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Dive into the research topics where Aristeidis Chiotellis is active.

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Featured researches published by Aristeidis Chiotellis.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2014

Transglutaminase-Based Chemo-Enzymatic Conjugation Approach Yields Homogeneous Antibody–Drug Conjugates

Patrick Dennler; Aristeidis Chiotellis; Eliane Fischer; Delphine Bregeon; Christian Belmant; Laurent Gauthier; Florence Lhospice; Francois Romagne; Roger Schibli

Most chemical techniques used to produce antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) result in a heterogeneous mixture of species with variable drug-to-antibody ratios (DAR) which will potentially display different pharmacokinetics, stability, and safety profiles. Here we investigated two strategies to obtain homogeneous ADCs based on site-specific modification of deglycosylated antibodies by microbial transglutaminase (MTGase), which forms isopeptidic bonds between Gln and Lys residues. We have previously shown that MTGase solely recognizes Gln295 within the heavy chain of IgGs as a substrate and can therefore be exploited to generate ADCs with an exact DAR of 2. The first strategy included the direct, one-step attachment of the antimitotic toxin monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE) to the antibody via different spacer entities with a primary amine functionality that is recognized as a substrate by MTGase. The second strategy was a chemo-enzymatic, two-step approach whereby a reactive spacer entity comprising a bio-orthogonal thiol or azide function was attached to the antibody by MTGase and subsequently reacted with a suitable MMAE-derivative. To this aim, we investigated two different chemical approaches, namely, thiol-maleimide and strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition (SPAAC). Direct enzymatic attachment of MMAE-spacer derivatives at an 80 molar excess of drug yielded heterogeneous ADCs with a DAR of between 1.0 to 1.6. In contrast to this, the chemo-enzymatic approach only required a 2.5 molar excess of toxin to yield homogeneous ADCs with a DAR of 2.0 in the case of SPAAC and 1.8 for the thiol-maleimide approach. As a proof-of-concept, trastuzumab (Herceptin) was armed with the MMAE via the chemo-enzymatic approach using SPAAC and tested in vitro. Trastuzumab-MMAE efficiently killed BT-474 and SK-BR-3 cells with an IC50 of 89.0 pM and 21.7 pM, respectively. Thus, the chemo-enzymatic approach using MTGase is an elegant strategy to form ADCs with a defined DAR of 2. Furthermore, the approach is directly applicable to a broad variety of antibodies as it does not require prior genetic modifications of the antibody sequence.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2015

Site-Specific Conjugation of Monomethyl Auristatin E to Anti-CD30 Antibodies Improves Their Pharmacokinetics and Therapeutic Index in Rodent Models

Florence Lhospice; Delphine Bregeon; Christian Belmant; Patrick Dennler; Aristeidis Chiotellis; Eliane Fischer; Laurent Gauthier; A. Boëdec; H. Rispaud; S. Savard-Chambard; A. Represa; N. Schneider; C. Paturel; M. Sapet; C. Delcambre; S. Ingoure; N. Viaud; C. Bonnafous; Roger Schibli; Francois Romagne

Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) have demonstrated clinical benefits that have led to the recent FDA approval of KADCYLA and ADCETRIS. Most ADCs that are currently in clinical use or development, including ADCETRIS, are produced by chemical conjugation of a toxin via either lysine or cysteine residues, inevitably leading to heterogeneous products with variable drug-to-antibody ratios (DARs). Here, we describe the in vitro and in vivo characterization of four novel ADCs that are based on the anti-CD30 antibody cAC10, which has the same polypeptide backbone as ADCETRIS, and compare the results with the latter. Bacterial transglutaminase (BTG) was exploited to site-specifically conjugate derivatives of monomethyl auristatin E (all comprising a cleavable linker) to the glutamine at positions 295 and 297 of cAC10, thereby yielding homogeneous ADCs with a DAR of 4. In vitro cell toxicity experiments using two different CD30-positive cell lines (Karpas 299 and Raji-CD30(+)) revealed comparable EC50 values for ADCETRIS (1.8 ± 0.4 and 3.6 ± 0.6 ng/mL, respectively) and the four cAC10-based ADCs (2.0 ± 0.4 to 4.9 ± 1.0 ng/mL). Quantitative time-dependent in vivo biodistribution studies (3-96 h p.i.) in normal and xenografted (Karpas 299 cells) SCID mice were performed with a selected (125)I-radioiodinated cAC10 ADC and compared with that of (125)I-ADCETRIS. The chemo-enzymatically conjugated, radioiodinated ADC showed higher tumor uptake (17.84 ± 2.2% ID/g 24 h p.i.) than (125)I-ADCETRIS (10.5 ± 1.8% ID/g 24 h p.i.). Moreover, (125)I-ADCETRIS exhibited higher nontargeted liver and spleen uptake. In line with these results, the maximum tolerated dose of the BTG-coupled ADC (>60 mg/kg) was significantly higher than that of ADCETRIS (18 mg/kg) in rats. These results suggest that homogeneous ADCs display improved pharmacokinetics and better therapeutic indexes compared to those of chemically modified ADCs with variable DARs.


Molecular Imaging and Biology | 2014

Imaging Tumour ATB0,+ Transport Activity by PET with the Cationic Amino Acid O-2((2-[18F]fluoroethyl)methyl-amino)ethyltyrosine

Adrienne Müller; Aristeidis Chiotellis; Claudia Keller; Simon M. Ametamey; Roger Schibli; Linjing Mu; Stefanie D. Krämer

PurposeThe concentrative amino acid transporter ATB0,+ (SLC6A14) is under evaluation as a target for anticancer therapy. An ATB0,+-selective positron emission tomography (PET) probe could advance preclinical drug development. We characterised the cationic tyrosine analogue O-2((2-[18F]fluoroethyl)methyl-amino)ethyltyrosine ([18F]FEMAET) as a PET probe for ATB0,+ activity.ProceduresCell uptake was studied in vitro. ATB0,+ expression was quantified by real-time PCR. [18F]FEMAET accumulation in xenografts was investigated by small animal PET with mice.Results[18F]FEMAET accumulated in PC-3 and NCI-H69 cancer cells in vitro. As expected for ATB0,+ transport, uptake was inhibited by LAT/ATB0,+ inhibitors and dibasic amino acids, and [18F]FEMAET efflux was only moderately stimulated by extracellular amino acids. ATB0,+ was expressed in PC-3 and NCI-H69 but not MDA-MB-231 xenografts. PET revealed accumulation in PC-3 and NCI-H69 xenografts and significant reduction by ATB0,+ inhibition. Uptake was negligible in MDA-MB-231 xenografts.ConclusionATB0,+ activity can be imaged in vivo by PET with [18F]FEMAET.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2014

Synthesis and biological evaluation of (18)F-labeled Fluoroethoxy tryptophan analogues as potential PET tumor imaging agents.

Aristeidis Chiotellis; Adrienne Müller; Linjing Mu; Claudia Keller; Roger Schibli; Stefanie D. Krämer; Simon M. Ametamey

As a continuation of our research efforts toward the development of tryptophan-based radiotracers for tumor imaging with positron emission tomography (PET), three new fluoroethoxy tryptophan analogues were synthesized and evaluated in vivo. These new tracers (namely, 4-(2-[(18)F]fluoroethoxy)-dl-tryptophan ([(18)F]4-FEHTP), 6-(2-[(18)F]fluoroethoxy)-dl-tryptophan ([(18)F]6-FEHTP), and 7-(2-[(18)F]fluoroethoxy)-dl-tryptophan ([(18)F]7-FEHTP) carry the fluoroethoxy side chain either at positions 4-, 6-, or 7- of the indole core. Reference compounds and precursors were synthesized by multistep approaches. Radiosynthesis was accomplished by no-carrier-added nucleophilic (18)F-fluorination following either an indirect approach (O-alkylation of the corresponding hydroxytryptophan with [(18)F]fluoroethyltosylate) or a direct approach (nucleophilic [(18)F] fluorination using a protected mesyl precursor). Radiochemical yields (decay corrected) for both methods were in the range of 10-18%. Small animal PET imaging with xenograft-bearing mice revealed the highest tumor/background ratio for [(18)F]6-FEHTP which, in a direct comparison, outperformed the other two tryptophan tracers and also the well-established tyrosine analogue O-(2-[(18)F]fluoroethyl)-l-tyrosine ([(18)F]l-FET). Investigation of the transport mechanism of [(18)F]6-FEHTP in small cell lung cancer cells (NCI-H69) revealed that it is most probably taken up exclusively via the large neutral amino acid transporter(s) (LAT).


European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Synthesis and biological evaluation of 18F-labeled fluoropropyl tryptophan analogs as potential PET probes for tumor imaging

Aristeidis Chiotellis; Linjing Mu; Adrienne Müller; Svetlana V. Selivanova; Claudia Keller; Roger Schibli; Stefanie D. Krämer; Simon M. Ametamey

In the search for an efficient, fluorine-18 labeled amino acid based radiotracer for tumor imaging with positron emission tomography (PET), two new tryptophan analogs were synthesized and characterized in vitro and in vivo. Both are tryptophan alkyl-derivatives, namely 2-(3-[(18)F]fluoropropyl)-DL-tryptophan ([(18)F]2-FPTRP) and 5-(3-[(18)F]fluoro-propyl)-DL-tryptophan ([(18)F]5-FPTRP). Standard reference compounds and precursors were prepared by multi step approaches. Radiosynthesis was achieved by no-carrier-added nucleophilic [(18)F]fluorination in 29-34% decay corrected yields with radiochemical purity over 99%. In vitro cell uptake assays showed that both compounds are substrates for amino acid transport and enter small cell lung cancer cells (NCI-H69) most probably almost exclusively via large neutral amino acids transporter(s) (LAT). Small animal PET imaging with xenograft bearing mice revealed high tumor/background ratios for [(18)F]2-FPTRP comparable to the well established tyrosine analog O-(2-[(18)F]fluroethyl)-L-tyrosine ([(18)F]FET). Radiometabolite studies showed no evidence of involvement of a biotransformation step in tumor accumulation.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2016

Synthesis, Radiolabeling, and Biological Evaluation of 5-Hydroxy-2-[18F]fluoroalkyl-tryptophan Analogues as Potential PET Radiotracers for Tumor Imaging

Aristeidis Chiotellis; Adrienne Müller Herde; Simon L. Rössler; Ante Brekalo; Erika Gedeonova; Linjing Mu; Claudia Keller; Roger Schibli; Stefanie D. Krämer; Simon M. Ametamey

Aiming at developing mechanism-based amino acid (18)F-PET tracers for tumor imaging, we synthesized two (18)F-labeled analogues of 5-hydroxy-l-[β-(11)C]tryptophan ([(11)C]5HTP) whose excellent in vivo performance in neuroendocrine tumors is mainly attributed to its decarboxylation by aromatic amino acid decarboxylase (AADC), an enzyme overexpressed in these malignancies. Reference compounds and precursors were synthesized following multistep synthetic approaches. Radiosynthesis of tracers was accomplished in good radiochemical yields (15-39%), high specific activities (45-95 GBq/μmol), and excellent radiochemical purities. In vitro cell uptake was sodium-independent and was inhibited ≥95% by 2-amino-2-norbornanecarboxylic acid (BCH) and ∼30% by arginine. PET imaging in mice revealed distinctly high tumor/background ratios for both tracers, outperforming the well-established O-(2-[(18)F]fluoroethyl)tyrosine ([(18)F]FET) tracer in a head-to-head comparison. Biological evaluation revealed that the in vivo performance is most probably independent of any interaction with AADC. Nevertheless, the excellent tumor visualization qualifies the new tracers as interesting probes for tumor imaging worthy for further investigation.


Molecular Imaging and Biology | 2017

CD80 Is Upregulated in a Mouse Model with Shear Stress-Induced Atherosclerosis and Allows for Evaluating CD80-Targeting PET Tracers

Romana Meletta; Larissa Steier; Nicole Borel; Linjing Mu; Claudia Keller; Aristeidis Chiotellis; Erica Russo; Cornelia Halin; Simon M. Ametamey; Roger Schibli; Stefanie D. Krämer; Adrienne Müller Herde

PurposeA shear stress-induced atherosclerosis mouse model was characterized for its expression of inflammation markers with focus on CD80. With this model, we evaluated two positron emission tomography (PET) radiotracers targeting CD80 as well as 2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoro-d-mannose ([18F]FDM) in comparison with 2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoro-d-glucose ([18F]FDG).ProcedureA flow constrictive cuff implanted around the common carotid artery in apolipoprotein E knockout mice resulted in plaque formation. CD80 expression levels and plaque histopathology were evaluated. Serial PET/X-ray computed tomography scans were performed to follow inflammation.ResultsPlaque formation with increased levels of CD80 was observed. Histologically, plaques presented macrophage-rich and large necrotic areas covered by a thin fibrous cap. Of the CD80-specific tracers, one displayed an increased uptake in plaques by PET. Both [18F]FDG and [18F]FDM accumulated in atherosclerotic plaques.ConclusionThis mouse model presented, similar to humans, an increased expression of CD80 which renders it suitable for non-invasively targeting CD80-positive immune cells and evaluating CD80-specific radiotracers.


Molecules | 2015

Evaluation of the Radiolabeled Boronic Acid-Based FAP Inhibitor MIP-1232 for Atherosclerotic Plaque Imaging

Romana Meletta; Adrienne Müller Herde; Aristeidis Chiotellis; Malsor Isa; Zoran Rancic; Nicole Borel; Simon M. Ametamey; Stefanie D. Krämer; Roger Schibli

Research towards the non-invasive imaging of atherosclerotic plaques is of high clinical priority as early recognition of vulnerable plaques may reduce the incidence of cardiovascular events. The fibroblast activation protein alpha (FAP) was recently proposed as inflammation-induced protease involved in the process of plaque vulnerability. In this study, FAP mRNA and protein levels were investigated by quantitative polymerase chain reaction and immunohistochemistry, respectively, in human endarterectomized carotid plaques. A published boronic-acid based FAP inhibitor, MIP-1232, was synthetized and radiolabeled with iodine-125. The potential of this radiotracer to image plaques was evaluated by in vitro autoradiography with human carotid plaques. Specificity was assessed with a xenograft with high and one with low FAP level, grown in mice. Target expression analyses revealed a moderately higher protein level in atherosclerotic plaques than normal arteries correlating with plaque vulnerability. No difference in expression was determined on mRNA level. The radiotracer was successfully produced and accumulated strongly in the FAP-positive SK-Mel-187 melanoma xenograft in vitro while accumulation was negligible in an NCI-H69 xenograft with low FAP levels. Binding of the tracer to endarterectomized tissue was similar in plaques and normal arteries, hampering its use for atherosclerosis imaging.


Chemical Communications | 2016

Novel chemoselective 18F-radiolabeling of thiol-containing biomolecules under mild aqueous conditions

Aristeidis Chiotellis; Filippo Sladojevich; Linjing Mu; Adrienne Müller Herde; Ibai E. Valverde; Vladimir Tolmachev; Roger Schibli; Simon M. Ametamey; Thomas L. Mindt


Amino Acids | 2014

Synthesis and preliminary biological evaluation of O -2((2-[ 18 F]fluoroethyl)methylamino)ethyltyrosine ([ 18 F]FEMAET) as a potential cationic amino acid PET tracer for tumor imaging

Aristeidis Chiotellis; Adrienne Müller; Karin Weyermann; Dominique S. Leutwiler; Roger Schibli; Simon M. Ametamey; Stefanie D. Krämer; Linjing Mu

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