| Literature DB >> 26925240 |
Maja Thim Larsen1, Matthias Kuhlmann1, Michael Lykke Hvam1, Kenneth A Howard1.
Abstract
The effectiveness of a drug is dependent on accumulation at the site of action at therapeutic levels, however, challenges such as rapid renal clearance, degradation or non-specific accumulation requires drug delivery enabling technologies. Albumin is a natural transport protein with multiple ligand binding sites, cellular receptor engagement, and a long circulatory half-life due to interaction with the recycling neonatal Fc receptor. Exploitation of these properties promotes albumin as an attractive candidate for half-life extension and targeted intracellular delivery of drugs attached by covalent conjugation, genetic fusions, association or ligand-mediated association. This review will give an overview of albumin-based products with focus on the natural biological properties and molecular interactions that can be harnessed for the design of a next-generation drug delivery platform.Entities:
Keywords: Albumin fusions; Albumin-binding; Drugs; Half-life extension; Human serum albumin (HSA); Intracellular delivery; Molecular medicine; Neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn); Targeted drug delivery
Year: 2016 PMID: 26925240 PMCID: PMC4769556 DOI: 10.1186/s40591-016-0048-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Ther ISSN: 2052-8426
Fig. 1Crystal structure of human serum albumin. The illustration shows the tertiary structure of human serum albumin in complex with stearic acid (PDB 1e7e). The three domains of albumin are shown in purple (IA), red (IB), green (IIA), orange (IIB), blue (IIIA), and violet (IIIB). Yellow sticks depicture disulfide bridges, and yellow spheres highlight the available cysteine 34 in domain IA
Fig. 2Albumin-based drug delivery strategies. a Albumin fusion-based drugs, in light green (HSA) and in red (fusion peptide) (modified PDB 1e7e + 3IOL). b Albumin associating drugs; upper left binding of paclitaxel (from PDB1JFF), upper right binding of insulin detemir (Levemir®) (insulin from PDB1ZNI, Myristic acid from PDB1H9Z), lower panel binding of the weakly associated warfarin (PDB1H9Z). c Covalent conjugation of a drug to albumin via the available Cys34 (modified PDB 1e7e + 1I1E)
A selection of albumin-based systems in clinical trials and marketed products
| Attachment | Name | Disease | Drug type | Clinical status | Company | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-covalent/reversible association | Levemir® | Diabetes type 1 and 2 | Insulin detemir | Marketed | Novo Nordisk | [ |
| Victoza® | Diabetes type 2 | GLP-1 | Marketed | Novo Nordisk | [ | |
| Ozoralizumab | Rheumatoid arthritis | Antibody derivative | Phase II completed | Ablynx | [ | |
| Covalent | MTX-HSA | Cancer and autoimmune diseases | Methotrexate | Phase II | Access Pharmaceuticals Inc. | [ |
| Aldoxorubicin | Cancer | Doxorubicin | Phase I completed | CytRx, Inc. | [ | |
| CJC-1134 | Diabetes type 2 | Exendin-4 | Phase II | ConjuChem | [ | |
| Genetic fusion | Eperzan/Tanzeum | Diabetes type 2 | GLP-1 | Marketed | Glaxo Smith Kline | [ |
| N/A | Hemophilia | FVIIa | Phase I completed | CSL Behring GmbH | [ | |
| N/A | Hemophilia B | rIX-FP | Phase III completed | CSL Behring GmbH | [ | |
| Albuferon®/Zalbin/Jouleferon | Hepatitis C | INFalpha-2b | Phase III completed, Development ceased | Human Genome Sciences in collaboration with Novartis | [ | |
| Micro-/Nanoparticle | Abraxane® | Cancer | Paclitaxel | Marketed | Celgene | [ |
| ABI-008 | Cancer | Docetaxel | Phase I/II | Celgene | [ | |
| ABI-009 | Cancer | Rapamycin | Phase I/II | Celgene | [ | |
| ABI-010 | Cancer | HSP90 Inhibitor | Withdrawn before enrollment | Celgene | [ | |
| 99mTc-Albures | Diagnostic purpose | Technetium-99 | Marketed | GE Healthcare | ||
| 99mTc-Nanocoll | Diagnostic purpose | Technetium-99 | Marketed | GE Healthcare |