| Literature DB >> 34198550 |
Natalia Teresa Jarzebska1,2, Mark Mellett1,3, Julia Frei1,3, Thomas M Kündig1,3, Steve Pascolo1,3.
Abstract
Protamine is a natural cationic peptide mixture mostly known as a drug for the neutralization of heparin and as a compound in formulations of slow-release insulin. Protamine is also used for cellular delivery of nucleic acids due to opposite charge-driven coupling. This year marks 60 years since the first use of Protamine as a transfection enhancement agent. Since then, Protamine has been broadly used as a stabilization agent for RNA delivery. It has also been involved in several compositions for RNA-based vaccinations in clinical development. Protamine stabilization of RNA shows double functionality: it not only protects RNA from degradation within biological systems, but also enhances penetration into cells. A Protamine-based RNA delivery system is a flexible and versatile platform that can be adjusted according to therapeutic goals: fused with targeting antibodies for precise delivery, digested into a cell penetrating peptide for better transfection efficiency or not-covalently mixed with functional polymers. This manuscript gives an overview of the strategies employed in protamine-based RNA delivery, including the optimization of the nucleic acid's stability and translational efficiency, as well as the regulation of its immunostimulatory properties from early studies to recent developments.Entities:
Keywords: RNA; cancer therapy; protamine; transfection; vaccines
Year: 2021 PMID: 34198550 PMCID: PMC8231816 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13060877
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1(A) Positively charged Protamine spontaneously assembles with negatively charged nucleic acids (here mRNA), formulating nanocomplexes; (B) The Protamine-RNA complex is internalized into the cell via endosomes. RNA acts as danger signals that trigger TLR7/8 to stimulate innate immune responses (see paragraph 3). mRNA released into the cytoplasm is translated into the desired protein (see paragraph 2); (C) Amino acid sequence of salmon sperm-derived protamine. Nuclear localization signal (NLS) highlighted in red [13].
Figure 2Improvement of Protamine-RNA complex transfectability by the addition of poly(acrylic acid) derivatives. (A) Chemical structures of used Endosome Destabilizing Agents (B) Schematic mechanism of action. At low pH PAA derivatives start to behave like surface active substance and destabilize the endosomal membrane allowing mRNA to escape degradation into the cytoplasm; (C) Addition of PAA derivatives (PMMA, PEA, P2PA) to Protamine-RNA (Luciferase) complexes improves transfection efficiency. All prepared particles contained 200 ng of Luciferase –coding mRNA; PMMA particles contained: 1.8 µg PMMA and Protamine 6 µg; PEA particles contained: 200 ng PEA and Protamine 1.2 µg; P2PA particles contained: 1.8 µg P2PA and 2 µg of Protamine. 100,000 HEK293 cells in RPMI complete medium were incubated for 24 h with indicated particles and after that time Luciferase activity was measured after addition of 25 µL of BrightGlo reagent (Promega); (D) Viability of HEK293 cells after 24 h exposure to Protamine-RNA-PAA complexes measured via LDH assay (Promega). Data represent triplicates mean value with SD.
Figure 3Schematic representation of Protamine-RNA formulations for RNA delivery mentioned in this review.
Published clinical trials with Protamine-mRNA.
| Condition | Protamine Formulation | Number | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metastatic Melanoma | Protamine ICM | NCT00204607 | [ |
| Prostate Cancer | RNactive CV9103 | EudraCT 2008-003967-37 | [ |
| Prostate Cancer | RNactive CV9104 | NCT01817738 | [ |
| Rabies | RNactive CV7201 | NCT02241135 | [ |
| Non-small Cell Lung Cancer | RNactive CV9201 | NCT00923312 | [ |
| Non-small Cell Lung Cancer | RNactive CV9202 | NCT01915524 | [ |