Literature DB >> 27633684

Peptide Therapeutics and the Pharmaceutical Industry: Barriers Encountered Translating from the Laboratory to Patients.

John Rafferty, Hema Nagaraj, Alice P McCloskey, Rawan Huwaitat, Simon Porter, Alyaa Albadr, Garry Laverty1.   

Abstract

Peptides are receiving increasing interest as clinical therapeutics. These highly tunable molecules can be tailored to achieve desirable biocompatibility and biodegradability with simultaneously selective and potent therapeutic effects. Despite challenges regarding up-scaling and licensing of peptide products, their vast clinical potential is reflected in the 60 plus peptide-based therapeutics already on the market, and the further 500 derivatives currently in developmental stages. Peptides are proving effective for a multitude of disease states including: type 2 diabetes (controlled using the licensed glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor liraglutide); irritable bowel syndrome managed with linaclotide (currently at approval stages); acromegaly (treated with octapeptide somatostatin analogues lanreotide and octreotide); selective or broad spectrum microbicidal agents such as the Gram-positive selective PTP-7 and antifungal heliomicin; anticancer agents including goserelin used as either adjuvant or monotherapy for prostate and breast cancer, and the first marketed peptide derived vaccine against prostate cancer, sipuleucel-T. Research is also focusing on improving the biostability of peptides. This is achieved through a number of mechanisms ranging from replacement of naturally occurring L-amino acid enantiomers with D-amino acid forms, lipidation, peptidomimetics, N-methylation, cyclization and exploitation of carrier systems. The development of self-assembling peptides are paving the way for sustained release peptide formulations and already two such licensed examples exist, lanreotide and octreotide. The versatility and tunability of peptide-based products is resulting in increased translation of peptide therapies, however significant challenges remain with regard to their wider implementation. This review highlights some of the notable peptide therapeutics discovered to date and the difficulties encountered by the pharmaceutical industry in translating these molecules to the clinical setting for patient benefit, providing some possible solutions to the most challenging barriers.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27633684     DOI: 10.2174/0929867323666160909155222

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Med Chem        ISSN: 0929-8673            Impact factor:   4.530


  12 in total

Review 1.  Anxiety, Depression, and the Microbiome: A Role for Gut Peptides.

Authors:  Gilliard Lach; Harriet Schellekens; Timothy G Dinan; John F Cryan
Journal:  Neurotherapeutics       Date:  2018-01       Impact factor: 7.620

2.  Myristoylated TMEM39AS41, a cell-permeable peptide, causes lung cancer cell death.

Authors:  Sungjin Park; Minhee Kim; Youngeun Hong; Hyunji Lee; Quangdon Tran; Chaeyeong Kim; So Hee Kwon; Jisoo Park; Jongsun Park; Seon-Hwan Kim
Journal:  Toxicol Res       Date:  2020-02-07

Review 3.  The Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis in Depression: The Potential Pathophysiological Mechanisms and Microbiota Combined Antidepression Effect.

Authors:  Fangyuan Zhu; Huaijun Tu; Tingtao Chen
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2022-05-16       Impact factor: 6.706

4.  Hollow Microparticles as a Superior Delivery System over Solid Microparticles for the Encapsulation of Peptides.

Authors:  Sharad Kharel; Archana Gautam; Andreas Dickescheid; Say Chye Joachim Loo
Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  2018-08-02       Impact factor: 4.200

Review 5.  Peptides to Tackle Leishmaniasis: Current Status and Future Directions.

Authors:  Alberto A Robles-Loaiza; Edgar A Pinos-Tamayo; Bruno Mendes; Cátia Teixeira; Cláudia Alves; Paula Gomes; José R Almeida
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-04-22       Impact factor: 5.923

Review 6.  Self-Assembled Antimicrobial Nanomaterials.

Authors:  Ana Maria Carmona-Ribeiro
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2018-07-04       Impact factor: 3.390

7.  Somatostatin receptors in normal and acromegalic somatotroph cells: the U-turn of the clinician to immunohistochemistry report - a review.

Authors:  Nina Ionovici; Mara Carsote; Dana Cristina Terzea; Anca Mihaela Predescu; Anne Marie Rauten; Mihaela Popescu
Journal:  Rom J Morphol Embryol       Date:  2020 Apr-Jun       Impact factor: 1.033

Review 8.  Think Big, Start Small: How Nanomedicine Could Alleviate the Burden of Rare CNS Diseases.

Authors:  Abdelfattah Faouzi; Valérie Gaëlle Roullin
Journal:  Pharmaceuticals (Basel)       Date:  2021-01-30

9.  Synthesis of a DOTA-C-glyco bifunctional chelating agent and preliminary in vitro and in vivo study of [68Ga]Ga-DOTA-C-glyco-RGD.

Authors:  Floriane Mangin; Charlotte Collet; Valérie Jouan-Hureaux; Fatiha Maskali; Emilie Roeder; Julien Pierson; Katalin Selmeczi; Pierre-Yves Marie; Cédric Boura; Nadia Pellegrini-Moïse; Sandrine Lamandé-Langle
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2021-02-17       Impact factor: 3.361

10.  A Simple Platform for the Rapid Development of Antimicrobials.

Authors:  Stephen Albert Johnston; Valeriy Domenyuk; Nidhi Gupta; Milene Tavares Batista; John C Lainson; Zhan-Gong Zhao; Joel F Lusk; Andrey Loskutov; Zbigniew Cichacz; Phillip Stafford; Joseph Barten Legutki; Chris W Diehnelt
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-12-14       Impact factor: 4.379

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