PEGylation

This article is about PEGylation in a pharmaceutical context. For the bulk industrial process, see Ethoxylation.
Polyethylene glycol (in pharmacy called macrogol)

PEGylation (often styled pegylation) is the process of both covalent and non-covalent attachment or amalgamation of polyethylene glycol (PEG, in pharmacy called macrogol) polymer chains to molecules and macrostructures, such as a drug, therapeutic protein or vesicle, which is then described as PEGylated (pegylated). PEGylation is routinely achieved by incubation of a reactive derivative of PEG with the target molecule. The covalent attachment of PEG to a drug or therapeutic protein can "mask" the agent from the host's immune system (reduced immunogenicity and antigenicity), and increase the hydrodynamic size (size in solution) of the agent which prolongs its circulatory time by reducing renal clearance. PEGylation can also provide water solubility to hydrophobic drugs and proteins.

History

Around 1970, Frank F. Davis, a professor of biochemistry at Rutgers University, became interested in developing a process to render usable bioactive proteins of potential medical value. After considerable study, he concluded that the attachment of an inert and hydrophilic polymer might extend blood life and control immunogenicity of the proteins.[1] Polyethylene glycol was chosen as the polymer. A team of Davis, Theodorus Van Es and Nicholas C. Palczuk conducted animal studies and found that PEG attachment greatly extended blood life and controlled immunogenicity of the proteins. A patent application was filed in 1973 and patent issued in 1979.[2] The inventors and Abraham Abuchowski conducted extensive additional PEGylation studies on various enzymes.[3][4] In 1981 Davis and Abuchowski founded Enzon, Inc., which brought three PEGylated drugs to market. Abuchowski later founded and is CEO of Prolong Pharmaceuticals.

Overview

A comparison of uricase and PEG-uricase. PEG-uricase includes 40 polymers of 10kDa PEG. PEGylation improves its solubility at physiological pH, increases serum half-life and reduces immunogenicity without compromising activity. Upper images show the whole tetramer, lower images show one of the lysines that is PEGylated. (uricase from PDB: 1uox and PEG-uricase model from reference;[5] only 36 PEG polymers included)

PEGylation is the process of attaching the strands of the polymer PEG to molecules, most typically peptides, proteins, and antibody fragments, that can improve the safety and efficiency of many therapeutics.[6] It produces alterations in the physiochemical properties including changes in conformation, electrostatic binding, hydrophobicity etc. These physical and chemical changes increase systemic retention of the therapeutic agent. Also, it can influence the binding affinity of the therapeutic moiety to the cell receptors and can alter the absorption and distribution patterns.

PEGylation, by increasing the molecular weight of a molecule, can impart several significant pharmacological advantages over the unmodified form, such as:

PEGylated drugs also have the following commercial advantages:

PEG is a particularly attractive polymer for conjugation. The specific characteristics of PEG moieties relevant to pharmaceutical applications are:

PEGylated pharmaceuticals on the market

The clinical value of PEGylation is now well established. ADAGEN (pegademase bovine) manufactured by Enzon Pharmaceuticals, Inc., US was the first PEGylated protein approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in March 1990, to enter the market. It is used to treat X-linked severe combined immunogenicity syndrome, as an alternative to bone marrow transplantation and enzyme replacement by gene therapy. Since the introduction of ADAGEN, a large number of PEGylated protein and peptide pharmaceuticals have followed and many others are under clinical trial or under development stages. Sales of the two most successful products, Pegasys and Neulasta, exceeded $5 billion in 2011.[7][8] All commercially available PEGylated pharmaceuticals contain methoxypoly(ethylene glycol) or mPEG. PEGylated pharmaceuticals currently on the market (in reverse chronology by FDA approval year) include:

PEGylation process

The first step of the PEGylation is the suitable functionalization of the PEG polymer at one or both terminals. PEGs that are activated at each terminus with the same reactive moiety are known as “homobifunctional”, whereas if the functional groups present are different, then the PEG derivative is referred as “heterobifunctional” or “heterofunctional.” The chemically active or activated derivatives of the PEG polymer are prepared to attach the PEG to the desired molecule.

The overall PEGylation processes used to date for protein conjugation can be broadly classified into two types, namely a solution phase batch process and an on-column fed-batch process.[10] The simple and commonly adopted batch process involves the mixing of reagents together in a suitable buffer solution, preferably at a temperature between 4 and 6 °C, followed by the separation and purification of the desired product using a suitable technique based on its physicochemical properties, including size exclusion chromatography (SEC), ion exchange chromatography (IEX), hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC) and membranes or aqueous two phase systems.[11][12]

The choice of the suitable functional group for the PEG derivative is based on the type of available reactive group on the molecule that will be coupled to the PEG. For proteins, typical reactive amino acids include lysine, cysteine, histidine, arginine, aspartic acid, glutamic acid, serine, threonine, tyrosine. The N-terminal amino group and the C-terminal carboxylic acid can also be used as a site specific site by conjugation with aldehyde functional polymers.[13]

The techniques used to form first generation PEG derivatives are generally reacting the PEG polymer with a group that is reactive with hydroxyl groups, typically anhydrides, acid chlorides, chloroformates and carbonates. In the second generation PEGylation chemistry more efficient functional groups such as aldehyde, esters, amides etc. made available for conjugation.

As applications of PEGylation have become more and more advanced and sophisticated, there has been an increase in need for heterobifunctional PEGs for conjugation. These heterobifunctional PEGs are very useful in linking two entities, where a hydrophilic, flexible and biocompatible spacer is needed. Preferred end groups for heterobifunctional PEGs are maleimide, vinyl sulfones, pyridyl disulfide, amine, carboxylic acids and NHS esters.

Third generation pegylation agents, where the shape of the polymer has been branched, Y shaped or comb shaped are available which show reduced viscosity and lack of organ accumulation.[14]

Limitations of PEGylation

Unpredictability in clearance times for PEGylated compounds may lead to the accumulation of large molecular weight compounds in the liver leading to inclusion bodies with no known toxicologic consequences.[15] Furthermore, alteration in the chain length may lead to unexpected clearance times in vivo.[16]

Future perspectives

Four decades of development in PEGylation technology have proven its pharmacological advantages and acceptability. As a multibillion-dollar annual business with growing interest from both emerging biotechnology and established multinational pharmaceutical companies, there is great scientific and commercial interest in improving present methodologies and in introducing innovative process variations.[17]

See also

References

  1. Davis, Frank F. (2002). "The origin of pegnology". Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews. 54 (4): 457–8. doi:10.1016/S0169-409X(02)00021-2. PMID 12052708.
  2. Davis, F. F., Van Es, T., and Palczuk, N. C. (1979) United States Patent US 4179337. Non-immunogenic polypeptides. Originally filed in 1973
  3. Abuchowski, A; Van Es, T; Palczuk, N. C.; Davis, F. F. (1977). "Alteration of immunological properties of bovine serum albumin by covalent attachment of polyethylene glycol". The Journal of biological chemistry. 252 (11): 3578–81. PMID 405385.
  4. Abuchowski, A; McCoy, J. R.; Palczuk, N. C.; Van Es, T; Davis, F. F. (1977). "Effect of covalent attachment of polyethylene glycol on immunogenicity and circulating life of bovine liver catalase". The Journal of biological chemistry. 252 (11): 3582–6. PMID 16907.
  5. Sherman, MR; Saifer, MG; Perez-Ruiz, F (3 January 2008). "PEG-uricase in the management of treatment-resistant gout and hyperuricemia.". Advanced drug delivery reviews. 60 (1): 59–68. doi:10.1016/j.addr.2007.06.011. PMID 17826865.
  6. Veronese, FM; Harris, JM (2002). "Introduction and overview of peptide and protein pegylation". Advanced drug delivery reviews. 54 (4): 453–6. doi:10.1016/S0169-409X(02)00020-0. PMID 12052707.
  7. Klauser, Alexander (Head), Roche Group Media Relations, "Roche in 2011: Strong results and positive outlook," www.roche.com/med-cor-2012-02-01-e.pdf, Feb 1, 2012, p.7
  8. "Amgen 2011 Annual Report and Financial Summary," 2011 AnnualReport.pdf, Feb 23 2012, p. 71
  9. http://www.fda.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/ucm472643.htm
  10. Fee, Conan J.; Van Alstine, James M. (2006). "PEG-proteins: Reaction engineering and separation issues". Chemical Engineering Science. 61 (3): 924. doi:10.1016/j.ces.2005.04.040.
  11. Veronese, edited by Francesco M. (2009). "Protein conjugates purification and characterization". PEGylated protein drugs basic science and clinical applications (Online-Ausg. ed.). Basel: Birkhäuser. pp. 113–125. ISBN 978-3-7643-8679-5.
  12. Fee, Conan J. (2003). "Size-exclusion reaction chromatography (SERC): A new technique for protein PEGylation". Biotechnology and Bioengineering. 82 (2): 200–6. doi:10.1002/bit.10561. PMID 12584761.
  13. Fee, Conan J.; Damodaran, Vinod B. (2012). "Biopharmaceutical Production Technology": 199. doi:10.1002/9783527653096.ch7. ISBN 9783527653096. |chapter= ignored (help)
  14. Ryan, Sinéad M; Mantovani, Giuseppe; Wang, Xuexuan; Haddleton, David M; Brayden, David J (2008). "Advances in PEGylation of important biotech molecules: Delivery aspects". Expert Opinion on Drug Delivery. 5 (4): 371–83. doi:10.1517/17425247.5.4.371. PMID 18426380.
  15. Kawai, F (2002). "Microbial degradation of polyethers". Applied microbiology and biotechnology. 58 (1): 30–8. doi:10.1007/s00253-001-0850-2. PMID 11831473.
  16. Veronese, F. M. (2001). "Peptide and protein PEGylation: A review of problems and solutions". Biomaterials. 22 (5): 405–17. doi:10.1016/s0142-9612(00)00193-9. PMID 11214751.
  17. Damodaran V. B. ; Fee C. J. (2010). "Protein PEGylation: An overview of chemistry and process considerations". European Pharmaceutical Review. 15 (1): 18–26.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.