Enhanced Photodynamic Therapy Using the Apohemoglobin-Haptoglobin Complex as a Carrier of Aluminum Phthalocyanine.

ACS Appl Bio Mater

William G. Lowrie Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, United States.

Published: July 2020

Photodynamic therapy (PDT) has been shown to effectively treat cancer by producing cytotoxic reactive oxygen species via excitation of photosensitizer (PS). However, most PS lack tumor cell specificity, possess poor aqueous solubility, and cause systemic photosensitivity. Removing heme from hemoglobin (Hb) yields an apoprotein called apohemoglobin (apoHb) with a vacant heme-binding pocket that can efficiently bind to hydrophobic molecules such as PS. In this study, the PS aluminum phthalocyanine (Al-PC) was bound to the apoHb-haptoglobin (apoHb-Hp) protein complex, forming an apoHb-Al-PC-Hp (APH) complex. The reaction of Al-PC with apoHb prevented Al-PC aggregation in aqueous solution, retaining the characteristic spectral properties of Al-PC. The stability of apoHb-Al-PC was enhanced via binding with Hp to form the APH complex, which allowed for repeated Al-PC additions to maximize Al-PC encapsulation. The final APH product had 65% of the active heme-binding sites of apoHb bound to Al-PC and a hydrodynamic diameter of 18 nm that could potentially reduce extravasation of the molecule through the blood vessel wall and prevent kidney accumulation of Al-PC. Furthermore, more than 80% of APH's absorbance spectra were retained when incubated for over a day in plasma at 37 °C. Heme displacement assays confirmed that Al-PC was bound within the heme-binding pocket of apoHb and binding specificity was demonstrated by ineffective Al-PC binding to human serum albumin, Hp, or Hb. studies confirmed enhanced singlet oxygen generation of APH over Al-PC in aqueous solution and demonstrated effective PDT on human and murine cancer cells. Taken together, this study provides a method to produce APH for enhanced PDT via improved PS solubility and potential targeted therapy via uptake by CD163+ macrophages and monocytes in the tumor (i.e., tumor-associated macrophages). Moreover, this scalable method for site-specific encapsulation of Al-PC into apoHb and apoHb-Hp may be used for other hydrophobic therapeutic agents.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsabm.0c00450DOI Listing

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