Manmade
protein shows promise for cancer, macular degeneration
Newswise — Potentially blinding blood vessel growth in the cornea
resulting from eye injury or even surgery can be reduced by more
than 50 percent with a new manmade protein, researchers say.
“We believe eventually we’ll be able to use this protein to help
patients in many situations where blood vessel formation is
detrimental, including cancer, diabetic retinopathy and macular
degeneration,” says Dr. Balamurali
K. Ambati, corneal specialist at the Medical College of
Georgia and Augusta Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Dr.
Ambati is corresponding author of the study published in the
November issue of Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual
Science.
The body can produce new blood vessels to promote healing
after trauma, such as a corneal transplant, a significant
corneal scratch from a contact lens or retinal oxygen
deprivation caused by diabetes or aging. This natural
response, called angiogenesis, becomes detrimental when new
growth obstructs vision or when a tumor pirates the process
to survive.
In an animal model, researchers used the protein they developed to
reverse obstructive growth as long as one month after injury, says
Dr. Ambati. That’s a very long time after injury in a mouse’s
lifetime, indicating even well-established blood vessels are
susceptible to intraceptor-mediated regression, he says.
This intraceptor traps vascular endothelial growth factor, or VEGF,
inside the protein making machinery of a cell. It’s made with a
portion of a VEGF receptor called sflt-1, a free-floating receptor
recently shown to help keep the cornea clear by taking up and
effectively neutralizing VEGF. Although other molecules have an
anti-angiogenic effect, sflt-1 was the only one they found that
spurs corneal blood vessels when blocked. The work, published in
October in Nature, was led by teams at MCG and the University of
Kentucky.
“Now we have designed a novel recombinant molecule where we take a
subunit of sflt-1 and couple it with a four-amino-acid peptide
tail,” he says. “The tail essentially handcuffs the manmade molecule
within the protein-making machinery of the cell so that it stays
there and anything that binds with it, namely VEGF, stays there too.
So it’s a very specific way of down-regulating a target protein.”
In May 2005, Dr. Ambati and his colleagues published work in
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science showing the intraceptor
helped reduce blood vessel development in the test tube and animal
models for corneal injury and melanoma.
“Now we are talking about making them go away,” says Dr. Ambati.
While the work is still in the laboratory, it provides further
evidence of the intraceptor’s potential clinical application, he
says.
The work shows the intraceptor prompts regression of blood vessels
by inducing programmed cell death, or apoptosis, in the vascular
endothelial cells that line the vessels.
“The biology of all this is showing this molecule interrupts the
proper folding of proteins involved in existing blood vessels, which
makes them die. It’s a nice result,” says Dr. Ambati.
Some existing anti-angiogenesis treatments target VEGF outside
cells. “It is important to bind it within cells because certain
cells, such as cancer and blood vessel cells, have the capability to
produce their own VEGF and their own receptors,” Dr. Ambati says.
“Imagine trying to block from the outside a factory that has
everything it needs inside. You have to throw a monkey wrench inside
the factory and that is what we managed to do.”
For the study, the manmade protein was injected directly into the
cornea with a microneedle. “Ideally we would like to develop a
topical eye drop with a long-term delivery system,” says Dr. Ambati.
His research team is pursuing its work of the intraceptor’s
potential role in destroying blood vessels that help sustain
cancers. They also are looking at a biodegradable polymer cage so
they can encapsulate the intraceptor, tag it with a homing device
for target cells and deliver it “like a missile carrying a payload”
into the desired cells where it will slowly release the intraceptor,
he says.
Co-authors include Dr. Nirbhai Singh, MCG postdoctoral fellow; Pooja
D. Jani and Shivan Amin, MCG medical students; and Tushar Suthar, a
medical student at New York Medical College in Valhalla.
The research was funded by the Knights-Templar Eye Foundation, Fight
For Sight Grant-in-Aid and the Association for Research in Vision
and Ophthalmology/Alcon Postdoctoral Fellowship.