aug 2023 09:36
Last Modified: 23 Aug 2023 09:36
URI: https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/id/eprint/71203

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