Cancer research
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Antibody-directed catalysis (ADC) is a two-step method for the delivery of chemotherapeutic agents in which enzyme-antibody conjugate, prelocalized to antigen-bearing tumor cells, catalyzes the site-specific conversion of prodrug to drug. An ADC system consisting of F(ab')-beta-lactamase conjugates and a cephalosporin derivative of the oncolytic agent 4-desacetylvinblastine-3-carboxhydrazide was investigated. The ability of the system to mediate antitumor activity was compared with that of free drug given alone and with covalent drug-antibody conjugates in LS174T and T380 colon carcinoma xenografts in nude mice. ⋯ Hence, heterogeneous expression and membrane shedding of carcinoembryonic antigen and TAG-72, did not diminish the suitability of these antigens as targets for ADC therapy. In contrast, drug-antibody conjugate efficacy was more sensitive to subcellular location and heterogeneity. Thus, ADC is a highly effective form of immunochemotherapy in preclinical models, with applicability toward a variety of antigen targets.