Open Access
Novel pegylated interferon‐β as strong suppressor of the malignant ascites in a peritoneal metastasis model of human cancer
Author(s) -
Iwamura Tomokatsu,
Narumi Hideki,
Suzuki Tomohiko,
Yanai Hideyuki,
Mori Katsuyuki,
Yamashita Koji,
Tsushima Yoshiaki,
Asano Tomomi,
Izawa Akiko,
Momen Shinobu,
Nishimura Kazumi,
Tsuchiyama Hiromi,
Uchida Masashi,
Yamashita Yuji,
Okano Kiyoshi,
Taniguchi Tadatsugu
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
cancer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.035
H-Index - 141
eISSN - 1349-7006
pISSN - 1347-9032
DOI - 10.1111/cas.13176
Subject(s) - ascites , cancer research , in vivo , metastasis , medicine , interferon , cancer , peg ratio , immunology , biology , finance , economics , microbiology and biotechnology
Malignant ascites manifests as an end‐stage event during the progression of a number of cancers and lacks a generally accepted standard therapy. Interferon‐β ( IFN ‐β) has been used to treat several cancer indications; however, little is known about the efficacy of IFN ‐β on malignant ascites. In the present study, we report on the development of a novel, engineered form of human and murine IFN ‐β, each conjugated with a polyethylene glycol molecule ( PEG ‐ hIFN ‐β and PEG ‐ mIFN ‐β, respectively). We provide evidence that these IFN ‐β molecules retain anti‐viral potency comparable to unmodified IFN ‐β in vitro and manifested improved pharmacokinetics in vivo . Interestingly, PEG ‐ mIFN ‐β significantly inhibited the accumulation of ascites fluid and vascular permeability of the peritoneal membrane in models of ovarian cancer and gastric cancer cell xenograft mice. We further show that PEG ‐ hIFN ‐β directly suppresses VEGF 165 ‐induced hyperpermeability in a monolayer of human vascular endothelial cells and that PEG ‐ mIFN ‐β enhanced gene expression for a number of cell adhesion related molecules in mouse vascular endothelial cells. Taken together, these findings unveil a hitherto unrecognized potential of IFN ‐β in maintaining vascular integrity, and provide proof‐of‐mechanism for a novel and long‐acting pegylated hIFN ‐β for the therapeutic treatment of malignant ascites.