| Literature DB >> 32397259 |
Abstract
Therapeutic enzymes are administered for the treatment of a wide variety of diseases. They exert their effects through binding with a high affinity and specificity to disease-causing substrates to catalyze their conversion to a non-noxious product, to induce an advantageous physiological change. However, the metabolic and clinical efficacies of parenterally or intramuscularly administered therapeutic enzymes are very often limited by short circulatory half-lives and hypersensitive and immunogenic reactions. Over the past five decades, the erythrocyte carrier has been extensively studied as a strategy for overcoming these limitations and increasing therapeutic efficacy. This review examines the rationale for the different therapeutic strategies that have been applied to erythrocyte-mediated enzyme therapy. These strategies include their application as circulating bioreactors, targeting the monocyte-macrophage system, the coupling of enzymes to the surface of the erythrocyte and the engineering of CD34+ hematopoietic precursor cells for the expression of therapeutic enzymes. An overview of the diverse biomedical applications for which they have been investigated is also provided, including the detoxification of exogenous chemicals, thrombolytic therapy, enzyme replacement therapy for metabolic diseases and antitumor therapy.Entities:
Keywords: carrier erythrocytes; drug delivery; enzyme replacement therapies; erythrocyte bioreactor; erythrocyte carriers; therapeutic enzymes; thrombolytic therapy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32397259 PMCID: PMC7284836 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics12050435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1Strategy for the removal of pathological metabolites from the circulation. Pathological metabolites in the blood enter the erythrocyte carrier, to undergo metabolism by the encapsulated enzyme (E).
Figure 2Strategy for targeting enzymes to the monocyte–macrophage system of the spleen, liver and bone marrow. Senescent erythrocyte carriers loaded with enzymes are removed from the circulation by macrophages. The resulting phagosome fuses with macromolecule-laden lysosomes, resulting in the release of enzyme and breakdown of macromolecules.
Figure 3Therapeutic strategy for therapeutic enzymes coupled to the erythrocyte membrane. Pathological plasma metabolites are catalyzed by the conjugated enzyme to their corresponding non-pathological product.
Figure 4Strategy for therapeutic enzymes produced through the transfection of CD34+ cells with lentiviral vectors containing constructs encoding for the enzyme of interest. Cells are expanded and differentiated until the nucleus is ejected, resulting in the mature reticulocyte expressing the recombinant enzyme.
Summary of in vitro, in vivo and clinical applications of erythrocyte-mediated enzyme therapy.
| Therapeutic Application | Therapeutic Target/Disorder | Encapsulated/Conjugated Enzyme | Investigations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Detoxification of exogenous chemicals | Cyanide [ | Rhodanase | Mouse |
| Paraoxon [ | Phosphotriesterase | Mouse | |
| Paraoxonase | Mouse | ||
| Ethanol [ | Acetaldehyde dehydrogenase | Mouse | |
| Alcohol dehydrogenase/aldehyde dehydrogenase | Mouse | ||
| Methanol [ | Alcohol oxidase | Mouse | |
| Formate dehydrogenase | |||
| Lead [ | δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase | Mouse | |
| Hydrogen gas [ | Hydrogenase | Human | |
| Thrombolytic therapy | Plasminogen [ | Urokinase | Human |
| Streptokinase | Human | ||
| tPA | Human | ||
| Brinase | Rabbit | ||
| Treatment of metabolic disease | Sphingolipids (Lysosomal storage disorders) [ | β-glucosidase | Human |
| β-galactosidase | Human | ||
| β-glucuronidase | Mouse | ||
| β-glucocerebrosidase | Human | ||
| Alglucerase | Human | ||
| Ammonia (hyperammonemia) [ | Human | ||
| Glutamine synthetase | Mouse | ||
| Glutamate dehydrogenase/alanine aminotransferase | |||
| Arginine and ammonia (arginase-1 deficiency) [ | Arginase | Human | |
| Urea and ammonia (chronic renal failure) [ | Urease/alanine dehydrogenase | Human | |
| Glucose (hyperglycemia) [ | Hexokinase | Human | |
| Glucose oxidase | Human | ||
| Hexokinase/glucose oxidase | Human | ||
| Lactate (hyperlactatemia) [ | Lactate 2-mono-oxygenase | Mouse/human | |
| Lactate oxidase | Mouse/human | ||
| Lactate 2-mono-oxygenase/ lactate oxidase | Mouse | ||
| NADP (Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency) [ | Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase | Human | |
| Adenosine and 2‘-deoxyadenosine | Adenosine deaminase | Human | |
| Thymidine and 2’-deoxyuridine (MNGIE) [ | Thymidine phosphorylase | Mouse/dog | |
| Uric acid (hyperuricemia) [ | Uricase | Human | |
| Phenylalanine (phenylketonuria) [ | Phenylalanine ammonia lyase | Mouse | |
| Phenylalanine hydroxylase | Mouse | ||
| RTX-134 | Human Phase Ib | ||
| Antitumor therapy | Asparagine | Asparaginase | Monkey |
| Asparagine | ERY-ASP | Human Phase I | |
| (triple negative breast cancer) | Eryaspase | Human Phase II/III | |
| Methionine (gastric adenocarcinoma, glioblastoma, breast carcinoma) [ | Methionine-γ-lyase | Mouse | |
| Arginine [ | Arginine deiminase | Mouse |