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Prostate-Specific Membrane Antigen (PSMA)-Directed Dendrimer-Camptothecin Conjugate for Targeted Treatment of Prostate Cancer.

ACS applied nano materials 2025

Dhull A, Pulukuri AJ, Dar AI, Palmer NJ, Gonzalez JC, Rani A, Sharma R, Berkman CE, Sharma A

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Prostate cancer (PC) remains a major global health challenge, particularly in its advanced, treatment-resistant form.

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APA Dhull A, Pulukuri AJ, et al. (2025). Prostate-Specific Membrane Antigen (PSMA)-Directed Dendrimer-Camptothecin Conjugate for Targeted Treatment of Prostate Cancer.. ACS applied nano materials. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.5c03528
MLA Dhull A, et al.. "Prostate-Specific Membrane Antigen (PSMA)-Directed Dendrimer-Camptothecin Conjugate for Targeted Treatment of Prostate Cancer.." ACS applied nano materials, 2025.
PMID 41030685

Abstract

Prostate cancer (PC) remains a major global health challenge, particularly in its advanced, treatment-resistant form. Although Camptothecin (Campto) is a potent topoisomerase I inhibitor with strong antiproliferative and pro-apoptotic activity, its clinical utility is limited by poor aqueous solubility, instability, and systemic toxicity. To address these challenges, we developed a prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA)-targeted dendrimer-Camptothecin conjugate (PD-Campto-CTT1298) that improves drug solubility, enables receptor-mediated uptake, and enhances therapeutic effects. This platform was synthesized by conjugating Campto and a high-affinity PSMA ligand (CTT1298) to a generation-4 hydroxyl-terminated PAMAM dendrimer (PD) via copper-catalyzed and strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition reactions. The resulting conjugate exhibited high aqueous solubility, formulation stability, and efficient drug loading. drug release studies demonstrated pH- and esterase-responsive Campto release mimicking the tumor microenvironment. PD-Campto-CTT1298 showed selective uptake in PSMA-positive PC cells (PC3-PIP, C4-2B), leading to enhanced cytotoxicity, apoptosis induction, mitochondrial dysfunction, and reactive oxygen species generation. Confocal imaging and flow cytometry confirmed receptor-specific internalization via clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Moreover, PD-Campto-CTT1298 suppressed VEGF-A secretion and disrupted angiogenesis in HUVEC tube formation assays, indicating antiangiogenic activity. Combination therapy with Olaparib demonstrated synergistic effects. Overall, PD-Campto-CTT1298 represents a promising strategy for PSMA-targeted prodrug delivery, offering a multifaceted therapeutic approach through enhanced solubility, intracellular release, and PSMA-positive tumor-specific enhanced cytotoxicity.