Literature DB >> 17105223

Engineering an arginine catabolizing bioconjugate: Biochemical and pharmacological characterization of PEGylated derivatives of arginine deiminase from Mycoplasma arthritidis.

Maoliang Wang1, Amartya Basu, Thomas Palm, Jack Hua, Stephen Youngster, Lisa Hwang, Hsien-Ching Liu, Xiguang Li, Ping Peng, Yue Zhang, Hong Zhao, Zhihua Zhang, Clifford Longley, Mary Mehlig, Virna Borowski, Prakash Sai, Manickam Viswanathan, Eun Jang, Gerald Petti, Sam Liu, Karen Yang, David Filpula.   

Abstract

Arginine is an important metabolite in the normal function of several biological systems, and arginine deprivation has been investigated in animal models and human clinical trials for its effects on inhibition of tumor growth, angiogenesis, or nitric oxide synthesis. In order to design an optimal arginine-catabolizing enzyme bioconjugate, a novel recombinant arginine deiminase (ADI) from Mycoplasma arthritidis was prepared, and multi-PEGylated derivatives were examined for enzymatic and biochemical properties in vitro, as well as pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic behavior in rats and mice. ADI bioconjugates constructed with 12 kDa or 20 kDa monomethoxy-poly(ethylene glycol) polymers with linear succinimidyl carbonate linkers were investigated via intravenous, intramuscular, or subcutaneous administration in rodents. The selected PEG-ADI compounds have 22 +/- 2 PEG strands per protein dimer, providing an additional molecular mass of about 0.2-0.5 x 10(6) Da and prolonging the plasma mean residence time of the enzyme over 30-fold in mice. Prolonged plasma arginine deprivation was demonstrated with each injection route for these bioconjugates. Pharmacokinetic analysis employed parallel measurement of enzyme activity in bioassays and enzyme assays and demonstrated a correlation with the pharmacodynamic analysis of plasma arginine concentrations. Either ADI bioconjugate depressed plasma arginine to undetectable levels for 10 days when administered intravenously at 5 IU per mouse, while the subcutaneous and intramuscular routes exhibited only slightly reduced potency. Both bioconjugates exhibited potent growth inhibition of several cultured tumor lines that are deficient in the anabolic enzyme, argininosuccinate synthetase. Investigations of structure-activity optimization for PEGylated ADI compounds revealed a benefit to constraining the PEG size and number of attachments to both conserve catabolic activity and streamline manufacturing of the experimental therapeutics. Specifically, ADI with either 12 kDa or 20 kDa PEG attachments on 33% of the primary amines retained about 60% or 48% of enzyme activity, respectively; the Km and pH profiles were nearly unchanged; IC50 values were diminished by less than 30%; while stability studies demonstrated full retention of activity at 4 degrees C for 5 months. A comparison of the enzymatic properties of a second ADI from Pseudomonas putida illustrated the superior characteristics of the M. arthritidis ADI enzyme.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17105223     DOI: 10.1021/bc060198y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bioconjug Chem        ISSN: 1043-1802            Impact factor:   4.774


  2 in total

1.  Recombinant human arginase induces apoptosis through oxidative stress and cell cycle arrest in small cell lung cancer.

Authors:  Shi Xu; Sze-Kwan Lam; Paul Ning-Man Cheng; James Chung-Man Ho
Journal:  Cancer Sci       Date:  2018-10-06       Impact factor: 6.716

2.  Impact of Linker Modification and PEGylation of Vancomycin Conjugates on Structure-Activity Relationships and Pharmacokinetics.

Authors:  Florian Umstätter; Julia Werner; Leah Zerlin; Eric Mühlberg; Christian Kleist; Karel D Klika; Tobias Hertlein; Barbro Beijer; Cornelius Domhan; Stefan Zimmermann; Knut Ohlsen; Uwe Haberkorn; Walter Mier; Philipp Uhl
Journal:  Pharmaceuticals (Basel)       Date:  2022-01-28
  2 in total

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