Multivalent Antiviral XTEN–Peptide Conjugates with Long in Vivo Half-Life and Enhanced Solubility
Author(s) -
Sheng Ding,
Michael Song,
Bee-Cheng Sim,
Chen Gu,
Vladimir N. Podust,
ChiaWei Wang,
Bryant McLaughlin,
Trishul P Shah,
Rodney Lax,
R. Gast,
Rahul Sharan,
Arthur Vasek,
Magdalena HartmanPetrycka,
Colin Deniston,
P. L. Srinivas,
Volker Schellenberger
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
bioconjugate chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.279
H-Index - 172
eISSN - 1520-4812
pISSN - 1043-1802
DOI - 10.1021/bc500215m
Subject(s) - chemistry , peptide , conjugate , in vivo , ethylene glycol , in vitro , maleimide , cysteine , combinatorial chemistry , conjugated system , biochemistry , polymer , organic chemistry , enzyme , mathematical analysis , mathematics , microbiology and biotechnology , biology
XTENs are unstructured, nonrepetitive protein polymers designed to prolong the in vivo half-life of pharmaceuticals by introducing a bulking effect similar to that of poly(ethylene glycol). While XTEN can be expressed as a recombinant fusion protein with bioactive proteins and peptides, therapeutic molecules of interest can also be chemically conjugated to XTEN. Such an approach permits precise control over the positioning, spacing, and valency of bioactive moieties along the length of XTEN. We have demonstrated the attachment of T-20, an anti-retroviral peptide indicated for the treatment of HIV-1 patients with multidrug resistance, to XTEN. By reacting maleimide-functionalized T-20 with cysteine-containing XTENs and varying the number and positioning of cysteines in the XTENs, a library of different peptide-polymer combinations were produced. The T-20-XTEN conjugates were tested using an in vitro antiviral assay and were found to be effective in inhibiting HIV-1 entry and preventing cell death, with the copy number and spacing of the T-20 peptides influencing antiviral activity. The peptide-XTEN conjugates were also discovered to have enhanced solubilities in comparison with the native T-20 peptide. The pharmacokinetic profile of the most active T-20-XTEN conjugate was measured in rats, and it was found to exhibit an elimination half-life of 55.7 ± 17.7 h, almost 20 times longer than the reported half-life for T-20 dosed in rats. As the conjugation of T-20 to XTEN greatly improved the in vivo half-life and solubility of the peptide, the XTEN platform has been demonstrated to be a versatile tool for improving the properties of drugs and enabling the development of a class of next-generation therapeutics.
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