Mutations in the lysosomal enzyme, N-sulfoglucosamine sulfohydrolase (SGSH), also called sulfamidase, cause accumulation of lysosomal inclusion bodies in the brain of children born with mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA, also called Sanfilippo type A syndrome. Enzyme replacement therapy with recombinant SGSH does not treat the brain because the enzyme is a large molecule drug that does not cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB). A BBB-penetrating form of SGSH was produced by re-engineering the enzyme as an IgG fusion protein, where the IgG domain is a monoclonal antibody (mAb) against the human insulin receptor (HIR). The HIRMAb domain of the HIRMAb-SGSH fusion protein acts as a molecular Trojan horse to ferry the fused enzyme across the BBB. The HIRMAb-SGSH was produced in stably transfected host cells and purified to homogeneity by protein A chromatography. The fusion protein reacted with antibodies against either human IgG or SGSH on Western blotting. High affinity binding to the HIR was retained following SGSH fusion to the HIRMAb, with an EC50 of 0.33 ± 0.05 nM in an HIR binding ELISA. The SGSH enzyme activity of the HIRMAb-SGSH fusion protein was 4712 ± 388 units/mg protein based on a two-step fluorometric enzyme assay. The HIRMAb-SGSH was taken up by lysosomes in MPSIIIA fibroblasts, and treatment of these cells with the fusion protein caused an 83% reduction in sulfate incorporation into lysosomal glycosoaminoglycans. The HIRMAb-SGSH fusion protein was radiolabeled with the [(125)I]-Bolton-Hunter reagent and injected intravenously in the Rhesus monkey. The brain uptake of the fusion protein was high, ∼1% injected dose/brain. Calculations, based on this level of brain uptake, suggest normalization of brain SGSH enzyme activity is possible following administration of therapeutic doses of the fusion protein. These studies describe a novel IgG-SGSH fusion protein that is a new noninvasive treatment of the brain in MPS type IIIA.
Mutations in the lysosomal enzyme, N-sulfoglucosamine sulfohydrolase (SGSH), also called sulfamidase, cause accumulation of lysosomal inclusion bodies in the brain of children born with mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA, also called Sanfilippo type A syndrome. Enzyme replacement therapy with recombinant SGSH does not treat the brain because the enzyme is a large molecule drug that does not cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB). A BBB-penetrating form of SGSH was produced by re-engineering the enzyme as an IgG fusion protein, where the IgG domain is a monoclonal antibody (mAb) against the humaninsulin receptor (HIR). The HIRMAb domain of the HIRMAb-SGSH fusion protein acts as a molecular Trojan horse to ferry the fused enzyme across the BBB. The HIRMAb-SGSH was produced in stably transfected host cells and purified to homogeneity by protein A chromatography. The fusion protein reacted with antibodies against either human IgG or SGSH on Western blotting. High affinity binding to the HIR was retained following SGSH fusion to the HIRMAb, with an EC50 of 0.33 ± 0.05 nM in an HIR binding ELISA. The SGSH enzyme activity of the HIRMAb-SGSH fusion protein was 4712 ± 388 units/mg protein based on a two-step fluorometric enzyme assay. The HIRMAb-SGSH was taken up by lysosomes in MPSIIIA fibroblasts, and treatment of these cells with the fusion protein caused an 83% reduction in sulfate incorporation into lysosomal glycosoaminoglycans. The HIRMAb-SGSH fusion protein was radiolabeled with the [(125)I]-Bolton-Hunter reagent and injected intravenously in the Rhesus monkey. The brain uptake of the fusion protein was high, ∼1% injected dose/brain. Calculations, based on this level of brain uptake, suggest normalization of brain SGSH enzyme activity is possible following administration of therapeutic doses of the fusion protein. These studies describe a novel IgG-SGSH fusion protein that is a new noninvasive treatment of the brain in MPS type IIIA.
Mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) type IIIA,
also called MPSIIIA, or
Sanfilippo A syndrome, is an inborn failure of metabolism caused by
mutations in the gene encoding the lysosomal enzyme, N-sulfoglucosamine
sulfohydrolase (SGSH), also called sulfamidase, which degrades heparan
sulfate type glycosoaminoglycans or GAGs.[1] SGSH is the only human enzyme that causes the hydrolysis of N-linked
sulfate groups from the nonreducing terminal glucosaminide residues
of heparan sulfate.[1] An insufficient level
of SGSH causes a pathological buildup of heparan sulfate, a GAG, in
tissues, including the central nervous system (CNS). However, unlike
other MPS disorders, MPSIIIA patients present primarily with a CNS
phenotype, where the majority of the effects of the disease are brain-related,
including severe behavioral disturbances, loss of speech by the age
of 7 years, impaired walking leading to wheelchair existence by the
age of 12, and death at a mean age of 18 years.[2] Following the initial cloning and expression of human recombinant
SGSH nearly 20 years ago,[3] it was believed
that MPSIIIA could be treated with weekly intravenous enzyme replacement
therapy (ERT). However, patients with MPSIIIA presently have no therapy,
as conventional ERT with recombinant SGSH would not be effective because
the SGSH enzyme does not cross the blood–brain barrier (BBB).[4] In an attempt to bypass the BBB, the enzyme has
been administered to animals by intracerebroventricular (ICV) injections.[5] However, SGSH only distributes to the surface
of the brain following ICV injection,[5] owing
to the rapid rate of drug exit from the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
compartment, as CSF courses by bulk flow from brain to blood.[6]Large molecule pharmaceuticals, such as
SGSH, can be re-engineered
for BBB penetration, as IgG–enzyme fusion proteins, where the
IgG domain is a molecular Trojan horse that crosses the BBB.[7] The IgG domain is a monoclonal antibody (mAb)
against an endogenous BBB receptor-transporter such as the insulin
receptor or the transferrin receptor (TfR). The receptor-specific
mAb binds the BBB receptor, which leads to receptor-mediated transport
across the BBB of the mAb as well as the fused enzyme pharmaceutical.[6] IgG–SGSH fusion proteins have not been
previously engineered, and it is not known if an enzymatically active
SGSH enzyme can be re-engineered to enable BBB transport. In the present
study, humanSGSH was fused to the carboxyl terminus of the heavy
chain of a genetically engineered mAb against the humaninsulin receptor
(HIR), and this fusion protein is designated the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein (Figure 1). This investigation
describes the genetic engineering and expression of the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein, the purity, identity, and potency of the purified
fusion protein, the reduction of GAGs in MPSIIIA fibroblasts, and
the rapid penetration of the BBB in the Rhesus monkey following intravenous
(IV) injection of the fusion protein.
Figure 1
Structure of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion
protein, which is formed
by two light chains and two heavy chains, where the SGSH monomer is
fused to the carboxy terminus of each heavy chain. The domains of
the light chain include the variable region of the light chain (VL)
of the HIRMAb and the human κ constant region of the light chain
(CL). The domains of the heavy chain include the variable region of
the heavy chain (VH) of the HIRMAb, the the subdomains of the human
IgG1 constant region (CH1, CH2, CH3), and the human SGSH enzyme (sulfamidase).
Structure of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion
protein, which is formed
by two light chains and two heavy chains, where the SGSH monomer is
fused to the carboxy terminus of each heavy chain. The domains of
the light chain include the variable region of the light chain (VL)
of the HIRMAb and the human κ constant region of the light chain
(CL). The domains of the heavy chain include the variable region of
the heavy chain (VH) of the HIRMAb, the the subdomains of the human
IgG1 constant region (CH1, CH2, CH3), and the humanSGSH enzyme (sulfamidase).
Experimental Section
Engineering of Tandem Vector
and Production of Stably Expressing
CHO Line
A 1.5 kb cDNA encoding the humanSGSH cDNA was produced
by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction using the following
forward and reverse oligodeoxynucleotide primers: 5′-phosphate-
CACGTCCCCGGAACGCACTGCTG-3′ and 5′-phosphate-TCACAGCTCATTGTGGAGGGGCTG-3′,
and polyA+RNA from human liver. The cDNA encoding the SGSH sequence,
absent the enzyme signal peptide, was fused to the 3′-flank
of the cDNA encoding the HIRMAb heavy chain so as to produce a heavy
chain (HC) fusion protein wherein the amino terminus of the mature
SGSH was fused, via a short linker, to the carboxyl terminus of the
CH3 region of the HC of the HIRMAb. A tandem vector was engineered
as previously described.[8,9] Bidirectional DNA sequencing
was performed, which showed the three expression cassettes spanned
10000 nucleotides. The light chain was described previously.[9] The predicted molecular weight of the light chain
is 23398 Da with a predicted isoelectric point (pI) of 5.45. The fusion
protein of the HIRMAb heavy chain and SGSH was comprised of 946 AA,
which included a 19 AA signal peptide, the 443 AA HIRMAb heavy chain,
a 2 AA linker (Ser-Ser), and the 482 AA mature SGSH enzyme. The predicted
pI of the heavy chain is 7.44, and the predicted
molecular weight of the heavy chain, without glycosylation, is 103 412
Da, which includes 54674 Da within the SGSH domain. The AA sequence
of the SGSH domain is 100% identical with the sequence of mature humanSGSH (Genbank NP_000190), with the exception of a histidine at position
456 of the SGSH domain. The R456H substitution is a common polymorphism,
which has no effect on enzyme activity.[10] The predicted molecular weight of the heterotetramer, without glycosylation,
is 253620 Da.The tandem vector plasmid DNA was linearized and
stably transfected Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells in serum free
medium (SFM) were engineered and isolated by limited dilutional cloning
as previously described.[9]
Purification
and Analysis of Fusion Protein
The HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein was affinity purified by protein A chromatography from
SFM conditioned by the CHO cells as previously described.[9]The identity of the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein was verified by human IgG and humanSGSH Western blotting.
For the human IgG Western blot, the primary antibody was a goat antihuman
IgG (H+L) (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). For the humanSGSH
Western blot, the primary antibody was a rabbit antihuman SGSH antibody
(Abcam, Cambridge, MA). The secondary antibody was a biotinylated
horse antigoat IgG or biotinylated goat antirabbit IgG antibody (Vector
Laboratories). The purity of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein
was verified by reducing sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) as previously described.[9] The molecular weight (MW) standards were obtained from
Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc. (Rockford, IL), and Biorad Laboratories,
Inc. (Hercules, CA). Samples tested in the Western blotting include
the protein A purified HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein, the protein
A purified HIRMAb, and a recombinant fusion protein of amino terminal
glutathione S-transferase and humanSGSH (Novus Biologicals,
Littleton, CO). The potency of HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein binding
to the HIR was evaluated by measurement of the affinity of binding
of the fusion protein to the HIR extracellular domain (ECD) using
an ELISA, as described previously.[8,9]
SGSH Enzyme
Activity Assay
The SGSH enzyme specific
activity of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein was measured with
a two-step fluorometric enzymatic assay using 4-methylumbelliferyl-α-N-sulfo-d-glucosaminide (MU-αGlcNS) as the
assay substrate.[11] This substrate was custom
synthesized and HPLC purified by Sigma-Aldrich (St Louis, MO), and
the structure was confirmed by mass spectrometry. The MU-αGlcNS
substrate was hydrolyzed by SGSH to 4-methylumbelliferyl-α-d-glucosaminide (MU-αGlcNH2), which was then hydrolyzed
to the fluorescent product, 4-methylumbelliferone (4-MU), by the α-glucosaminidase
side activity in commercial yeast α-glucosidiase.[11] The assay was performed by incubation of the
HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein (30, 100, or 300 ng) and 3.4 mM
MU-αGlcNS substrate in 0.03 M sodium barbital/0.03 M sodium
acetate/0.13 M NaCl/pH = 5.5/0.02% sodium azide for 37 °C for
17 h. McIlvaine’s buffer and 0.1 unit of yeast α-glucosidase
was added, followed by incubation at 37C for an additional 24 h. The
reaction was stopped by the addition of 0.5 M sodium carbonate/pH
= 10.7. Fluorescence was measured with a Farrand filter fluorometer
with a 365 nm excitation filter and a 450 nm emission filter. A standard
curve was generated with 0.03–3.0 nmol/tube of the 4-MU product
(Sigma), which allowed for conversion of fluorescent units to nmol/tube.
The enzyme activity was measured as units/mg protein of the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein, where 1 unit = nmol of 4-MU product formed during
the 17 h primary incubation.[11]
GAG Reduction
in Sanfilippo Type A Fibroblasts
The
SGSH enzyme hydrolyzes the sulfate group from heparan sulfate GAGs,[1] which allows for subsequent degradation of the
GAG by other enzymes in the cell. The effect of treatment with the
HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein on the release of sulfate from GAGs
was examined in Sanfilippo Type A fibroblasts (MPS-IIIA fibroblasts),
which were obtained from the Coriell Institute for Medical Research
(Camden, NJ). The cells were pulsed with 35S-sulfate, which is incorporated
into both lysosomal GAGs, as well as cell surface GAGs. The lysosomal
enzyme only reduces GAG accumulation in the lysosomal compartment,
not the cell surface. Therefore, a pulse-chase experiment was designed
to lower the cell surface 35S-labeled GAGs, as described previously.[12] Sanfilippo A fibroblasts were grown in 6-well
cluster dishes to confluency, and then a pulse-chase experiment is
performed with [35S]-sodium sulfate (PerkinElmer, Waltham, MA). For
the pulse phase, the confluent cells were washed with phosphate buffered
saline (PBS), and incubated with 1 mL of low sulfate Ham’s
F12 medium with 10% dialyzed fetal bovine serum (FBS) and 47 μCi/mL
of [35S]sodium sulfate for 48 h at 37 °C in a humidified incubator.
The medium was aspirated, and the wells were washed with PBS, and
the cells were incubated with 1 mL/well of radioactivity-free DMEM/F12
medium with 10% regular FBS and different concentrations of the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein for 48 h at 37 °C in a humidified incubator. The
medium was aspirated and the cells washed with PBS. The cells were
removed from the well with 0.4 mL/well of 0.05% trypsin/EDTA at 37
°C for 4 min, as this step removes radioactivity adhered to the
cell surface and not incorporated in lysosomal GAGs. The cells are
suspended in serum-free medium to stop the trypsin reaction and centrifuged
at 1000g. The supernatant was removed and discarded,
and the cell pellet was solubilized in 0.4 mL of 1N NaOH at 60C for
1 h. The protein content was measured with the bicinchoninic acid
(BCA) protein assay. The 35S radioactivity was measured with a PerkinElmer
liquid scintillation counter in Ultima-gold (PerkinElmer). The CPM
radioactivity was divided by the mg protein well and the data reported
as CPM/mg protein.
Confocal Microscopy in Sanfilippo Type A
Fibroblasts
Sanfilippo A fibroblasts were grown overnight
in DMEM with 10% fetal
bovine serum to >80% confluency on autoclaved 22 mm × 22 mm
Fisherfinest
glass coverslips (number 1 thickness) and placed on Costar 3516 6-well
cluster dishes (Thermo Scientific, Rochester, NY). The cells were
treated with 10 μg/mL of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein,
as previously described.[9] Following a 6
h incubation at 37 °C, the medium was aspirated, the wells were
washed extensively with cold PBS, and the cells were fixed with 4%
paraformaldehyde for 40 min at 4 °C and permeabilized with 0.5%
Triton X-100 for 15 min at room temperature. Following a PBS wash,
the plates were blocked with 10% donkey serum and then colabeled with
10 μg/mL of a rabbit anti-SGSH antibody (Abcam) and 10 μg/mL
of a mouse mAb to humanlysosomal associated membrane protein (LAMP)-1
(Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, Iowa City, IA). Negative control
antibodies were previously described.[9] The
secondary antibodies (Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA) were 5 μg/mL
each of Alexa Fluor-488 conjugated donkey antimouse IgG (green channel)
and Alexa Fluor-555 conjugated donkey antirabbit IgG (red channel).
The washed slides were air-dried and mounted in Vectashield Mounting
Medium with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) (Vector Laboratories,
Burlingame, CA). Confocal microscopy was performed as described previously.[9]
Rhesus Monkey Brain Uptake and Pharmacokinetics
The
HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein was radiolabeled with [125I]-monoiodinated-Bolton–Hunter reagent (PerkinElmer). The
specific activity of the Bolton–Hunter reagent was 2200 μCi/nmol,
and the final specific activity of the [125I]-HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein was 3.7 μCi/μg. The trichloroacetic acid
(TCA) precipitability of the [125I]-HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein was >97% for least 8 days after labeling during
storage
at −70 °C. Prior to labeling, the fusion protein was buffer
exchanged with 0.01 M sodium acetate/140 mM NaCl/pH = 5.5/0.001% Tween-80,
as described previously.[9] The labeled HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein was purified by gel filtration, as described previously.[9] An adult male Rhesus monkey, 17.3 kg, was investigated
at MPI Research (Mattawan, MI). The animal was injected intravenously
(IV) with 1200 μCi of [125I]-HIRMAb–SGSH fusion
protein by bolus intravenous injection, as described previously.[9] The injection dose (ID) of the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein was 19 μg/kg. Anesthesia was induced with intramuscular
ketamine, as described previously.[9] All
procedures were carried out in accordance with the Guide for the Care
and Use of Laboratory Animals as adopted and promulgated by the U.S.
National Institutes of Health. Following intravenous drug administration,
femoral venous plasma was obtained between 2 and 140 min for determination
of total plasma [125I] radioactivity (DPM/mL) and plasma
radioactivity that is precipitated by 10% cold TCA, as described previously.[9] The animal was euthanized, and samples of brain
and major organs (heart, liver, spleen, lung, skeletal muscle, and
omental fat) were processed for determination of radioactivity, as
described previously.[9] Samples (∼2
g) of frontal cortex were removed for capillary depletion analysis
to confirm transport of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein across
the BBB, as described previously.[9,13]The
TCA precipitable [125I] radioactivity in plasma, DPM/mL,
was converted to ng/mL, based on the specific activity of the injected
fusion protein, and a biexponential equation, %ID/mL = A1e– + A2e–, was fit to the plasma fusion
protein concentration. The intercepts (A1, A2) and the slopes (k1, k2) were used to compute the median residence time (MRT), the central
volume of distribution (Vc), the steady state volume of distribution
(Vss), the area under the plasma concentration curve (AUC), and the
systemic clearance (CL), as described previously.[14] Nonlinear regression analysis used the AR subroutine of
the BMDP Statistical Software (Statistical Solutions Ltd., Cork, Ireland).
Data were weighted by 1/(ng/mL)2.The BBB permeability-surface
area (PS) product was computed from
the terminal brain uptake, %ID/g, divided by the terminal (140 min)
plasma AUC, %ID·min/mL, and reported as μL/min/g.
Statistical
Analysis
Statistical differences were determined
by Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) with Bonferroni correction.
Results
The CHO-derived HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein was purified
by protein A affinity chromatography to homogeneity on SDS-PAGE (Figure 2). The HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein and the
HIRMAb use the same LC, which migrates with the same mobility on SDS-PAGE
(Figure 2). The size of the HC of the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein is larger than the size of the HC of the HIRMAb, owing
to fusion of the SGSH to the antibody HC (Figure 2). The antihuman IgG antibody reacts with the LC and HC of
both the HIRMAb and the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein but not
with recombinant SGSH (Figure 3, left). The
antihuman SGSH antibody reacts with recombinant SGSH and the HC of
the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein but not with the HC of the HIRMAb
(Figure 3, right). On the basis of the migration
of molecular weight (MW) standards on the Western blot (lane 1, Figure 3), the MW of the LC and the HC of the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein is 27 and 133 kDa, respectively. The MW of the heterotetrameric
IgG–enzyme fusion protein shown in Figure 1 is estimated to be 320 kDa based on mobility in the Western
blotting.
Figure 2
Reducing SDS-PAGE and Coomassie blue staining of the chimeric HIRMAb
and the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein.
Figure 3
Western blot with a primary antibody against human IgG (left) or
human SGSH (right). The proteins tested are the HIRMAb alone, recombinant
SGSH alone, and the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein.
Reducing SDS-PAGE and Coomassie blue staining of the chimeric HIRMAb
and the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein.Western blot with a primary antibody against human IgG (left) or
humanSGSH (right). The proteins tested are the HIRMAb alone, recombinant
SGSH alone, and the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein.The binding of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein,
and the HIRMAb
alone, to the HIR was measured with an ELISA (Experimental
Section). The EC50 of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion
protein binding to the HIR, 0.33 ± 0.05 nM, is comparable to
the EC50, 0.19 ± 0.02 nM, of the HIRMAb binding to
the HIR (Figure 4). The SGSH enzyme activity
of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein was measured with a two-step
fluorometric assay (Figure 5A), using the custom
synthesized substrate shown in Figure 5A. The
assay was linear with respect to mass of fusion protein (Figure 5B), and the average enzyme activity was 4712 ±
388 units/mg protein.
Figure 4
Binding to the HIR is saturable for the HIRMAb and the
HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein. The EC50 was determined by nonlinear regression
analysis and the value in ng/mL was converted to nM, based on a molecular
weight of 150 kDa for the HIRMAb and a molecular weight of 320 kDa
for the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein.
Figure 5
(A) The SGSH fluorometric enzyme assay is a two-step assay. The
substrate, 4-methylumbelliferyl-α-d-N-sulphoglucosaminide (MU-α-GlcNS), is converted by SGSH to
methylumbelliferyl-α-d-glucosaminide (MU-α-GlcNH2),
which is then converted to the fluorescent product, 4-methyl umbelliferone
(4-MU), by the second step enzyme, α-glucosaminidase. (B) Linear
formation of the 4-MU product by the addition of the 30–300
ng of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein. Data are mean ±
SD of three replicates; error bars are shown.
Binding to the HIR is saturable for the HIRMAb and the
HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein. The EC50 was determined by nonlinear regression
analysis and the value in ng/mL was converted to nM, based on a molecular
weight of 150 kDa for the HIRMAb and a molecular weight of 320 kDa
for the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein.(A) The SGSH fluorometric enzyme assay is a two-step assay. The
substrate, 4-methylumbelliferyl-α-d-N-sulphoglucosaminide (MU-α-GlcNS), is converted by SGSH to
methylumbelliferyl-α-d-glucosaminide (MU-α-GlcNH2),
which is then converted to the fluorescent product, 4-methyl umbelliferone
(4-MU), by the second step enzyme, α-glucosaminidase. (B) Linear
formation of the 4-MU product by the addition of the 30–300
ng of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein. Data are mean ±
SD of three replicates; error bars are shown.MPSIIIA fibroblasts were incubated with 10 μg/mL HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein for 6 h followed by fixation and immune labeling with
a mouse monoclonal antibody to LAMP1, a lysosomal marker, and a rabbit
polyclonal antibody to humanSGSH. The SGSH immunoreactivity is detected
in the red channel (Figure 6A), and the LAMP1
immunoreactivity within the cell is detected in the green channel
(Figure 6B). The overlap of the SGSH and LAMP1
immunoreactivity is shown in Figure 6C and
indicates the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein is triaged to the
lysosomal compartment following uptake into MPSIIIA fibroblasts. Nuclear
labeling with DAPI is shown in Figure 6D. There
was no immunoreactivity in the cells labeled with isotype control
antibodies. The HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein was pharmacologically
active in MPSIIIA fibroblasts, as low concentrations of the fusion
protein, 0.25 and 0.5 μg/mL, cause a 72% and 83% reduction in
lysosomal GAGs labeled with sulfate in MPS-IIIA fibroblasts (Figure 7).
Figure 6
Confocal microscopy of MPSIIIA fibroblasts treated with
the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein and immuno-stained with a primary antibody against
either SGSH (red channel (A)) or LAMP1 (green channel (B)). Overlap
of red and green images of the immune staining yields a yellow image
as shown in (C). (D) nuclear labeling with DAPI.
Figure 7
Incorporation of 35S-sulfate into lysosomal GAGs in MPSIIIA fibroblasts
is reduced by 48 h incubations with 0.25–0.5 μg/mL HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein. Mean ± SD (n = 4). *P < 0.01 difference from control.
Confocal microscopy of MPSIIIA fibroblasts treated with
the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein and immuno-stained with a primary antibody against
either SGSH (red channel (A)) or LAMP1 (green channel (B)). Overlap
of red and green images of the immune staining yields a yellow image
as shown in (C). (D) nuclear labeling with DAPI.Incorporation of 35S-sulfate into lysosomal GAGs in MPSIIIA fibroblasts
is reduced by 48 h incubations with 0.25–0.5 μg/mL HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein. Mean ± SD (n = 4). *P < 0.01 difference from control.The HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein was radiolabeled with
the
[125I]-Bolton–Hunter reagent to a specific activity
of 3.7 μCi/μg and a TCA precipitation of 97%. The [125I]-HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein (1200 μCi, 324
μg) was injected IV in a male Rhesus monkey. The time course
of TCA precipitable [125I]-HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein
is shown in Figure 8. The percent of total
plasma radioactivity that was precipitable by TCA was 96 ± 1%,
95 ± 1%, 94 ± 1%, 89 ± 1%, 84 ± 2%, 79 ±
1%, and 72 ± 2%, respectively, at 2, 5, 15, 30, 60, 90, and 140
min after IV injection. A 2-exponential equation was fit to the plasma
profile of TCA-precipitable fusion protein (Experimental
Section) to yield the pharmacokinetic (PK) parameters shown
in Table 1. The [125I]-HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein is rapidly cleared from plasma with a mean residence
time of 62 ± 4 min, a systemic volume of distribution (Vss) that
is 2.5-fold greater the central compartment volume (Vc), and a high
rate of systemic clearance, 1.11 ± 0.03 mL/min/kg (Table 1).
Figure 8
Plasma TCA-precipitable
[125I]-HIRMAb–SGSH fusion
protein concentration, ng/mL, in the adult Rhesus monkey, is plotted
vs time over a 140 min period after a single IV injection of 19 μg/kg
the fusion protein.
Table 1
Pharmacokinetic Parameters
of the
HIRMAb–SGSH Fusion Proteina
parameter
units
value
T1/21
min
5.5 ± 0.8
T1/22
min
55 ± 4
MRT
min
62 ± 4
Vc
mL/kg
28 ± 2
Vss
mL/kg
69 ± 4
AUCss
μg·min/mL
16.8 ± 0.5
CL
mL/min/kg
1.11 ± 0.03
Parameters computed from the plasma
profile in Figure 8. T1/21 and T1/22 are the half-times
of plasma clearance for the first phase (α) and second phase
(β) phases.
Parameters computed from the plasma
profile in Figure 8. T1/21 and T1/22 are the half-times
of plasma clearance for the first phase (α) and second phase
(β) phases.Plasma TCA-precipitable
[125I]-HIRMAb–SGSH fusion
protein concentration, ng/mL, in the adult Rhesus monkey, is plotted
vs time over a 140 min period after a single IV injection of 19 μg/kg
the fusion protein.The volume of distribution
(VD) of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion
protein in total brain homogenate at 140 min after injection is high,
782 ± 36 μL/g, compared to the brain VD of a nonspecific
human IgG1 isotype control antibody, 20 ± 6 μL/g (Table 2). The brain VD of the IgG1 isotype control antibody
represents the brain uptake of a molecule that is sequestered within
the blood volume of brain, and which does not cross the BBB, as described
previously.[9] The VD of the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein in the postvascular supernatant, 666 ± 71 μL/g,
is greater than the VD of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein in
the vascular pellet of brain, 24 ± 17 μL/g (Table 2), which indicates that the majority of the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein has traversed the BBB and penetrated the brain parenchyma.
The radioactivity in the postvascular supernatant represents intact
HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein, and not labeled metabolites, as
the TCA precipitation of the postvascular supernatant radioactivity
is 95.9 ± 0.7% (Table 2).
Table 2
Capillary Depletion Analysis of the
Brain Uptake of the HIRMAb–SGSH Fusion Proteina
molecule
brain fraction
VD (μL/g)
HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein
brain homogenate
782 ± 36
postvascular supernatant
666 ± 71
vascular pellet
24 ± 17
human
IgG1 isotype control
brain homogenate
20 ± 6
Mean ± SD. The fusion protein
was administered by IV injection, and brain measurements made 140
min following injection. The radioactivity in the postvascular supernatant
was 95.9 ± 0.7% precipitable by cold 10% trichloroacetic acid.
The homogenate VD for the human IgG1 isotype control antibody was
reported previously.[23]
Mean ± SD. The fusion protein
was administered by IV injection, and brain measurements made 140
min following injection. The radioactivity in the postvascular supernatant
was 95.9 ± 0.7% precipitable by cold 10% trichloroacetic acid.
The homogenate VD for the human IgG1 isotype control antibody was
reported previously.[23]The organ uptake of the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein is expressed
as % of injected dose (ID) per 100 g wet organ weight (Table 3) because the brain of the adult Rhesus monkey weighs
100 g.[14] The major organs accounting for
the removal of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein from plasma are
liver and spleen (Table 3). The brain cortical
uptake of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein is 0.81 ± 0.07%
ID/100 g brain (Table 3). The BBB PS product,
a measure of brain clearance (Experimental Section), for the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein is 1.8 ± 0.2 μL/min/g.
Table 3
Organ Uptake of the HIRMAb–SGSH
Fusion Protein in the Rhesus Monkeya
organ
organ uptake (%ID/100 g)
frontal cortex
0.81 ± 0.07
cerebellar
cortex
0.60 ± 0.04
choroid plexus
1.13 ± 0.06
liver
16.2 ± 0.4
spleen
14.7 ± 0.5
lung
1.1 ± 0.2
heart
0.93 ± 0.11
fat
0.044 ± 0.004
skeletal muscle
0.31 ± 0.21
Data are mean ±
SD of triplicate
samples.
Data are mean ±
SD of triplicate
samples.
Discussion
The
results of these studies are consistent with the following
conclusions. First, fusion of the SGSH enzyme to the carboxyl terminus
of the heavy chain of the HIRMAb (Figure 1)
results in a bifunctional HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein that retains
both high affinity binding to the HIR (Figure 4) and high SGSH enzyme activity (Figure 5).
Second, the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein is taken up by MPSIIIA
fibroblasts (Figure 6C) and is pharmacologically
active in these cells with 72–83% reduction in lysosomal GAGs
(Figure 7). Third, the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion
protein is rapidly cleared from plasma following IV injection (Table 1, Figure 8), owing to rapid
uptake by peripheral tissues (Table 3). Fourth,
the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein is taken up by brain at a rate
of ∼1% ID/brain (Table 3), and capillary
depletion results show rapid movement of the fusion protein into the
postvascular parenchyma of brain (Table 2).The SGSH lysosomal enzyme could be fused to either the amino terminus
or the carboxyl terminus of the HIRMAb. Fusion of the enzyme to the
amino terminus would enable folding of the enzyme cotranslationally
prior to folding of the antibody heavy chain, which could promote
retention of enzyme activity in the form of the fusion protein. However,
the HIR binding site of the HIRMAb is near the amino terminus of the
IgG chains, and fusion of a lysosomal enzyme to the heavy chain amino
terminus of the HIRMAb results in a >95% reduction in HIRMAb binding
to the HIR.[15] High affinity binding to
the HIR is retained following lysosomal enzyme fusion to the carboxyl
terminus of the HIRMAb heavy chain, but this then resulted in a >95%
loss of enzyme activity of a model lysosomal enzyme, β-glucuronidase.[15] In the present study, SGSH was fused to the
carboxyl terminus of the IgG, and the SGSH enzyme activity of the
fusion protein is 4712 ± 388 units/mg protein (Results). The SGSH enzyme specific activity of the 60 kDa
recombinant humanSGSH, using the same two-step fluorometric enzyme
assay, is 15000 units/mg protein.[4] However,
following re-engineering of the SGSH as a heterotetrameric IgG–SGSH
fusion protein with a MW of 320 kDa (Results), the effective MW of the SGSH domain of the fusion protein is 160
kDa, whereas the MW of SGSH is 60 kDa. After normalization for MW
differences, the effective SGSH specific activity of the fusion protein
is equivalent to 12800 units/mg recombinant SGSH, which is 85% of
the enzyme activity of recombinant SGSH. Therefore, fusion of the
SGSH to the carboxyl terminus of the HC of the HIRMAb had minimal
effect on the enzyme activity of the SGSH enzyme. The sulfatase activity
of SGSH requires a post-translational conversion of a cysteine residue
in the near amino terminal region of the enzyme to a N-formyl glycine residue via the enzymatic action of sulfatase modifying
factor type 1, or SUMF1.[16] Expression of
SGSH in transfected host cells is dependent on cotransfection of the
host cell with genes for both SGSH and SUMF1.[16] However, when the SGSH is stably expressed in CHO cells as an IgG–SGSH
fusion protein, without cotransfection with SUMF1, the CHO cells secrete
an enzymatically active IgG–SGSH fusion protein. The retention
of SGSH enzyme activity following fusion to the HIRMAb is also demonstrated
by the 83% reduction in lysosomal GAGs following treatment of MPSIIIA
fibroblasts with the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein (Figure 7). Triage of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein
into the lysosomal compartment of MPSIIIA fibroblasts is shown by
confocal microscopy (Figure 6C).The
HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein is rapidly cleared from plasma
following IV injection, owing to uptake by peripheral tissues, similar
to the rapid plasma clearance of recombinant SGSH.[17] However, recombinant SGSH does not enter the brain from
blood,[17] which is problematic in the treatment
of MPSIIIA, because the primary clinical symptoms of MPSIIIA involves
the CNS.[2] The present work shows the brain
uptake of the HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein is 0.8% of injected
dose (ID)/100 g brain in the Rhesus monkey. Therefore, an injection
dose (ID) of 3 mg/kg HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein in a 17 kg
Rhesus monkey is equal to 50 mg, or an ID of about 250000 units of
enzyme activity. With a brain uptake of 1% ID/100 g brain (Table 3), the brain SGSH enzyme activity is 2500 units/100
g brain, or 25 units/g brain. There are 100 mg protein per g brain.[18] Therefore, the SGSH enzyme activity is predicted
to be 0.25 units/mg protein in brain following administration of a
3 mg/kg dose, which is comparable to the endogenous SGSH enzyme activity
in brain, 0.12 units/mg protein, as determined by the same two-step
fluorometric enzyme assay.[19] These calculations
suggest it is possible to achieve therapeutic SGSH enzyme activity
in the brain following administration of the enzyme in the form of
the BBB-penetrating HIRMAb–SGSH fusion protein. The HIRMAb
resides in primate brain with a half-time of 16 h.[20] However, the tissue half-time of HIRMAb–sulfatase
enzyme activity is longer, 3 days,[21] due
to sequestration within the lysosome.Penetration of the BBB
followed by distribution of the HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein into the postvascular parenchyma of brain is demonstrated
by the capillary depletion method (Table 2).
If the fusion protein was retained within the endothelial compartment
of the brain microvasculature, then the VD in the vascular pellet
would be high and the VD in the postvascular supernatant would be
low. However, the opposite is observed, as the VD in the postvascular
supernatant is 28-fold higher than the VD in the vascular compartment
(Table 2). The radioactivity in the postvascular
supernatant is not an artifact caused by brain uptake of low MW metabolites
generated by rapid systemic degradation of the fusion protein because
low MW metabolites labeled with the [125I]-Bolton–Hunter
reagent do not cross the BBB.[9,22] This is also demonstrated
in the present study, where the TCA precipitability of the radioactivity
in the postvascular supernatant of brain is high, 96 ± 1% (Table 2), compared to the TCA precipitability of the radioactivity
in the terminal plasma, 72 ± 2% (Results). The results obtained with the capillary depletion method have
been corroborated with emulsion autoradiography of Rhesus monkey brain,
which shows broad distribution of a HIRMAb–sulfatase fusion
protein in brain parenchyma following IV administration.[9]In summary, the present study describes
the re-engineering of the
SGSH lysosomal enzyme as an IgG–SGSH fusion protein, wherein
the IgG domain is the HIRMAb that mediates transport across the BBB,
as well as uptake into target cells, which is followed by triage to
the lysosomal compartment of target cells. The HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein is bifunctional and retains both high affinity binding
for the HIR and high SGSH enzyme activity. The HIRMAb–SGSH
fusion protein is a new form of receptor-mediated enzyme replacement
therapy of the brain in MPSIIIA.
Authors: Ruben J Boado; Eric K-W Hui; Jeff Zhiqiang Lu; Rachita K Sumbria; William M Pardridge Journal: Bioconjug Chem Date: 2013-10-03 Impact factor: 4.774
Authors: E A Karpova; J L Keulemans; A T Hoogeveen; B Winchester; I V Tsvetkova; O P van Diggelen Journal: J Inherit Metab Dis Date: 1996 Impact factor: 4.982
Authors: H S Scott; L Blanch; X H Guo; C Freeman; A Orsborn; E Baker; G R Sutherland; C P Morris; J J Hopwood Journal: Nat Genet Date: 1995-12 Impact factor: 38.330
Authors: Shaheen A Farhadi; Evelyn Bracho-Sanchez; Sabrina L Freeman; Benjamin G Keselowsky; Gregory A Hudalla Journal: Bioconjug Chem Date: 2018-01-31 Impact factor: 4.774
Authors: Maria Francisca Coutinho; Juliana Inês Santos; Liliana S Mendonça; Liliana Matos; Maria João Prata; Amália S Jurado; Maria C Pedroso de Lima; Sandra Alves Journal: Int J Mol Sci Date: 2020-08-10 Impact factor: 5.923