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EGFR and anti-EGFR nanobodies: review and update

Jafar Sharifi, Mohammad Reza Khirehgesh, Fatemeh Safari, Bahman Akbari

2020Journal of drug targeting34 citationsDOI

Abstract

Targeted therapy is one of the favourable methods used in cancer treatment. Several recombinant proteins and small-molecules used for this aim include monoclonal antibodies, antibody fragments and peptides. Nanobody (Nb) is a camelid antibody fragment that is very effective in targeted therapy. Recently, several anti-EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor) Nbs have been developed and utilised for diagnosis and therapy of EGFR overexpressing tumours. Anti-EGFR Nbs are used in drug delivery systems, photodynamic therapy (PDT) and/or conjugated to other molecules such as quantum dots (QDs), nanoparticles, liposome, tumour penetration peptides, neural stem cells (NSCs) and chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR T cells). In this review, we discussed the structure and function of EGFR and Nb, the current status of EGFR targeting, and recent developments in anti-EGFR Nbs. To gain sound insight into the issue at hand, we focused on the most powerful anti-EGFR Nbs.

Topics & Concepts

Monoclonal antibodyEpidermal growth factor receptorCancer researchAntibodyMedicineTargeted therapyAntigenImmunotherapyChimeric antigen receptorCancer therapyRecombinant DNAPhotodynamic therapyFusion proteinDrug deliveryBispecific antibodyMonoclonalImmunologyReceptorCancerDrugBiologyImmunoconjugateEpidermal growth factorTargeted drug deliveryCompanion diagnosticMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies ResearchHER2/EGFR in Cancer ResearchCAR-T cell therapy research
EGFR and anti-EGFR nanobodies: review and update | Litcius