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Chemical Modification of Cysteine with 3-Arylpropriolonitrile Improves the In Vivo Stability of Albumin-Conjugated Urate Oxidase Therapeutic Protein

Authors :
Byungseop Yang
Inchan Kwon
Source :
Biomedicines, Vol 9, Iss 10, p 1334 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

3-arylpropiolonitriles (APN) are promising alternatives to maleimide for chemo-selective thiol conjugation, because the reaction product has a remarkably hydrolytic stability compared with that of thiol-maleimide reactions in vitro. However, whether cysteine modification with APN enhances stability in vivo compared to thiol-maleimide reactions remains unclear, probably due to the too short in vivo serum half-life of a protein to observe significant cleavage of thiol-maleimide/-APN reaction products. The conjugation of human serum albumin (HSA) to a therapeutic protein reportedly prolongs the in vivo serum half-life. To evaluate the in vivo stability of the thiol-APN reaction product, we prepared HSA-conjugated Arthrobacter globiformis urate oxidase (AgUox), a therapeutic protein for gout treatment. Site-specific HSA conjugation to AgUox was achieved by combining site-specific incorporation of tetrazine containing an amino acid (frTet) into AgUox and a crosslinker containing trans-cyclooctene and either thiol-maleimide (AgUox-MAL-HSA) or -APN chemistry (AgUox-APN-HSA). Substantial cleavage of the thioester of AgUox-MAL-HSA was observed in vitro, whereas no cleavage of the thiol-APN product of AgUox-APN-HSA was observed. Furthermore, the in vivo serum half-life of AgUox-APN-HSA in the late phase was significantly longer than that of AgUox-MAL-HSA. Overall, these results demonstrate that the thiol-APN chemistry enhanced the in vivo stability of the HSA-conjugated therapeutic protein.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22279059
Volume :
9
Issue :
10
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Biomedicines
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8a1fc7d8eba47c79f04817d8d678f56
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines9101334