Abstract
Previous studies have shown that immunotoxin action is dependent upon selective binding to the target cell, internalization and then passage into the cytosol. It is important to define precisely how these critical steps are controlled so that the underlying relationship of each to high cytotoxic effectiveness is understood. In order to evaluate the contribution of internalization rate and receptor number on immunotoxin potency, the effects of an anti-(transferrin receptor, TfR)/ricin A chain immunotoxin, 7D3-A, were assessed on a parent Chinese hamster ovary cell line developed in our laboratory with no TfR (TfRneg) and two lines transfected with either wild-type TfR (Tfrwt) or an internalization-deficient (TfRδ7 – 58del) mutated human TfR. Potent, receptor-mediated cytotoxicity resulted from the action of 7D3-A on TfRwt cells (ID50<1 nM) while both TfRneg cells and TfRδ7 – 58del were only minimally affected (ID50>100 nM). Butyrate up-regulation substantially increased receptor expression on the TfRwt and TfRδ7 – 58del cells, but no corresponding rise in sensitivity to 7D3-A was observed. In contrast, immunotoxin potency was increased by co-treatment of TfRwt cells with the carboxylic ionophore monensin and the effect was even more pronounced for TfRδ7 – 58del cells. We conclude that internalization rate or intracellular destination is a much more important determinant of immunotoxin efficacy than receptor number.
Keywords: Key words Immunotoxin, Transferrin receptor, Internalization rate, Monensin, Ricin A chain
Footnotes
Received: 15 March 1996 / Accepted: 28 May 1996