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An anti-CEA affibody showing high-definition staining in human pancreatic cancer tissue sections and selective tumor targeting in vivo

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posted on 2025-09-10, 07:19 authored by Johan Nilvebrant, Carlos Fernández Moro, Eleftherios Papalanis, Masih Ostad Novin, Haozhong Ding, Ruonan Li, Maryam Oroujeni, Arun Kumar SelvamArun Kumar Selvam, Béla Bozóky, Torbjörn Gräslund, Timea Szekerczes, Tatiana Sandalova, Hugh Salter, Adnane Achour, Vladimir Tolmachev, Mikael Björnstedt, Per-Åke Nygren
We report development and characterization of small non-immunoglobulin affibody affinity proteins directed to the highly glycosylated human carcinoembryonic antigen-related adhesion molecule 5 (CEACAM5, CEA), and their use in immunohistochemical (IHC) analyses of human pancreatic cancer samples and for in vivo tumor imaging. A total of nineteen unique anti-CEA affibodies were identified from large phage display libraries constructed using combinatorial protein engineering of a small 58 amino acid three-helix bundle protein domain. Molecular modeling suggested that all enriched clones share a binding surface with several clustered tryptophan residues interacting with a hydrophobic patch in the N1 domain of CEA centered around a phenylalanine residue. One variant, designated as C9, exhibited the highest affinity in biosensor analyses and was reformatted into a 15 kDa homodimer expressed in Escherichia coli. The biotinylated form, C9-C9-Bio, was evaluated for its IHC performance on matched frozen and formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) sections of human pancreatic cancer samples (n = 7). Compared to clinical-grade monoclonal antibodies II-7 and CEA31, as well as a polyclonal reagent, C9-C9-Bio demonstrated highly sensitive CEA detection with minimal background staining. Statistical analyses including intraclass correlation and Bland-Altman assessments revealed excellent agreement between C9-C9-Bio and the two monoclonal antibodies in FFPE tissue samples. Further, a 99mTc[Tc]-labeled C9-C9 construct showed CEA-dependent binding to human cancer cell lines in vitro, and selectively bound to CEA-expressing BxPC3 xenografts in mice when investigated as a tracer for in vivo imaging, allowing for a visualization of tumors after four hours. In , these findings highlight the potential use of the easily produced CEA-binding C9 affibody for various clinical applications, including IHC and medical imaging, and as a targeting moiety for directing various therapeutic modalities to CEA-expressing tumors.<p></p>

Funding

Swedish Cancer Society

Radium Hemmets Research Funds

Karolinska University Hospital

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  • Published

Publication status

Accepted

Journal

Translational Oncology

ISSN

1944-7124

Volume

61

Article number

102512

Language

  • eng

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