Conclusion
Temporal pharmacological modulation of membrane HER2 may be clinically relevant and exploitable for pretargeted molecular imaging and therapy in gastric tumors.
Methods
We conducted in vitro and in vivo studies with NCI-N87 gastric cancer cells to determine how HER2 endocytosis affects pertuzumab binding to tumor cells. Lovastatin, a clinically approved cholesterol-lowering drug, was used to modulate caveolae-mediated HER2 endocytosis.
Results
Administration of lovastatin to NCI-N87 cancer cells resulted in significant accumulation of non-activated HER2 dimers at the cell surface. Pretreatment of NCI-N87 cells with lovastatin increased in vitro specific accumulation of membrane-bound 89Zr-labeled pertuzumab. Lovastatin-enhanced pertuzumab tumor uptake was also observed in NCI-N87 gastric cancer xenografts, allowing tumor detection as early as 4 h and high-contrast images at 48 h after tracer administration via PET. Temporal enhancement of HER2 membrane availability by lovastatin allowed imaging of cell surface HER2 with transcyclooctene-conjugated antibodies and 18F-labeled tetrazine.
