Abstract
Disulfide bonds provide a bioactivatable connection with applications in imaging and therapy. The circulation stability and intracellular release of disulfides are problematically coupled in that increasing stability causes a corresponding decrease in cleavage and payload release. However, an antibody offers the potential for a reversible stabilization. We examined this by attaching a small molecule directly to engineered cysteines in an antibody. At certain sites this unhindered disulfide was stable in circulation yet cellular internalization and antibody catabolism generated a disulfide catabolite that was rapidly reduced. We demonstrated that this stable connection and facile release is applicable to a variety of payloads. The ability to reversibly stabilize a labile functional group with an antibody may offer a way to improve targeted probes and therapeutics.
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CITATION STYLE
Pillow, T. H., Sadowsky, J. D., Zhang, D., Yu, S. F., Del Rosario, G., Xu, K., … Flygare, J. A. (2016). Decoupling stability and release in disulfide bonds with antibody-small molecule conjugates. Chemical Science, 8(1), 366–370. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6sc01831a
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