BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of the Invention
[0001] The present invention is in the fields of protein biochemistry and the pharmaceutical
and medical sciences. In particular, the invention provides methods for the production
of conjugates between water-soluble polymers (
e.g., poly(ethylene glycol) and derivatives thereof) and cytokines (
e.g., interferon-
beta), which conjugates have increased potency compared to polymer conjugates of the same
cytokine synthesized by standard methods. The invention also provides conjugates produced
by such methods, compositions comprising such conjugates, kits comprising such conjugates
and compositions and methods of use of the conjugates and compositions in preventing,
diagnosing and treating a variety of medical and veterinary conditions. The invention
also provides methods of determining the site(s) of attachment of polymers by reductive
alkylation under certain conditions.
Related Art
[0002] The following description of related art includes interpretations of the present
inventors that are not, themselves, in the prior art. Cytokines are secreted regulatory
proteins that control the survival, growth, differentiation, and/or effector function
of cells in endocrine, paracrine or autocrine fashion (reviewed in
Nicola, N.A. (1994) in: Guidebook to Cytokines and Their Receptors, Nicola, N.A.,
ed., pp. 1-7, Oxford University Press, New York). Because of their potency, specificity, small size and relative ease of production
in recombinant organisms, cytokines have many potential applications as therapeutic
agents.
[0003] Two key factors have hindered the development of cytokines, in particular, and recombinant
proteins, in general, as therapeutic agents - their generally short half-lives in
the circulation and their potential antigenicity and immunogenicity. As used herein
and generally in the art, the term "antigenicity" refers to the ability of a molecule
to bind to preexisting antibodies, while the term "immunogenicity" refers to the ability
of the molecule to evoke an immune response
in vivo, whether that response involves the formation of antibodies (a "humoral response")
or the stimulation of cellular immune responses.
[0004] For the administration of recombinant therapeutic proteins, intravenous (
i.v.) administration is often desirable in order to achieve the highest circulating activities
and to minimize problems of bioavailability and degradation. However, the half-lives
of small proteins following
i.v. administration are usually extremely short (see examples in
Mordenti, J., et al., (1991) Pharm Res 8:1351-1359;
Kuwabara, T., et al., (1995) Pharm Res 12:1466-1469). Proteins with hydrodynamic radii exceeding that of serum albumin, which has a Stokes
radius of about 36 Å and a molecular weight of about 66,000 Daltons (66 kDa), are
generally retained in the bloodstream by healthy kidneys. However, smaller proteins,
including cytokines such as granulocyte colony-stimulating factor ("G-CSF"), interleukin-2
("IL-2"), interferon-
alpha ("IFN-alpha") and interferon-
gamma ("IFN-gamma"), are cleared rapidly from the bloodstream by glomerular filtration (
Brenner, B.M., et al., (1978) Am J Physiol 234:F455-F460;
Venkatachalam, M.A. et al., (1978) Circ Res 43:337-347;
Wilson, G., (1979) J Gen Physiol 74:495-509;
Knauf, M.J., et al., (1988) J Biol Chem 263:15064-15070;
Kita, Y., et al., (1990) Drug Des Deliv 6:157-167;
Rostaing, L., et al., (1998), J Am Soc Nephrol 9:2344-2348). As a result, the maintenance of therapeutically useful concentrations of small
recombinant proteins in the circulation is problematic following injection. Therefore,
higher concentrations of such proteins and more frequent injections typically must
be administered. The resulting dose regimens increase the cost of therapy, decrease
the likelihood of patient compliance and increase the risk of adverse events,
e.g., immune reactions. Both cellular and humoral immune responses can reduce the circulating
concentrations of injected recombinant proteins to an extent that may preclude the
administration of an effective dose or may lead to treatment-limiting events including
accelerated clearance, neutralization of efficacy and anaphylaxis (
Ragnhammar, P., et al., (1994) Blood 84:4078-4087;
Wadhwa, M., et al., (1999) Clin Cancer Res 5:1353-1361;
Hjelm Skog, A.-L., et al., (2001) Clin Cancer Res 7:1163-1170;
Li, J., et al., (2001) Blood 98:3241-3248;
Basser, R.L., et al., (2002) Blood 99:2599-2602;
Schellekens, H., (2002) Clin Ther 24:1720-1740).
[0005] Modification of recombinant proteins by the covalent attachment of poly(ethylene
glycol) ("PEG") has been investigated extensively as a means of addressing the shortcomings
discussed above (reviewed in
Sherman, M.R., et al., (1997) in: Poly(ethylene glycol): Chemistry and Biological
Applications, Harris, J.M., et al., eds., pp. 155-169, American Chemical Society,
Washington, D.C.;
Roberts, M.J., et al., (2002) Adv Drug Deliv Rev 54:459-476). The attachment of PEG to proteins has been shown to stabilize the proteins, improve
their bioavailability and/or reduce their immunogenicity
in vivo. (The covalent attachment of PEG to a protein or other substrate is referred to herein,
and is known in the art, as "PEGylation.") In addition, PEGylation can increase the
hydrodynamic radius of proteins significantly. When a small protein such as a cytokine
is coupled to a single long strand of PEG (
e.g., having a molecular weight of at least about 18 kDa), the resultant conjugate has
a hydrodynamic radius exceeding that of serum albumin and its clearance from the circulation
via the renal glomeruli is retarded dramatically. The combined effects of PEGylation
- reduced proteolysis, reduced immune recognition and reduced rates of renal clearance
- confer substantial advantages on PEGylated proteins as therapeutic agents.
[0006] Since the 1970s, attempts have been made to use the covalent attachment of polymers
to improve the safety and efficacy of various proteins for pharmaceutical use (see,
e.g., Davis, F.F., et al., U.S. Patent No. 4,179,337). Some examples include the coupling of PEG or poly(ethylene oxide) ("PEO") to adenosine
deaminase (EC 3.5.4.4) for use in the treatment of severe combined immunodeficiency
disease (
Davis, S., et al., (1981) Clin Exp Immunol 46:649-652;
Hershfield, M.S., et al., (1987) N Engl J Med 316:589-596), to superoxide dismutase (EC 1.15.1.1) for the treatment of inflammatory conditions
(
Saifer, M., et al., U.S. Patent Nos. 5,006,333 and
5,080,891) and to urate oxidase (EC 1.7.3.3) for the elimination of excess uric acid from the
blood and urine (
Kelly, S.J., et al., (2001) J Am Soc Nephrol 12:1001-1009;
Williams, L.D., et al., PCT Publication No. WO 00/07629 A3 and
U.S. Patent No. 6,576,235;
Sherman, M.R., et al., PCT Publication No. WO 01/59078 A2).
[0007] PEOs and PEGs are polymers composed of covalently linked ethylene oxide units. These
polymers have the following general structure:
R
1-(OCH
2CH
2)
n-R
2
where R
2 may be a hydroxyl group (or a reactive derivative thereof) and R
1 may be hydrogen, as in dihydroxyPEG ("PEG diol"), a methyl group, as in monomethoxyPEG
("mPEG"), or another lower alkyl group,
e.g., as in
iso-propoxyPEG or
t-butoxyPEG. The parameter n in the general structure of PEG indicates the number of
ethylene oxide units in the polymer and is referred to herein and in the art as the
"degree of polymerization." Polymers of the same general structure, in which R
1 is a C
1-7 alkyl group, have also been referred to as oxirane derivatives (
Yasukohchi, T., et al., U.S. Patent No. 6,455,639). PEGs and PEOs can be linear, branched (
Fuke, I., et al., (1994) J Control Release 30:27-34) or star-shaped (
Merrill, E.W., (1993) J Biomater Sci Polym Ed 5:1-11). PEGs and PEOs are amphipathic,
i.e., they are soluble in water and in certain organic solvents and they can adhere to
lipid-containing materials, including enveloped viruses and the membranes of animal
and bacterial cells. Certain random or block or alternating copolymers of ethylene
oxide (OCH
2CH
2) and propylene oxide, which has the following structure:

have properties that are sufficiently similar to those of PEG that these copolymers
are thought to be suitable replacements for PEG in certain applications (see,
e.g.,
Hiratani, H., U.S. Patent No. 4,609,546 and
Saifer, M., et al., U.S. Patent No. 5,283,317). The term "polyalkylene oxides" and the abbreviation "PAOs" are used herein to refer
to such copolymers, as well as to PEG or PEO and poly(oxyethylene-oxymethylene) copolymers
(
Pitt, C.G., et al., U.S. Patent No. 5,476,653). As used herein, the term "polyalkylene glycols" and the abbreviation "PAGs" are
used to refer generically to polymers suitable for use in the conjugates of the invention,
particularly PEGs, more particularly PEGs containing a single reactive group ("monofunctionally
activated PEGs").
[0008] The covalent attachment of PEG or other polyalkylene oxides to a protein requires
the conversion of at least one end group of the polymer into a reactive functional
group. This process is frequently referred to as "activation" and the product is called
"activated PEG" or activated polyalkylene oxide. MonomethoxyPEGs, in which an oxygen
at one end is capped with an unreactive, chemically stable methyl group (to produce
a "methoxyl group") and on the other end with a functional group that is reactive
towards amino groups on a protein molecule, are used most commonly for such approaches.
So-called "branched" mPEGs, which contain two or more methoxyl groups distal to a
single activated functional group, are used less commonly. An example of branched
PEG is di-mPEG-lysine, in which PEG is coupled to both amino groups, and the carboxyl
group of lysine is most often activated by esterification with
N-hydroxysuccinimide (
Martinez, A., et al., U.S. Patent No 5,643,575;
Greenwald, R.B., et al., U.S. Patent No. 5,919,455;
Harris, J.M., et al., U.S. Patent No. 5,932,462).
[0009] Commonly, the activated polymers are reacted with a bioactive compound having nucleophilic
functional groups that serve as attachment sites. One nucleophilic functional group
that is used commonly as an attachment site is the
epsilon amino group of lysine residues. Solvent-accessible
alpha-amino groups, carboxylic acid groups, guanidino groups, imidazole groups, suitably
activated carbonyl groups, oxidized carbohydrate moieties and thiol groups have also
been used as attachment sites.
[0010] The hydroxyl group of PEG has been activated with cyanuric chloride prior to its
attachment to proteins (
Abuchowski, A., et al., (1977) J Biol Chem 252:3582-3586;
Abuchowski, A., et al., (1981) Cancer Treat Rep 65:1077-1081). The use of this method has disadvantages, however, such as the toxicity of cyanuric
chloride and its non-specific reactivity for proteins having functional groups other
than amines, such as solvent-accessible cysteine or tyrosine residues that may be
essential for function. In order to overcome these and other disadvantages, alternative
activated PEGs have been introduced, such as succinimidyl succinate derivatives of
PEG ("SS-PEG") (
Abuchowski, A., et al., (1984) Cancer Biochem Biophys 7:175-186), succinimidyl carbonate derivatives of PAG ("SC-PAG") (
Saifer, M., et al., U.S. Patent No. 5,006,333) and aldehyde derivatives of PEG (
Royer, G.P., U.S. Patent No. 4,002,531).
[0011] Commonly, several (
e.g., 5 to 10) strands of one or more PAGs,
e.g., one or more PEGs with a molecular weight of about 5 kDa to about 10 kDa, are coupled
to the target protein
via primary amino groups (the
epsilon amino groups of lysine residues and, possibly, the
alpha amino group of the amino-terminal ("N-terminal") amino acid). More recently, conjugates
have been synthesized containing a single strand of mPEG of higher molecular weight,
e.g., 12 kDa, 20 kDa or 30 kDa. Direct correlations have been demonstrated between the
plasma half-lives of the conjugates and an increasing molecular weight and/or increasing
number of strands of PEG coupled (Knauf, M.J.,
et al., supra; Katre, N.V. (1990) J Immunol 144:209-213;
Clark, R., et al., (1996) J Biol Chem 271:21969-21977;
Bowen, S., et al., (1999) Exp Hematol 27:425-432;
Leong, S.R., et al., (2001) Cytokine 16:106-119). On the other hand, as the number of strands of PEG coupled to each molecule of
protein is increased, so is the probability that an amino group in an essential region
of the protein will be modified and hence the biological function of the protein will
be impaired, particularly if it is a receptor-binding protein. For larger proteins
that contain many amino groups, and for enzymes with substrates of low molecular weight,
the tradeoff between increased duration of action and decreased specific activity
may be acceptable, since it produces a net increase in the biological activity of
the PEG-containing conjugates
in vivo. For smaller proteins that function
via interactions with cell-surface receptors, such as cytokines, however, a relatively
high degree of substitution has been reported to decrease the functional activity
to the point of negating the advantage of an extended half-life in the bloodstream
(Clark, R.,
et al., supra).
[0012] Thus, polymer conjugation is a well-established technology for prolonging the bioactivity
and decreasing the immunoreactivity of therapeutic proteins such as enzymes (
see, e.g., U.S. Provisional Appl. No. 60/436,020, filed December 26, 2002, and
U.S. Provisional Appl. Nos. 60/479,913 and
60/479,914, both filed on June 20, 2003. A class of therapeutic proteins that would benefit especially from such decreased
immunoreactivity are the interferon-beta̅s, particularly interferon-beta-1b ("IFN-β-1b;"
SEQ ID NO:1) (
The IFNB Multiple Sclerosis Study Group (1996) Necrology 47:889-894). However, the conjugation of polymers to regulatory proteins that function by binding
specifically to cell-surface receptors usually: (1) interferes with such binding;
(2) markedly diminishes the signal transduction potencies of cytokine agonists; and
(3) markedly diminishes the competitive potencies of cytokine antagonists. Published
examples of such conjugates with diminished receptor-binding activity include polymer
conjugates of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor ("G-CSF") (
Kinstler, O., et al., PCT Publication No. WO 96/11953; Bowen, S.,
et al., supra); human growth hormone ("hGH") (Clark, R.,
et al., supra); hGH antagonists (
Ross, R.J.M., et al., (2001) J Clin Endocrinol Metab 86:1716-1723; and
In-alpha (
Bailon, P., et al., (2001) Bioconjug Chem 12:195-202;
Wylie, D.C., et al., (2001) Pharm Res 18:1354-1360; and
Wang, Y.-S., et al., (2002) Adv Drug Deliv Rev 54:547-570), among others. In an extreme case, the coupling of polymers to interleukin-15 ("IL-15")
converted this IL-2-like growth factor into an inhibitor of cellular proliferation
(
Pettit, D.K., et al., (1997) J Biol Chem 272:2312-2318). While not intending to be bound by theory, the mechanism for such undesirable effects
of PEGylation may involve steric hindrance of receptor interactions by the bulky PEG
groups, charge neutralization, or both.
[0017] Thus, there exists a need for methods for producing PAG-containing (
e.g., PEG- and/or PEO-containing) conjugates, particularly conjugates between such water-soluble
polymers and receptor-binding proteins, with preservation of substantial bioactivity
(
e.g., at least about 40%), nearly complete bioactivity (
e.g., at least about 80%) or essentially complete bioactivity (
e.g., at least about 90%). Such conjugates will have the benefits provided by the polymer
component of increased solubility, stability and bioavailability
in vivo and will exhibit substantially increased potency or utility, compared to conventional
polymer conjugates, in an animal into which the conjugates have been introduced for
prophylactic, therapeutic or diagnostic purposes.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0018] The present invention addresses the needs identified above, and provides methods
for the preparation of conjugates of poly(ethylene glycol), and derivatives thereof,
with interferon-beta-1b. The invention also provides conjugates produced by such methods.
Compared to the corresponding unconjugated bioactive components, the conjugates of
the invention have increased stability (
i.e., longer shelf life and longer half-lives
in vivo). In addition, compared to conjugates of the same bioactive component prepared with
polymer chains that are attached randomly to solvent-accessible sites along the polypeptide
chains, the conjugates of the invention have increased receptor-binding activity,
which can be measured or employed
in vitro, and increased potency, which can be measured either
in vitro or
in vivo.
[0019] Specifically, the invention provides a method for increasing the in vitro biological
potency or a non-glycosylated interferon-beta, comprising selectively coupling, in
the presence of a surfactant, one or more water-soluble polymers to the amino-terminal
amino acid or said interferon-beta, wherein said amino-terminal amino acid is located
remotely from the receptor-binding domain(s) or said interferon-beta and wherein
- (i) the water soluble polymer bears a single aldehyde group and the coupling comprises
reductive alkylation or a Schiff's base formed with the water-soluble polymer and
reduction or the Schiff's base with a mild reducing agent or
- (ii) the coupling comprises coupling a hydrazide, hydrazine, semicarbazide or other
amine-containing water soluble polymer to an N-terminal serine or threonine residue
or the interferon-beta that has been oxidatively cleaned to an aldehyde with periodate,
and
wherein the water-soluble polymer is a polyalkylene glycol selected from the group
consisting of a poly (ethylene glycol), a mono-methoxypoly (ethylene glycol) and a
monohydroxy-poly (ethylene glycol).
[0020] Further, the invention provides conjugates produced by such methods, compositions
comprising such conjugates, kits containing such conjugates and compositions for use
in a variety of therapeutic and diagnostic regimens.
[0021] Suitable polymers for use in these methods of the invention are one or more poly(ethylene
glycols), one or more monomethoxypoly(ethylene glycols) and one or more monohydroxypoly(ethylene
glycols))
. Polymers suitable for use in the methods of the invention typically have molecular
weights of between about 1 kDa and about 100 kDa, inclusive, or more particularly
molecular weights of between about 8 kDa and about 14 kDa, inclusive; between about
10 kDa and about 30 kDa, inclusive; between about 18 kDa and about 22 kDa, inclusive;
or of about 20 kDa or about 30 kDa.
[0022] In certain embodiments, the one or more polymers is/are covalently coupled (particularly
via a secondary amine linkage) to the
alpha amino group of the amino-terminal amino acid on the cytokine.
[0023] For polymer conjugates of agonists of the invention, it is preferable that the site(s)
of polymer attachment be remote from all of the receptor-binding domains. The invention
also provides compositions, particularly pharmaceutical compositions, comprising one
or more of the conjugates of the invention and one or more additional components,
such as one or more pharmaceutically acceptable diluents, excipients or carriers.
The invention also provides kits comprising one or more of the conjugates, compositions
and/or pharmaceutical compositions of the invention.
[0024] The invention also provides the conjugates used in methods of preventing, diagnosing,
or treating a physical disorder in an animal (
e.g., a mammal such as a human) suffering from or predisposed to the physical disorder.
Such methods may comprise, for example, administering to the animal an effective amount
of one or more of the conjugates, compositions or pharmaceutical compositions of the
present invention. Physical disorders suitably treated or prevented according to such
methods of the invention include cancers (
e.g., a breast cancer, a uterine cancer, an ovarian cancer, a prostate cancer, a testicular
cancer, a lung cancer, a leukemia, a lymphoma, a colon cancer, a gastrointestinal
cancer, a pancreatic cancer, a bladder cancer, a kidney cancer, a bone cancer, a neurological
cancer, a head and neck cancer, a skin cancer, a sarcoma, a carcinoma, an adenoma
and a myeloma); infectious diseases (
e.g., bacterial diseases, fungal diseases, parasitic diseases and viral diseases (such
as a viral hepatitis, a disease caused by a cardiotropic virus, HIV/AIDS )); and genetic
disorders (
e.g., anemia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, hemophilia, dwarfism and severe combined
immunodeficiency disease ("SCID"); autoimmune disorders (
e.g., psoriasis, systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis) and neurodegenerative
disorders (
e.g., various forms and stages of multiple sclerosis ("MS") such as relapsing-remitting
MS, primary progressive MS and secondary progressive MS; Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease;
Alzheimer's Disease; and the like).
[0025] In additional embodiments, the invention provides methods for the selective oxidative
cleavage of an N-terminal serine residue of a bioactive protein without oxidizing
functionally essential amino acid residues of said bioactive protein. Certain such
methods of the invention comprise, for example, (a) adjusting the hydrogen ion concentration
of a solution of the bioactive protein to a pH of between about 5 and about 10, more
preferably a pH of between about 7 and about 8; (b) mixing the solution of bioactive
protein with about 0.1 moles to about 10 moles, or more preferably with about 0.5
moles to about 5 moles, of a periodate per mole of bioactive protein; and (c) incubating
said mixture for at least one hour, preferably at a temperature of between about 2°C
and about 40°C. Proteins suitable for use in accordance with such methods include
cytokines (including interferon-
beta (particularly interferon-
beta-1b, which preferably has the amino acid sequence specified in SEQ ID NO:1).
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0026] Figure 1 displays molecular models of cytokines created with RasMol software (
Sayle, R.A., et al., (1995) Trends Biochem Sci 20:374-376) based on crystallographic data. Each of the models is represented in "ribbon" or
"cartoon" format, except for certain residues of particular interest, which are shown
in "ball-and-stick" format. These formats are options selected using RasMol software.
The dark parts of the ribbons represent domains of the cytokines and growth factors
that are reported to be involved in binding to their receptors. For each structure,
the accession code in the Protein Data Bank ("PDB") is indicated (see
Laskowski, R.A., (2001) Nucleic Acids Res 29:221-222;
Peitsch, M.C., (2002) Bioinformatics 18:934-938;
Schein, C.H., (2002) Curr Pharm Des 8:2113-2129).
[0027] Figure 1 shows a molecular model of human interferon-
beta-1a (see SEQ ID NO:2), in which several lysine residues that are within or adjacent
to the receptor-binding domains are indicated (Lys 19, Lys 33, Lys 99 and Lys 134).
In addition, the glycosylation site (Asn 80) and the N-terminal methionine residue
("Met 1") are shown in "ball-and-stick" format (based on data of
Karpusas, M., et al., (1997) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 94:11813-11818;
Karpusas, M., et al., (1998) Cell Mol Life Sci 54:1203-1216;
Runkel, L., et al., (2000) Biochemistry 39:2538-2551). Met 1 is remote from Binding Sites 1 and 2, whereas several lysine residues are
located within the receptor-binding domains. (PDB code 1AUI) The structure of interferon-
beta-1b (see SEQ ID NO:1) differs from that of interferon-
beta-1a in lacking the N-terminal methionine residue and carbohydrate moiety, as well
as having a serine residue substituted for the unpaired cysteine residue (Cys 17 of
SEQ ID NO:2).
[0028] Figure 2 depicts the resolution by size-exclusion HPLC of interferon-β-1b ("IFN") from its
conjugates formed by reductive alkylation with 20 kDa mPEG aldehyde at various input
concentrations ("1x," "2x" or "4x"), with sodium cyanoborohydride (NaBH
3CN) as the reducing agent. Conjugates containing one strand of PEG ("PEG
1-IFN") or two strands ("PEG
2-IFN") are resolved from IFN to which PEG was not coupled under these conditions ("Mock
PEGylated IFN").
[0029] Figure 3 demonstrates the oxidative cleavage by sodium periodate of about 90% of PEG
1-IFN-β synthesized by reductive alkylation under various conditions. Size-exclusion
HPLC in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate ("SDS") resolved the residual PEG
1-IFN-β from the cleavage products, including formaldehyde and IFN in which the N-terminal
serine was cleaved to an aldehyde ("IFN Aldehyde").
[0030] Figure 4 depicts the resolution by reversed phase chromatography of PEG
1-IFN-β from Mock PEGylated IFN-β, unbound PEG, unbound SDS and minor components of
the reaction mixture.
[0031] Figure 5 depicts results of analytical reversed phase ("RP") chromatography of a PEGylation
reaction mixture and fractions from a preparative RP column that were enriched in
PEG
1-IFN-β (Fraction 51) or in Mock PEGylated IFN-β (Fraction 53), respectively.
[0032] Figure 6 depicts results of electrophoretic analyses of a PEGylation reaction mixture and
fractions from a preparative RP column that are enriched either in PEG
1-IFN-β (Fraction 51) or in conjugates containing more than one strand of PEG (Fraction
49). The gel was stained for protein with a fluorescent dye and photographed with
ultraviolet illumination. The intensity of the stain was measured with Kodak 1D imaging
software.
[0033] Figure 7 depicts results of electrophoretic analyses of the same samples as in Figure 6 except
that the gel was stained for PEG with a reagent containing BaCl
2, I
2 and KI. The intensity of the stain in a photograph of the gel was measured as in
Figure 6A peak of residual free 20-kDa PEG is detectable in the reaction mixture.
[0034] Figure 8 depicts reversed phase chromatograms of samples of IFN-β-1b that were either untreated
(top curve) or incubated with 0.5 mM NaIO
4 which cleaved the N-terminal serine residues of both the major and minor components
to aldehyde derivatives
(middle curve), or oxidized with NaIO
4 and reacted with 9-fluorenylmethyl carbazate ("Fmoc-carbazate"). The minor component
("Peak A") contains an oxidized methionine residue. The similar increases in the retention
times of both Peak A and the major component after oxidation reflect the cleavage
of the N-terminal serine residues in each peak to an aldehyde. No increase in the
percentage of Peak A was detected after incubation with NaIO
4 under these conditions. The formation of Fmoc conjugates from the oxidized forms
of Peak A and the main component is indicated by the increases in their retention
times and absorbances after reaction with Fmoc-carbazate.
[0035] Figure 9 demonstrates the synthesis of PEG
1-IFN-β by the reaction of 20-kDa PEG-carbazate with the aldehyde derivative of IFN-β.
The increasing proportion of the conjugate detected after incubation of the protein
with 0.125 mM NaIO
4 at room temperature for 0.5, 1 or 2 hours indicates that complete conversion of the
N-terminal serine to an aldehyde requires more than 1 hour under these conditions.
PEG
1-IFN-β was incompletely resolved from 20-kDa PEG-carbazate on this size-exclusion
column.
[0036] Figure 10 demonstrates the greater antiproliferative potency on human Burkitt's lymphoma cells
(Daudi cells) of dilutions of PEG
1-IFN-β, which was purified by reversed phase chromatography (Fraction 51, characterized
in Figures 17-19), than that of dilutions of the stock solution of IFN-β. The concentration
of purified PEG
1-IFN-β required to inhibit 50% of the inhibitable growth of these cells was about
40 pg/mL, which was about one sixth of that required for the stock solution of IFN-β.
The concentration of purified Mock PEGylated IFN-β (Fraction 53 from the reversed
phase chromatogram shown in Figure 17) required to inhibit 50% of the inhibitable
growth of these cells was about 80 pg/mL, which is about one third of that required
for the stock solution of IFN-β.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0037] Unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the
same meanings as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which
this invention belongs. Although any methods and materials similar or equivalent to
those described herein can be used in the practice or testing of the present invention,
the preferred methods and materials are described hereinafter.
[0038] As per the claims herein, the invention provides a method for increasing the
in vitro biological potency of a non-glycosylated interferon-
beta, comprising selectively coupling one or more synthetic water-soluble polymers to
the amino-terminal amino acid of said interferon-
beta, wherein said amino-terminal amino acid is located remotely from the receptor-binding
domain(s) of said interferon-
beta.
[0039] The invention further provides a method for the selective oxidative cleavage of an
N-terminal serine or threonine residue of a bioactive protein without oxidizing functionally
essential amino acid residues of said bioactive protein, comprising:
- a) adjusting the hydrogen ion concentration of a solution of said bioactive protein
to a pH between about 7 and about 8;
- b) mixing said solution of bioactive protein with about 0.5 to about 5 moles of a
periodate per mole of bioactive protein; and
- c) incubating said mixture for at least one hour at a temperature of between about
2°C and about 40°C.
Definitions
[0040] About: As used herein when referring to any numerical value, the term "about" means a value
of ±10% of the stated value (
e.g., "about 50°C" encompasses a range of temperatures from 45°C to 55°C, inclusive;
similarly, "about 100 mM" encompasses a range of concentrations from 90 mM to 110
mM, inclusive).
[0041] Amino Acid Residue: As used herein, the term "amino acid residue" refers to a specific amino acid, usually
dehydrated as a result of its involvement in two peptide bonds, in a polypeptide backbone
or side chain, but also when the amino acid is involved in one peptide bond, as occurs
at each end of a linear polypeptide chain. The amino acid residues are referred to
by the three-letter codes or single-letter codes that are common in the art.
[0042] Antagonist: As used herein, the term "antagonist" refers to a compound, molecule, moiety or
complex that reduces, substantially reduces or completely inhibits the biological
and/or physiological effects of a given cytokine on a cell, tissue or organism that
are mediated through the receptors for the given cytokine. Antagonists may carry out
such effects in a variety of ways, including with the agonist for binding site(s)
or receptor(s) on the cell surface; interacting with the agonist in such a way as
to reduce, substantially reduce or completely inhibit the ability of the agonist to
bind to cell surface receptors; binding to and inducing a conformational change in
cell surface receptors such that the receptors assume a structure to which the agonist
can no longer bind (or can bind only with reduced or substantially reduced affinity
and/or efficiency); inducing a physiological change (
e.g., increase in intracellular signaling complexes; increase in transcriptional inhibitors;
reduction in cell surface ligand receptor expression;
etc.) in cells, tissues or organisms such that the binding of the agonist, or the physiological
signal induced by the agonist upon binding to the cell, is reduced, substantially
reduced or completely inhibited; and other mechanisms by which antagonists may carry
out their activities, that will be familiar to the ordinarily skilled artisan. As
the ordinarily skilled artisan will understand, an antagonist may have a similar structure
to the ligand that it antagonizes (
e.g., the antagonist may be a mutein, variant, fragment or derivative of the agonist),
or may have a wholly unrelated structure.
[0043] Bioactive Component: As used herein, the term "bioactive component" refers to a compound, molecule, moiety
or complex that has a particular biological activity
in vivo, in vitro or
ex vivo upon a cell, tissue, organ or organism, and that is capable of being bound to one
or more polyalkylene glycols to form the conjugates of the invention. Preferred bioactive
components include proteins and polypeptides such as those that are described herein.
[0044] Bound: As used herein, the term "bound" refers to binding or attachment that may be covalent,
e.g., by chemically coupling, or non-covalent,
e.g., ionic interactions, hydrophobic interactions, hydrogen bonds,
etc. Covalent bonds can be, for example, ester, ether, phosphoester, thioester, thioether,
urethane, amide, amine, peptide, imide, hydrazone, hydrazide, carbon-sulfur bonds,
carbon-phosphorus bonds, and the like. The term "bound" is broader than and includes
terms such as "coupled," "conjugated" and "attached."
[0045] Conjugate/conjugation: As used herein, "conjugate" refers to the product of covalent attachment of a polymer,
e.g., PEG or PEO, to a bioactive component, e.g., a protein or glycoprotein. "Conjugation"
refers to the formation of a conjugate as defined in the previous sentence. Any method
normally used by those skilled in the art of conjugation of polymers to biologically
active materials can be used in the present invention.
[0046] Coupled: The term "coupled", as used herein, refers to attachment by covalent bonds or by
strong non-covalent interactions, typically and preferably to attachment by covalent
bonds. Any method normally used by those skilled in the art for the coupling of biologically
active materials can be used in the present invention.
[0047] Cytokine: As used herein, the term "cytokine" is defined as a secreted regulatory protein
that controls the survival, growth, differentiation, and/or effector function of cells,
in endocrine, paracrine or autocrine fashion (reviewed in Nicola, N.A.,
supra; Kossiakoff, A.A., et al., (1999) Adv Protein Chem 52:67-108). According to this definition, cytokines include interleukins, colony-stimulating
factors, growth factors, and other peptide factors produced by a variety of cells,
including those specifically disclosed or exemplified herein. Like their close relatives,
the polypeptide hormones and growth factors, cytokines initiate their regulatory functions
by binding to specific receptor proteins on the surface of their target cells.
[0048] Disease, disorder, condition: As used herein, the terms "disease" or "disorder" refer to any adverse condition
of a human or animal including tumors, cancer, allergies, addiction, autoimmunity,
infection, poisoning or impairment of optimal mental or bodily function. "Conditions"
as used herein includes diseases and disorders but also refers to physiologic states.
For example, fertility is a physiologic state but not a disease or disorder. Compositions
of the invention suitable for preventing pregnancy by decreasing fertility would therefore
be described as a treatment of a condition (fertility), but not a treatment of a disorder
or disease. Other conditions are understood by those of ordinary skill in the art.
[0049] Effective Amount: As used herein, the term "effective amount" refers to an amount of a given conjugate
or composition that is necessary or sufficient to realize a desired biologic effect.
An effective amount of a given conjugate or composition of the present invention would
be the amount that achieves this selected result, and such an amount can be determined
as a matter of routine by a person skilled in the art, using assays that are known
in the art and/or that are described herein, without the need for undue experimentation.
For example, an effective amount for treating an immune system deficiency could be
that amount necessary to cause activation of the immune system, resulting in the development
of an antigen-specific immune response upon exposure to an antigen. The term is also
synonymous with "sufficient amount." The effective amount for any particular application
can vary depending on such factors as the disease or condition being treated, the
particular composition being administered, the route of administration, the size of
the subject, and/or the severity of the disease or condition. One of ordinary skill
in the art can determine empirically the effective amount of a particular conjugate
or composition of the present invention without necessitating undue experimentation.
[0050] One, a, or an: When the terms "one," "a," or "an" are used in this disclosure, they mean "at least
one" or "one or more," unless otherwise indicated.
[0051] PEG: As used herein, "PEG" includes all polymers of ethylene oxide, whether linear or
branched or multi-armed and whether end-capped or hydroxyl terminated. "PEG" includes
those polymers that are known in the art as poly(ethylene glycol), methoxypoly(ethylene
glycol) or mPEG or poly(ethylene glycol)-monomethyl ether, alkoxypoly(ethylene glycol),
poly(ethylene oxide) or PEO, α-methyl-ω-hydroxy-poly(oxy-1,2-ethanediyl) and polyoxirane,
among other names that are used in the art for polymers of ethylene oxide.
[0052] PEGylation, PEGylated and Mock PEGylated: As used herein, "PEGylation" refers to any process for the covalent coupling of
PEG to a bioactive target molecule, especially a receptor-binding protein. The conjugate
produced thereby is referred to as being "PEGylated." As used herein, "Mock PEGylated"
refers to the portion of the protein in a PEGylation reaction mixture to which no
PEG has been covalently attached. Nevertheless, the Mock PEGylated product may have
been altered during the reaction or subsequent purification steps,
e.g., as a consequence of exposure to the reducing agent during PEGylation by reductive
alkylation and/or by having one or more inhibitory agents, compounds,
etc., removed during the processing and/or purification steps.
[0053] Polypeptide: As used herein, the term "polypeptide" refers to a molecule composed of monomers
(amino acids) linearly linked by amide bonds (also known as peptide bonds). It indicates
a molecular chain of amino acids and does not refer to a specific length of the product.
Thus, peptides, dipeptides, tripeptides, oligopeptides and proteins are included within
the definition of polypeptide. This term is also intended to refer to the products
of post-expression modifications of the polypeptide, for example, glycosylation, hyperglycosylation,
acetylation, phosphorylation. A polypeptide may be derived from a natural biological
source or produced by recombinant DNA technology, but is not necessarily translated
from a designated nucleic acid sequence. It may be generated in any manner, including
by chemical synthesis.
[0054] Protein and glycoprotein: As used herein, the term protein refers to a polypeptide generally of a size of
above about 10 or more, 20 or more, 25 or more, 50 or more, 75 or more, 100 or more,
200 or more, 500 or more, 1,000 or more, or 2,000 or more amino acids. Proteins generally
have a defined three-dimensional structures, although they do not necessarily have
such structure, and are often referred to as folded, as opposed to peptides and polypeptides,
which often do not possess a defined three-dimensional structure, but rather can adopt
a large number of different conformations, and are referred to as unfolded. Peptides
may, however, also have a defined three-dimensional structure. As used herein, the
term glycoprotein refers to a protein coupled to at least one carbohydrate moiety
that is attached to the protein via an oxygen-containing or a nitrogen-containing
side chain of an amino acid residue,
e.g., a serine residue or an asparagine residue.
[0055] Remote: As used herein, the term "remote" (as in "remote N-terminal amino acid" or "remote
glycosylation site") refers to a structure in which the location of one or more attachment
sites for one or more polymers on a protein is/are distal to or spatially removed
from one or more receptor-binding regions or domains of the protein, as assessed by
molecular modeling. Conjugation of a polymer at such a remote attachment site (usually
the N-terminal amino acid (for receptor-binding proteins that are therefore referred
to as "remote N-terminal" or "RN" receptor-binding proteins) or one or more carbohydrate
moieties or glycosylation sites on a glycoprotein (for receptor-binding proteins that
are therefore referred to as "remote glycosylation" or "RG" receptor-binding proteins))
does not cause substantial steric hindrance of the binding of the protein to its receptor(s).
Hence, an amino-terminal amino acid or a glycosylation site on a cytokine is said
to be "located remotely from one or more receptor-binding domains" of the cytokine
when conjugation (
e.g., covalent attachment) of a water-soluble polymer to the amino-terminal amino acid
or glycosylation site, respectively, does not interfere substantially with the ability
of the cytokine to bind to its receptor(s), particularly to cell-surface receptors.
It is recognized, of course, that a given cytokine may contain more than one receptor-binding
domain. In such situations, an amino-terminal amino acid or glycosylation site of
a cytokine can be located remotely from one such domain or from more than one of such
domains, and still be considered to be "located remotely from one or more receptor-binding
domains," so long as conjugation of the amino-terminal amino acid or glycosylation
site does not interfere substantially with the binding of the cytokine to its receptor(s)
via one or more of the receptor-binding domains. Whether or not the conjugation interferes
substantially with the ability of a protein to bind to its receptor(s) can be readily
determined using art-known assays of ligand-receptor binding that will be familiar
to the ordinarily skilled artisan.
[0056] PEG is a highly extended and flexible polymer that occupies a large volume in solution
relative to a protein of similar molecular weight. Although the amino acid residue
to which PEG is attached may be remote from one or more receptor-binding sites, portions
of the polymer could, nevertheless, interfere, to some extent, with receptor binding.
The probability of such interference increases with the molecular weight and hence
the volume occupied by the polymer in solution. In any case, targeted attachment of
PEG to one or more site(s) remote from the receptor-binding region(s) will interfere
less with the function of the cytokine than random PEGylation.
[0057] Methods of assessing ligand-receptor binding include, without limitation, competitive
binding assays, radioreceptor binding assays, cell-based assays, surface plasmon resonance
measurements, dynamic light scattering, ultracentrifugation and ultrafiltration.
[0058] Substantial, substantially: As used herein, conjugation of a protein is said not to interfere "substantially"
with the ability of the protein to bind to its receptor(s) if the rate and/or amount
of binding of a conjugated protein to a receptor is not less than about 40%, about
50%, about 60%, about 65%, about 70%, about 75%, about 80%, about 85%, about 90%,
about 91%, about 92%, about 93%, about 94%, about 95%, about 96%, about 97%, about
98%, about 99% or about 100% or more, of the binding rate and/or amount of the corresponding
cytokine that has not been conjugated.
[0059] Treatment: As used herein, the terms "treatment," "treat," "treated" or "treating" refer to
prophylaxis and/or therapy. When used with respect to an infectious disease, for example,
the term may refer to a prophylactic treatment that increases the resistance of a
subject to infection with a pathogen or, in other words, decreases the likelihood
that the subject will become infected with the pathogen or will show signs of illness
attributable to the infection, as well as a treatment after the subject has become
infected in order to fight the infection,
e.g., to reduce or eliminate the infection or to prevent it from becoming worse.
Overview
[0060] The present invention provides methods for the synthesis of polymer conjugates of
receptor-binding proteins that retain unexpectedly high receptor-binding activity
relative to polymer conjugates of the same receptor-binding protein in which one or
more polymers are attached randomly. Through the use of x-ray crystallographic and
nuclear magnetic resonance-based structural analyses, mutational analysis and molecular
modeling software, the present inventors have identified target sites for PEGylation
of cytokines that are involved or are not involved in binding to their receptors.
As a class of proteins, these cytokines are referred to herein as receptor-binding
proteins. By selection of a synthetic strategy that targets polymer attachment to
the region(s) of receptor-binding proteins that are not involved in receptor interactions,
certain undesirable steric hindrances are avoided and the resultant polymer conjugates
retain unusually high potency. Those receptor-binding proteins that have an amino-terminal
residue that is remote from one or more of their receptor-binding regions or domains
are defined herein as "remote N-terminal" or "RN" receptor-binding proteins; they
include all cytokines or antagonists thereof that have their amino-terminal amino
acid located remotely from the receptor-binding site or sites of the protein.
[0061] In additional embodiments of the invention, conjugates are produced comprising one
or more poly(ethylene glycols) covalently coupled to cytokines that have natural glycosylation
sites that are remote from one or more of their receptor-binding regions or domains.
This subset of receptor-binding proteins is referred to herein as "RG" receptor-binding
proteins. When a hydrophilic or amphipathic polymer is coupled selectively at or near
such a "remote glycosylation" site, especially when the target protein is a non-glycosylated
form of a protein that is naturally glycosylated, the polymer can mimic the favorable
effects of the naturally occurring carbohydrate,
e.g., on aggregation, stability and/or solubility. Hence attachment of the polymer at or
near a glycosylation site is referred to herein as "pseudoglycosylation." Thus, the
present invention provides methods for the synthesis of conjugates in which the site-selective
coupling of a synthetic polymer effectively replaces the naturally occurring carbohydrate
moieties. The resultant pseudoglycosylation contributes to improved solubility, decreased
aggregation and retarded clearance from the bloodstream, compared to other nonglycosylated
forms of the protein. This approach therefore is particularly advantageous for preparing
conjugates and compositions of proteins that are produced by recombinant DNA technology
in prokaryotic host cells (
e.g., bacteria such as
Escherichia coli), since prokaryotic organisms generally do not glycosylate proteins that they express.
[0062] Analogously, selective PEGylation of the carbohydrate moiety of a glycoprotein can
result in "pseudohyperglycosylation" of the glycoprotein. This process was described,
for example, by
C. Bona et al., in PCT Publication No. WO 96/40731. This approach therefore is particularly advantageous for preparing conjugates and
compositions of proteins that are produced by recombinant DNA technology in eukaryotic
host cells (
e.g., in yeasts, plant cells and animal cells (including mammalian and insect cells), since
eukaryotic organisms generally do glycosylate proteins that they express, if those
proteins include naturally occurring glycosylation signals or glycosylation signals
introduced by recombinant DNA technology. Such pseudoglycosylated RG receptor-binding
proteins are within the scope of the present invention.
[0063] The invention thus also encompasses polymer conjugates of "RN" receptor-binding proteins
that retain substantial, nearly complete or essentially complete receptor-binding
activity and pseudoglycosylated "RG" receptor-binding proteins that retain substantial,
nearly complete or essentially complete receptor-binding activity. As used herein,
a cytokine is said to "retain substantial, nearly complete or essentially complete
receptor-binding activity" when conjugated with one or more water-soluble polymers
according to the present invention, if the conjugation of the cytokine does not interfere
substantially with the ability of the protein to bind to its receptor(s),
i.e., if the rate and/or amount of binding of the conjugated protein to its corresponding
receptor(s) is not less than about 40%, about 50%, about 60%, about 65%, about 70%,
about 75%, about 80%, about 85%, about 90%, about 91%, about 92%, about 93%, about
94%, about 95%, about 96%, about 97%, about 98%, about 99% or about 100% or more,
of the binding rate and/or amount of an unconjugated form of the corresponding protein.
Also included within the scope of the present invention are polymer conjugates of
those receptor-binding proteins that are classified as both "RN" and "RG" receptor-binding
proteins. An example of the latter proteins is interferon
beta (particularly interferon-
beta-1b).
[0064] In additional embodiments, the invention provides methods for the synthesis of polymer
conjugates of receptor-binding proteins that retain unexpectedly high receptor-binding
activity relative to polymer conjugates of the same receptor-binding protein in which
one or more polymers are attached randomly. The invention also provides conjugates
produced by such methods, and compositions comprising one or more of these conjugates
of the invention that may further comprise one or more additional components or reagents,
such as one or more buffer salts, one or more carbohydrate excipients, one or more
carrier proteins, one or more enzymes, one or more detergents, one or more nucleic
acid molecules, one or more polymers such as unconjugated PEG or polyalkylene glycol.
The invention also provides kits comprising the conjugates and/or compositions of
the invention.
[0065] The invention also provides pharmaceutical or veterinary compositions comprising
the conjugates of the invention and at least one excipient or carrier that is acceptable
for pharmaceutical or veterinary use. The invention also provides conjugates for use
in treating or preventing a variety of physical disorders using such compositions,
comprising administering an effective amount of one or more of the conjugates or compositions
of the present invention to an animal suffering from or predisposed to a physical
disorder or condition.
[0066] Further, the invention provides stabilized receptor-binding proteins and methods
for their production for use in industrial cell culture, whereby unexpectedly high
potencies are obtained as a result of the combined effects of substantial retention
of bioactivity and increased duration of action in industrial use. The unusually high
potencies of the conjugates of the present invention may be reflected in unusually
high biomass production, unusually high levels of expression of recombinant proteins
and other improvements in efficiencies of bioprocessing.
[0067] In additional embodiments, the invention provides alternative methods for increasing
the biological potency of a preparation of interferon-beta, particularly a preparation
of interferon-
beta-1b. Methods according to this aspect of the invention may comprise, for example,
removal of one or more inhibitory components from a preparation of interferon-
beta (or interferon-
beta-1b). According to this aspect of the invention, the one or more inhibitory components
can be removed from the preparations by a variety of art-known methods of protein
and peptide processing, purification and/or analysis, including one or more chromatographic
methods such as size-exclusion chromatography, reversed phase chromatography, hydrophobic
interaction chromatography and affinity chromatography. As a practical matter, the
determination of the biological potency of a given preparation of interferon-
beta (
i.e., whether the biological potency is increased, decreased or unaffected, relative to
a stock solution of a cytokine such as interferon-
beta) can be accomplished by any number of
in vitro or
in vivo assays that will be familiar to the ordinarily skilled artisan. For example, a cell
culture assay that responds to interferon-
beta can be used to determine the biological potency of interferon-
beta preparations. Examples of suitable such cell culture assays include antiproliferative
assays, antiviral assays, signal transduction assays and gene activation assays, examples
of which are well-known to those of ordinary skill in the art.
[0068] In related embodiments, the invention also provides methods for determining the amount
of a polymer that is attached to the amino terminus of a protein having an N-terminal
serine residue, in a polymer-protein conjugate synthesized by reductive alkylation.
Methods according to this aspect of the invention comprise, for example, (a) reacting
the conjugate with a sufficient quantity of an oxidizing agent for a sufficient time
to cleave the polymer from the serine residue of the protein; and (b) measuring the
increase in the portion of unconjugated protein in the preparation. Proteins suitable
for use in accordance with such methods include cytokines (including interferon-
beta (particularly interferon-
beta-1b, which preferably has the amino acid sequence specified in SEQ ID NO:1) and megakaryocyte
growth and development factor (
Guerra, P.I., et al., (1998) Pharm Res 15:1822-1827 ). The oxidizing agent used in certain such methods of the invention may be a periodate
including sodium metaperiodate, potassium metaperiodate, lithium metaperiodate, calcium
periodate, barium periodate and periodic acid. Suitable methods for measuring the
increase in the portion of unconjugated protein in the preparation include any variety
of art-known methods of protein and peptide analysis, including, for example, size-exclusion
chromatography, reversed phase chromatography, gel electrophoresis, capillary electrophoresis,
ultracentrifugation, ultrafiltration, light scattering and mass spectroscopy.
[0069] In additional related embodiments, the invention provides methods for the selective
oxidative cleavage of an N-terminal serine residue of a bioactive protein without
oxidizing functionally essential amino acid residues of said bioactive protein. Certain
such methods of the invention comprise, for example, (a) adjusting the hydrogen ion
concentration of a solution of the bioactive protein to a pH of between about 5 and
about 10, more preferably a pH of between about 7 and about 8; (b) mixing the solution
of bioactive protein with about 0.1 moles to about 10 moles, or more preferably with
about 0.5 moles to about 5 moles, of a periodate per mole of bioactive protein; and
(c) incubating said mixture for at least one hour, preferably at a temperature of
between about 2°C and about 40°C. Proteins suitable for use in accordance with such
methods include cytokines (including interferon-
beta (particularly interferon-
beta-1b, which preferably has the amino acid sequence specified in SEQ ID NO:1).
Methods
[0070] The present inventors have discovered that targeting of polymers to the amino-terminal
amino acid of an "RN" receptor-binding protein or to the vicinity of the glycosylation
site of an "RG" receptor-binding protein assures that the polymer is attached at a
site that is remote from one or more of the receptor-binding regions or domains of
the protein, thereby minimizing steric hindrance of receptor interactions by the attached
polymer molecules. Consequently, a higher percentage of the receptor-binding activity
can be preserved by conjugating proteins according to the methods of the present invention
than would occur if the polymer were attached within or proximal to a portion of the
molecule that is involved in binding to its receptor(s). This principle, which can
result in unexpectedly high retention of receptor binding activity, can be demonstrated
for receptor-binding proteins that are selected from among basic fibroblast growth
factor ("bFGF" or "FGF-2"), epidermal growth factor ("EGF"), insulin-like growth factor-1
("IGF-1"), interferon-
alpha ("IFN-
alpha"), interferon-
beta ("IFN-
beta," including IFN-
beta-1b), granulocyte-macrophage-colony stimulating factor ("GM-CSF"), monocyte colony
stimulating factor ("M-CSF"), Flt3 ligand, stem cell factor ("SCF"), interleukins
2, 3, 4, 6, 10, 12, 13 and 15, transforming growth factor-
beta ("TGF-
beta"), human growth hormone ("hGH"), prolactin, placental lactogenic hormone, ciliary
neurotrophic factor ("CNTF"), leptin and structural analogs of these receptor-binding-proteins
that mimic the actions of these proteins or that are receptor-binding antagonists
thereof. In contrast, the selective attachment of a large polymer to the amino terminus
of IFN-
gamma is not predicted to preserve most of the activity of this cytokine, since such coupling
is expected to interfere with binding of the active dimer to its receptors (based
on data of
Walter, M.R., et al., (1995) Nature 376:230-235).
[0071] Amino-terminal modification of certain proteins has been disclosed previously (
see, e.g. Dixon, H.B.F., (1984) J Protein Chem 3:99-108). For example, N-terminal modification of proteins has been reported to stabilize
certain proteins against the action of aminopeptidases (Guerra, P.I.,
et al., supra), to improve the solubility of the protein (
Hinds, K,. et al., (2000) Bioconjug Chem 11:195-201), to decrease the charge on the N-terminal amino group, or to improve the homogeneity
of the resulting conjugates (Kinstler, O., et al. European Patent Application No.
EP 0 822 199 A2;
Kinstler, O., et al., (2002) Adv Drug Deliv Rev 54:477-485), among others. An alternative method for coupling polymers to the
alpha amino group of an N-terminal cysteine or histidine residue, by an adaptation of a
procedure known in the art as "native chemical ligation," has been disclosed (
Roberts, M.J., et al., PCT Publication No. WO 03/031581 A2 and
U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2003/0105224 A1 ). However, the existence of the "RN" and "RG" subclasses of receptor-binding proteins,
generally applicable methods for selecting members of those classes, and the preparation
and use of polymer conjugates of such receptor-binding proteins as a way to preserve
unexpectedly high functional activity of "RN" receptor-binding proteins, have not
been recognized or described previously.
[0072] Hence, there is an advantage to determining whether or not a given cytokine has an
N-terminus and/or glycosylation site(s) that are remote from the receptor-binding
site(s) of the ligand. The ability to predict whether a given cytokine is an "RN"
or an "RG" ligand, prior to conjugation of the ligand with a polymer, substantially
decreases the experimentation required to produce polymer-ligand conjugates (
e.g., cytokines or antagonists thereof conjugated with polymers,
e.g., PEGs) in which the antigenicity and immunogenicity of the conjugate is reduced relative
to the antigenicity and immunogenicity of the unconjugated ligand, while not substantially
decreasing the receptor-binding and physiological activities of the conjugated ligand.
[0073] Accordingly, in additional embodiments, the present invention provides methods for
identifying and selecting receptor-binding protein ligands (
e.g., cytokines and antagonists thereof) that have an N-terminus and/or glycosylation site(s)
that are remote from the receptor-binding sites of the protein ligands (
i.e., methods for identifying and selecting for "RN" or "RG" proteins). In certain such
embodiments of the invention; the optimum location for conjugation of one or more
polymers (
e.g., one or more PEGs) can be determined using molecular modeling,
e.g., by viewing the 3-dimensional structure of the protein (cytokine or antagonist thereof)
using molecular modeling software to predict the location(s) at which one or more
polymers can be attached to the protein without a substantial loss in biological or
receptor-binding activity of the protein (see also Schein, C.H.,
supra). An analogous approach has been demonstrated, for example, for conjugation of PEG
to G-CSF in an attempt to improve its resistance to proteolytic digestion (
see published
U.S. Application No. 2001/0016191 A1 of T.D. Osslund ). Suitable molecular modeling software for use in the present invention, such as
RASMOL (Sayle
et al., supra) and other programs used in generating the database of macromolecular structures
deposited at the Protein Data Bank (PDB;
see Laskowski, R.A.,
supra), is well-known in the art and will be familiar to those of ordinary skill in the art.
Using such molecular modeling software, the three-dimensional structure of a polypeptide,
e.g., a cytokine or antagonist thereof, can be predicted or determined with a high degree
of confidence, based on crystallographic analyses of the ligands and their receptors.
In this way, one of ordinary skill can readily determine which ligands are "RN" or
"RG" ligands that are suitable for use in accordance with the present invention.
[0074] To practice the present invention, one convenient route for covalently coupling a
water-soluble polymer to the
alpha amino group of the N-terminal amino acid residue of a protein is by reductive alkylation
of Schiff's bases formed with polymers bearing a single aldehyde group,
e.g. as claimed by
G.P. Royer (U.S. Patent No. 4,002,531), but not as claimed by
J.M. Harris, et al., (U.S. Patent No. 5,252,714), since the latter inventors claim only polymers derivatized at both ends with aldehyde
groups, which are crosslinking agents and are therefore ill-suited to the synthesis
of long-acting receptor-binding proteins that retain substantial receptor-binding
activity.
[0075] Directing the reductive alkylation of Schiff's bases of PEG-monoaldehydes toward
the
alpha amino group of the N-terminal amino acid of a receptor-binding protein and away from
the
epsilon amino groups of its lysine residues can be accomplished by a variety of methods,
based on the disclosures in
J.T. Edsall in Chapters 4 and 5 of Proteins Amino Acids and Peptides as Ions and Dipolar
Ions ((1943), Reinhold Publishing Corporation, New York). The acidic dissociation constant ("pK
a") of an
alpha amino group of an N-terminal amino acid of a polypeptide is expected to be below 7.6, whereas
the pK
a values of the
epsilon amino groups of lysine residues in polypeptides are expected to be approximately
9.5. Edsall ((1943,
supra) clearly stated that aldehydes will combine with the amino group of an amino acid
"only on the alkaline side of its isoelectric point."
[0076] Hence, based on the present disclosure and information that is readily available
in the art, the ordinarily skilled artisan will recognize that (1) the selective reaction
of aldehydes with the
alpha amino group of a protein will be favored by a range of pH that is below 9.5 (approximately
the pK
a of the
epsilon amino groups in the protein); (2) the rate of reaction of aldehydes with
epsilon amino groups will decrease if the pH of the reaction is lowered toward 7.6 (approximately
the pKa of the
alpha amino group of the protein); (3) the rate of reaction of aldehydes with the
alpha amino group will decrease less than that of the
epsilon amino groups as the reaction pH is lowered toward 7.6, and (4) the selectivity for
the reaction of an aldehyde with the
alpha amino group will be improved somewhat by lowering the pH toward 6.6. Since the latter
value is approximately one pH unit below the pK
a of the
alpha amino group and three pH units below the pK
a of the epsilon amino groups, approximately 10% of the
alpha amino groups and approximately 0.1 % of the
epsilon amino groups will be in their reactive, unprotonated state. Thus at pH 6.6, the fraction
of unprotonated
alpha amino groups is 100-fold higher than the fraction of unprotonated
epsilon amino groups. Therefore, very little increase in selectivity will be obtained by
lowering the pH of the reaction further,
e.g., to 5.6, where, theoretically, 1 % of the
alpha amino groups and 0.01% of the
epsilon amino groups would be in their reactive, unprotonated state. Thus, in certain embodiments
of the invention, protein ligands (particularly "RN" or "RG" ligands, including cytokines
and antagonists thereof) are conjugated with one or more polymers by forming a mixture
between the ligand(s) and the one or more reactive polymers at a pH of about 5.6 to
about 7.6; at a pH of about 5.6 to about 7.0; at a pH of about 6.0 to about 7.0; at
a pH of about 6.5 to about 7.0; at a pH of about 6.6 to about 7.6; at a pH of about
6.6 to about 7.0; or at a pH of about 6.6. The present methods thus differ significantly
from those known in the art, in which coupling of polymers to
alpha amino groups on the N-terminal amino acid residues of ligands is carried out at a
pH of about 5 (Kinstler, O.,
et al., (2002)
supra; EP 0 822 199 A2;
U.S. Patent Nos. 5,824,784 and
5,985,265; Roberts, M.J.,
et al., (2002),
supra; Delgado, C., et al., U.S. Application Publication No. 2002/0127244 A1), while coupling of polymers to
epsilon amino groups of lysine residues in the ligand polypeptide backbone is carried out
at a pH of 8.0 (
Kinstler, O., et al., EP 0 822 199 A2;
U.S. Patent Nos. 5,824,784 and
5,985,265). In the same way, the present methods also are significantly distinct from enzymatic
methods that have been used for coupling alkylamine derivatives of poly(ethylene glycol)
to certain proteins using transglutaminase, which is carried out at a pH of 7.5 (
Sato, H., (2002) Adv Drug Deliv Rev 54:487-504).
[0077] Reduction of the resultant Schiff's bases with mild reducing agents, such as sodium
cyanoborohydride or pyridine borane (
Cabacungan, J.C., et al., (1982) Anal Biochem 124:272-278), forms secondary amine bonds that preserve the positive charge of the N-terminal
alpha amino group of the protein at physiological pH. Such bonds that retain the same charge
as the native protein are more likely to preserve its biological activity than alternative
linkage chemistries that neutralize the charge,
e.g., by the formation of amide bonds (
Burg, J., et al., PCT Publication No. WO 02/49673 A2; Kinstler, O.,
et al., European Patent Application No.
EP 0 822 199 A2;
Kinstler, O., et al., (1996) Pharm Res, 13:996-1002; Kita, Y.,
et al., supra) or urethane bonds (
Gilbert, C.W., et al., U.S. Patent No. 6,042,822;
Grace, M., et al., (2001) J Interferon Cytokine Res 21:1103-1115;
Youngster, S., et al., (2002) Curr Pharm Des 8:2139-2157).
[0078] Alternative approaches to selective coupling of polymers to N-terminal amino acid
residues are known to those skilled in the art. Included are methods for coupling
hydrazide, hydrazine, semicarbazide or other amine-containing polymers to N-terminal
serine or threonine residues that have been oxidatively cleaved to aldehydes with
periodate (Dixon, H.B.F.,
supra; Geoghegan, K.F., U.S. Patent No. 5,362,852;
Gaertner, H.F., et al., (1996) Bioconjug Chem 7:38-44;
Drummond, R.J., et al., U.S. Patent No. 6,423,685).
Suitable Polymers
[0079] In certain embodiments of the invention, it is desirable to minimize the formation
of intramolecular and intermolecular cross-links by polymers such as PEG during the
reaction in which the polymer is coupled to the bioactive component to produce the
conjugates of the invention. This can be accomplished by using polymers that are activated
at only one end (referred to herein as "monofunctionally activated PEGs" or "monofunctionally
activated PAGs") or polymer preparations in which the percentage of bifunctionally
activated (referred to in the case of linear PEGs as "
bis-activated PEG diols") or multi-functionally activated polymers is less than about
30%, or more preferably less than about 10% or most preferably less than about 2%
(w/w). The use of activated polymers that are entirely or nearly entirely monofunctional
can minimize the formation of all of the following: intramolecular cross links within
individual protein molecules, "dumbbell" structures, in which one strand of polymer
connects two protein molecules, and larger aggregates or gels.
[0080] Activated forms of polymers that are suitable for use in the methods and compositions
of this invention can include any linear or branched, mono functionally activated
forms of polymers that are known in the art. For example, included are those with
molecular weights (excluding the mass of the activating group) in the range of about
1 kDa to about 100 kDa. Suitable ranges of molecular weights include about 5 kDa to
about 30 kDa; about 8 kDa to about 14 kDa; about 10 kDa to about 20 kDa; about 18
kDa to about 60 kDa; about 18 kDa to about 22 kDa; about 12 kDa to about 30 kDa, about
5 kDa, about 10 kDa, about 20 kDa or about 30 kDa. In the case of linear PEGs, molecular
weights of about 10 kDa, about 20 kDa or about 30 kDa correspond to degrees of polymerization
(
n) of about 230, about 450 or about 680 monomeric units of ethylene oxide, respectively.
It should be noted that long before the existence of the "RN" and "RG" classes of
receptor-binding proteins was recognized, the advantages of coupling therapeutic proteins
to polymers having relatively high molecular weights (
i.e., >20-30 kDa) were first disclosed (
Saifer, M., et al., PCT Publication No. WO 89/01033 A1, published Feb. 9, 1989 ).
[0081] In other embodiments of the invention, conjugates of receptor-binding proteins with
unusually high percentages of retained bioactivity can be prepared for use
in vitro, e.g., in cell culture, by coupling monofunctionally activated polymers of about 1 kDa,
about 2 kDa or about 5 kDa, according to the methods of this invention. For such
in vitro applications, this lower range of molecular weights may be preferred.
[0082] Optionally, a linear polymer can have a reactive group at one end or both ends, thereby
creating a "reactive polymer." In certain embodiments of this invention, it can be
desirable to use the N-hydroxysuccinimidyl ester of the monopropionic acid derivative
of PEG, as disclosed in
J.M. Harris, et al., U.S. Patent No. 5,672,662 or other N-hydroxysuccinimide-activated PEG-monocarboxylic acids. In certain other
embodiments, it can be desirable to use either the monosuccinimidyl carbonate derivatives
of PEG ("SC-PEG"), as described in
M. Saifer, et al., U.S. Patent Nos. 5,006,333;
5,080,891;
5,283,317 and
5,468,478, or the mono-
p-nitrophenyl carbonate derivative of PEG, as disclosed in S.J. Kelly,
et al., supra; in
L.D. Williams, et al. PCT Publication No. WO 00/07629 A2,
L.D. Williams, et al., U.S. Patent No. 6,576,235 and in
M.R. Sherman, et al., PCT Publication No. WO 01/59078 A2. Moreover, other types of reactive groups can be used to synthesize polymer conjugates
of proteins. These derivatives include monoaldehyde derivatives of PEGs (
Royer, G.P., U.S. Patent No. 4,002,531;
Harris, J.M., et al., U.S. Patent No. 5,252,714), monoamine, mono-tribromophenyl carbonate, monocarbonylimidazole, mono-trichlorophenyl
carbonate, mono-trifluorophenyl carbonate, monohydrazide, monohydrazine, monosemicarbazide,
monocarbazate, monothiosemicarbazide, monoiodoacetamide, monomateimide, mono-orthopyridyl
disulfide, mono-oxime, mono-phenylglyoxal, mono-thiazolidine-2-thione, monothioester,
monothiol, monotriazine and monovinylsulfone derivatives of PEGs. In additional embodiments,
cytokines, chemokines, growth factors, polypeptide hormones and antagonists thereof
can be coupled to one or more polymers as described in commonly owned, co-pending
U.S. Patent Application No. 10/669,597 .
Bioactive Components
[0083] As noted above, the conjugates of the invention comprise one PAG or PAO, and particularly
one strand of PEG, covalently attached to one or more bioactive components. Bioactive
components to which one or more polymers (or strands thereof) have been covalently
attached are referred to herein variously and equivalently as "conjugated bioactive
components" or "modified bioactive components." These terms are to be distinguished
herein from "unconjugated bioactive components," "initial bioactive components" or
"unmodified bioactive components," all of which terms refer to bioactive components
that have not had polymers covalently attached thereto. It is to be understood, however,
that an "unconjugated," "unmodified" or "initial" bioactive component may contain
other, non-polymer conjugations or modifications when compared to a wild-type or native
molecule, and would still be considered to be "unconjugated," "unmodified" or "initial"
in accordance with the present invention, since the bioactive component would be "unconjugated,"
"unmodified" or "initial" with respect to the attachment of polymers, as is the case
for bioactive components that are referred to herein as "Mock PEGylated."
[0084] The term "stabilizing" a bioactive component (or "methods of stabilization" or "stabilized
bioactive component") indicates that a bioactive component has been stabilized according
to the methods of this invention (
i.e., a bioactive component to which a polymer has been covalently attached according to
the methods of the invention). Such stabilized bioactive components will exhibit certain
altered biochemical and biophysical characteristics when compared to a bioactive component
that has not been stabilized (
i.e., a bioactive component to which a polymer has not been covalently attached). Included
among such altered biochemical and biophysical parameters, particularly for receptor-binding
proteins, may be decreased susceptibility to proteolytic degradation and particularly
the maintenance of the activity of a receptor-binding protein during incubation under
certain harsh environmental or experimental conditions. In certain embodiments of
the invention, the altered biochemical and biophysical parameters may include, for
example, an increased half-life in the circulation
in vivo, increased bioavailability, increased duration of action
in vitro.
[0085] Any receptor-binding protein (typically a cytokine) having biological (
i.e., physiological, biochemical or pharmaceutical) activity associated with portions of
the molecule that are remote from its amino terminus or from a naturally occurring
or mutationally-introduced glycosylation site can be suitably used as an initial component
in the present invention. Such bioactive components include peptides, polypeptides,
proteins . Bioactive components also include fragments, muteins and derivatives of
such peptides, polypeptides, proteins, particularly such fragments, muteins and derivatives
having biological (
i.e., physiological, biochemical or pharmaceutical) activity.
[0086] Suitable peptides, polypeptides and proteins, glycoproteins that are useful as bioactive
components in the present invention include any peptide, polypeptide or protein,
etc., having one or more than one available amino group, thiol group or other group that
is remote from the receptor-binding region or regions of the bioactive component and
to which polymers can be selectively attached. Such peptides, polypeptides, proteins,
glycoproteins include cytokines, which may have any of a variety of structures (Nicola,
N.A.,
supra; Schein, C.H.,
supra).
[0087] For example, suitable peptides, polypeptides and proteins of interest include the
class of cytokines having structures comprising four α-helical bundles (both long-chain
and short-chain subclasses) (for review,
see Schein, C.H.,
supra). A variety of such four-helical bundle proteins are suitable for use in the present
invention, including interleukins,
e.g., IL-2, IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, IL-7, IL-9, IL-10, IL-11, IL-12 (p35 subunit), IL-13,
IL-15 and IL-17; colony-stimulating factors,
e.g., macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating
factor (GM-CSF;
Rozwarski, D.A., et al., (1996) Proteins 26:304-313); interferons,
e.g., IFN-α, IFN-β (including IFN-β-1b) and consensus IFN; leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF);
erythropoietin (Epo); thrombopoietin (Tpo); megakaryocyte growth and development factor
(MGDF); stem cell factor (SCF), also known in the art as Steel Factor (
Morrissey, P.J., et al., (1994) Cell Immunol 157:118-131;
McNiece, I.K., et al., (1995) J Leukoc Biol 58:14-22); oncostatin M (OSM); phospholipase-activating protein (PLAP); neurotrophic factors;
and peptide mimetics thereof. Although prolactin and growth hormone are classical
hormones, which circulate widely in the body, unlike the cytokines, which are usually
produced near their target cells, prolactin and growth hormone belong to the same
structural class as the cytokines with four α-helical bundles (Nicola, N.A.,
supra; Goffin, V.,
et al., supra) and they are similarly suitable targets for polymer coupling and for production
of the present conjugates in accordance with the present invention.
[0088] Finally, although some antibodies function as receptor-binding agonists or antagonists
(
see, e.g., Morris, J.C., et al., (2000) Ann Rheum Dis 59 (Suppl I):i109-i114), such immunoglobulins are not suitable candidates for N-terminal polymer coupling
within the scope of this invention,
i.e., they are not RN receptor-binding proteins, since the amino-terminal regions of both
the light and heavy chains participate in antigen recognition.
[0089] Of particular use as bioactive components for use in preparing the polymer conjugates
of the present invention is interferon-
beta . Also of particular use are muteins and fragments of such bioactive components,
particularly those capable of binding to the receptors for the corresponding wild-type
or intact polypeptide, whether or not this binding induces a biological or physiological
effect. In certain such embodiments, muteins and fragments, of the bioactive components
can act as antagonists for the corresponding ligands, which reduce, substantially
reduce or completely inhibit the binding of ligands to their receptors and/or the
activity of the ligands on their target cells, tissues and/or organisms. Other antagonists,
which may or may not be structural analogues, muteins, variants or derivatives of
the ligands of interest, are also suitable for preparation of the conjugates in accordance
with the present invention. As a practical matter, whether or not a given mutein,
fragment, variant, derivative or antagonist antagonizes the biological and/or physiological
effects of a given ligand can be determined, without undue experimentation, using
assays for the biological/physiological effects of the ligand itself, a variety of
which are well-known in the art and/or described herein.
[0090] The structures (primary, secondary, tertiary and, where applicable, quaternary) for
these and other polypeptides of interest that are advantageously used in accordance
with the present invention are well-known in the art and will be familiar to one of
ordinary skill, particularly in view of the structures provided herein and in the
references cited herein .
Conjugates
[0091] The present invention provides stable conjugates of bioactive components, particularly
of cytokines, for use in a variety of applications. Such conjugates of the invention
have a number of advantages over those previously known in the art, as shown by the
following exemplary comparisons of art-known conjugates:
[0092] H. Hiratani (European Patent No.
EP 0 098 110 B1 and
U.S. Patent No. 4,609,546) discloses conjugates of copolymers of ethylene oxide and propylene oxide ("PEG-PPG,"
a member of the general class of PAGs) with proteins, including interferons and interleukins,
wherein no preference for avoiding regions of the proteins involved in receptor binding
is disclosed. In these references, interferons
alpha, beta and
gamma were considered to be equivalent targets for coupling of PAG, unlike in the present
invention wherein interferon-
gamma is not considered to be a suitable target for N-terminal coupling because the amino
terminus is within the receptor-binding region of this cytokine. In addition, Hiratani
discloses conjugates synthesized only with PAGs of 1 kDa to 10 kDa, whereas the methods
of the present invention prefer the coupling of water-soluble, synthetic polymers
with molecular weights exceeding 10 kDa for therapeutic applications. Analogously,
N.V. Katre ((1990)
supra) discloses that coupling larger numbers of strands of 5-kDa mPEG to human recombinant
interleukin-2 increases the life-times of the resultant conjugates in the bloodstreams
of mice and rabbits. However, this reference did not disclose or recognize the advantage
of coupling a smaller number of longer strands of PEG or of coupling a single strand
of high molecular weight PEG to the amino terminus of IL-2.
[0093] G. Shaw (
U.S. Patent No. 4,904,584 and
PCT Publication No. WO 89/05824 A2) discloses methods for inducing site-selective attachment of amine-reactive polymers
by introducing, replacing or deleting lysine residues in the target protein, especially
Epo, G-CSF and IL-2. However, unlike the disclosure of the present invention, these
references do not disclose that amine-reactive polymers can react with any amine in
the target protein other than the
epsilon amino groups of lysine residues, clearly distinguishing these disclosures from the
present invention.
[0094] D.E. Nitecki et al., (U.S. Patent No. 4,902,502) disclose multiply PEGylated IL-2 conjugates that were prepared from various chloroformate
derivatives of PEG that were intended to react with the
epsilon amino groups of lysine residues. In contrast to the present methods, however, this
reference discloses no method to avoid PEGylation of lysine residues in regions of
the IL-2 protein that are involved in receptor binding, nor any awareness that avoidance
of such sites is advantageous.
[0095] N. Katre, et al., (U.S. Patent No. 5,206,344) disclose PEG-IL-2 conjugates in which PEG is coupled to the
epsilon amino groups of lysine residues, to the unpaired sulfhydryl group of the naturally
occurring cysteine residue at position 125 (counting from the amino terminus) or to
the sulfhydryl group of a cysteine residue that has been mutationally introduced between
the first and twentieth residues from the amino terminus of IL-2. Included among the
muteins that are disclosed in the '344 patent is
"des-ala-1" IL-2,
i.e., a mutein in which the amino-terminal alanine is deleted and not PEGylated. In contrast
to the present disclosure, however, the '344 patent does not disclose any method for
avoiding coupling PEG to amino acid residues that are involved in binding to receptors,
nor any recognition that such an approach would be advantageous. Consistent with this
notion, and in contrast to the present invention, the broad range of points of attachment
proposed in the '344 patent does not suggest that coupling PEG to the amino terminus
of IL-2 would be especially advantageous.
[0096] S.P. Monkarsh, et al., (1997) Anal Biochem 247:434-440 and
S.P. Monkarsh, et al., (1997) in Harris, J.M., et al., eds., Poly(ethylene glycol):
Chemistry and Biological Applications, pp.207-216, American Chemical Society, Washington,
D.C., disclose that reacting interferon-
alpha-2a with a three-fold molar excess of an activated PEG with a molecular weight of
5,300 Daltons produces eleven positional isomers of monoPEG-interferon, corresponding
to the eleven lysine residues in interferon-
alpha-2a. No PEG-interferon in which the PEG is coupled to the
alpha amino group at the amino terminus of the interferon was reported. The eleven positional
isomers reported in these references displayed antiviral activities in cell cultures
that ranged from 6% to 40% of that of the unmodified interferon and antiproliferative
activities in cell cultures that ranged from 9% to 29% of that of the unmodified interferon.
Such results clearly demonstrate that the random PEGylation of lysine residues practiced
by these investigators interfered with the functions of interferon-
alpha-2a mediated by its receptors, in contrast to conjugates prepared by the methods of
the present invention. In addition, unlike the conjugates of the present invention,
there was no N-terminally PEGylated interferon in the conjugates reported in these
references.
[0097] O. Nishimura
et al., (U.S. Patent Statutory Invention Registration No. H1662) disclose conjugates of interferon-
alpha, interferon-
gamma and IL-2 that are prepared by reductive alkylation of activated "polyethylene glycol
methyl ether aldehydes" with sodium cyanoborohydride at pH 7.0 (for the interferon
conjugates) or pH 7.15 (for the IL-2 conjugates). The conjugates prepared by such
methods, however, were reported to have lost up to 95% of the bioactivity of the unmodified
proteins, apparently due to the presence of multiple sites of polymer attachment,
all of which were reported to be on the
epsilon amino groups of lysine residues .
[0098] D.K. Pettit, et al., (1997) J Biol Chem 272:2312-2318, disclose polymer conjugates of interleukin-15 ("IL-15"). The conjugated IL-15 reported
in this reference, however, not only lost its IL-2-like growth-promoting capacity
as a result of coupling polymers to lysine residues in regions of the protein that
are involved in receptor binding, but it also showed antagonism rather than agonism.
These authors conclude that selective inhibition of binding of IL-15 to one of several
cell surface receptors can be a consequence of polymer conjugation and that such inhibition
can not only decrease receptor binding, but can reverse the biological effect of the
protein. By avoiding the coupling of polymers to portions of the receptor-binding
protein that are involved in interactions with their receptors, the present invention
avoids this undesirable consequence of polymer coupling.
[0099] J. Hakimi, et al., (U.S. Patent Nos. 5,792,834 and
5,834,594) disclose urethane-linked PEG conjugates of proteins, including interferon-
alpha, IL-2, interleukin-1 ("IL-1") and an antagonist of the IL-1-receptor, which were
reportedly prepared in order to decrease the immunogenicity, increase the solubility
and increase the biological half-life of the respective proteins. In these references,
PEG was coupled to "various free amino groups," with no reference to N-terminal PEGylation
and no disclosure that the N-terminal
alpha amino groups could or should be PEGylated. These patents also state that the conjugate
disclosed therein "has at least a portion" of the original biological activity of
the starting protein, thus indicating possible loss of substantial bioactivity. This
result would be consistent with the use of the untargeted PEGylation methods disclosed
therein. In contrast to the present invention, these patents do not disclose any attempt
to improve the retention of bioactivity of their conjugates by altering the selectivity
of the PEGylation processes disclosed therein.
[0100] O.B. Kinstler,
et al., (European Patent Application No.
EP 0 822 199 A2) disclose a process for reacting poly(ethylene glycol) with the
alpha amino group of the amino acid at the amino terminus of a polypeptide, especially
consensus interferon and G-CSF, which are two of the proteins manufactured by Amgen,
Inc., the assignee of this patent application. This publication indicates that "a
pH sufficiently acidic to selectively activate the
alpha amino group" is a necessary feature of the disclosed process. In contrast, by the
present invention it has been discovered that lowering the pH
decreases the reactivity of amino groups with PEG aldehydes and that the
alpha amino group is more reactive when it is
not protonated,
i.e., at a pH above its pK
a. Thus, the present inventors find that no pH is "sufficiently acidic to selectively
activate the
alpha amino group" of any of the RN cytokine conjugates of the present invention. The explanations
of the pH dependence of the reactivity of N-terminal
alpha amino groups with aldehydes given by J.T. Edsall (
supra) and by
R.S. Larsen et al., ((2001) Bioconjug Chem 12:861-869) are more compatible with the experience of the present inventors. Furthermore, Kinstler
et al. report the use of N-terminal PEGylation of polypeptides for increased homogeneity
of the resulting conjugates and protection of the amino terminus from degradation
by proteinases, but do not disclose that N-terminal PEGylation can preserve a greater
fraction of the receptor-binding activity of certain receptor-binding proteins (
see, e.g., PCT Publication No. WO 96/11953; European Patent No.
EP 0 733 067 B1, and
U.S. Patent Nos. 5,770,577,
5,824,784 and
5,985,265, all of Kinstler, O.B.,
et al.).
[0101] The European application of
Kinstler et al. (EP 0 822 199 A2) also generalizes the benefits of N-terminal PEGylation to all polypeptides, which
has not been the experience of the present inventors. Specifically, since the amino
termini of antibody molecules occur proximal to the antigen-combining region of the
antibody proteins (
Chapman, A.P. (2002) Adv Drug Deliv Rev 54:531-545), N-terminal PEGylation of antibodies is unexpectedly deleterious to bioactivity,
compared to random PEGylation of lysine residues, as disclosed by Larsen, R.S.,
et al., supra. Similarly, N-terminal PEGylation of receptor-binding proteins that are not "RN" receptor-binding
proteins,
e.g., interferon-
gamma, is expected to be more inhibitory of interactions with receptors than random PEGylation
of the lysine residues of such receptor-binding proteins.
[0102] Thus, as noted above, the methods of the present invention are distinguished from
those disclosed by Kinstler
et al. in the publications cited herein, in that the conjugates of the present invention
are prepared by conjugating one or more cytokines or antagonists thereof that are
selected as RN receptor-binding proteins with one or more polymers by forming a mixture
between the ligand(s) and the one or more polymers at a pH of about 5.6 to about 7.6;
at a pH of about 5.6 to about 7.0; at a pH of about 6.0 to about 7.0; at a pH of about
6.5 to about 7.0; at a pH of about 6.6 to about 7.6; at a pH of about 6.6 to about
7.0; or at a pH of about 6.6. In contrast, the methods of Kinstler
et al. rely on conjugation of ligands at a pH below 5.5, which pH range the present inventors
have found to be suboptimal or inferior for preparing preparations of ligands selectively
conjugated with polymers at remote N-terminal amino acids and/or at remote glycosylation
sites.
[0103] Pepinsky, B., et al., (PCT Publication No. WO 00/23114 and
U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2003/0021765 A1) disclose polymer conjugates of glycosylated interferon-
beta-1a that are more active than nonglycosylated interferon-
beta-1b in an antiviral assay. When Pepinsky
et al. coupled 5-kDa or 20-kDa mPEG to the amino terminus of IFN-β-1 a by reductive alkylation,
no effect of PEGylation on the antiviral potency was observed, whereas the coupling
of PEGs of higher molecular weight decreased or eliminated the potency. This reference
also discloses that polyalkylene glycol can be coupled to the interferon-
beta-1a
via a variety of coupling groups at various sites, including the amino terminus, the
carboxyl terminus and the carbohydrate moiety of the glycosylated protein. The methods
disclosed in this publication, however, are stated not to be generalizable: "[t]hese
studies indicate that, despite the conservation in sequence between interferon-
beta-1a and interferon-
beta-1b, they are distinct biochemical entities and therefore much of what is known about
interferon-
beta-1b cannot be applied to interferon-
beta-1a, and vice versa." In contrast, the present invention discloses the common features
embodied in "RN" and "RG" receptor-binding proteins, as defined herein. According
to the present invention, both interferon-
beta-1a and interferon-
beta-1b- are "RN" receptor-binding proteins. In addition, interferon-
beta-1b is an "RG" receptor-binding protein. Accordingly, in contrast to the methods of
WO 00/23114, the methods of the present invention are useful for preparing stable, bioactive
conjugates of both interferon-
beta-1b and interferon-
beta-1a.
[0104] Z. Wei, et al., (U.S. Patent No. 6,077,939), disclose methods for coupling water-soluble polymers (especially PEG) to the N-terminal
alpha carbon atom of a polypeptide (especially erythropoietin), wherein the amine at the
alpha carbon of the N-terminal amino acid is first transaminated to an
alpha carbonyl group that is then reacted with a PEG derivative to form an oxime or a hydrazone
bond. Since the disclosed objective of this reference was to develop a method that
would be applicable to proteins in general, no consideration was given to the preservation
of receptor-binding activity that can result from the choice of the amino terminus
as the site of PEGylation of certain receptor-binding proteins. Thus, in contrast
to the disclosure of Wei,
et al., the present invention does not require the removal of the N-terminal
alpha amino group, but, in contrast, can preserve the charge of the N-terminal
alpha amino group at neutral pH through the formation of a secondary amine linkage between
the protein and the polymer.
[0105] C.W. Gilbert et al., (U.S. Patent No. 6,042,822; European Patent No.
EP 1 039 922 B1) disclose the desirability of a mixture of positional isomers of PEG-interferon-
alpha-2b wherein an especially desirable isomer has PEG coupled to a histidine residue
of interferon-
alpha-2b, especially histidine-34, and demonstrate that the PEG linkage to histidine-34
is unstable. Since histidine-34 lies on the surface of interferon-
alpha-2b in a region that must come into intimate contact with an interferon receptor in
order to trigger signal transduction, the instability of the linkage between PEG and
histidine-34 disclosed in these references appears to be critical to the function
of the PEG-interferon conjugate disclosed therein. Substantially pure histidine-linked
protein polymer conjugates were described by
S. Lee et al., U.S. Patent No. 5,985,263. In contrast, the present invention demonstrates that one preferred conjugate is
a PEG-interferon conjugate wherein the PEG is stably linked at a site that is remote
from the receptor-binding domains of the interferon component.
[0106] P. Bailon, et al., ((2001) Bioconjug Chem 12:195-202), disclose that interferon-alpha-2a that is PEGylated with one molecule of 40-kDa
di-mPEG-lysine per molecule of interferon is comprised of four major positional isomers.
This reference discloses that nearly all of the PEG was attached by amide bonds to
lysines 31, 121, 131 or 134, each of which is within or adjacent to the receptor-binding
domains of interferon-
alpha-2a (residues 29-35 and 123-140, according to Bailon
et al. ). N-terminal PEGylation was not reported by Bailon
et al. Antiviral activity of the isolated mixture of positional isomers of PEG-interferon
against Vesicular Stomatitis Virus infection of Madin-Darby bovine kidney cells
in vitro was reported to be 7% of that of the unconjugated interferon-
alpha-2a that was tested. The substantial loss of bioactivity that was observed for these
PEG-interferon conjugates that do not include N-terminally PEGylated interferon thus
clearly distinguishes the conjugates of Bailon
et al. from those of the present invention.
[0107] R.B. Pepinsky et al., ((2001) J Pharmacol Exp Ther 297:1059-1066), disclose synthesis of a conjugate from (1) glycosylated interferon-beta-1a having
an N-terminal methionine residue and (2) a 20-kDa PEG-aldehyde. The conjugate, which
is referred to in the reference as being monoPEGylated at the N-terminal methionine,
is said to retain full bioactivity in an antiviral assay. While these authors disclose
that their choice of the N-terminal site for PEGylation of glycosylated interferon-
beta-1a was dictated by the availability of site-selective PEGylation reagents and molecular
modeling, they acknowledge that "some effects are product specific." Moreover, and
in contrast to the present invention, the observations reported therein were not generalized
to include the class of receptor-binding proteins that are defined herein as "RN"
receptor-binding proteins.
[0108] J. Burg, et al., (PCT Publication No. WO 01/02017 A2) disclose the production of alkoxyPEG conjugates of erythropoietin, glycoprotein,
wherein one to three strands of a methoxyPEG was/were reacted with sulfhydryl groups
that were introduced chemically by modification of
epsilon amino groups of lysine residues on the surface of the glycoprotein. In contrast to
the present invention, however, this reference does not disclose any attempt to couple
PEG to the free
alpha amino group of the N-terminal amino acid of erythropoietin or to avoid modifying
lysine residues in regions of the erythropoietin glycoprotein that are essential for
interactions with erythropoietin receptors.
[0109] J. Burg, et al., (PCT Publication No. WO 02/49673 A2) disclose the synthesis of N-terminally amide-linked PEG conjugates of natural and
mutein erythropoietin glycoproteins by a process that employs selectively cleavable
N-terminal peptide extensions that are cleaved before PEGylation and after reversible
citraconylation of all
epsilon amino groups of the lysine residues of the glycoprotein. The disclosed rationale
for the multi-step process in this reference was to make the PEGylation process selective
for the free
alpha amino group of the N-terminal amino acid in order to produce homogeneous monoPEGylated
conjugates, thereby avoiding the need to separate monoPEGylated conjugates from multiply
PEGylated derivatives. This method differs from that of the present invention in a
number of important respects, including : (1) the approach of Burg
et al. is limited to erythropoietin glycoproteins to which alkoxyPEG is linked
via amide bonds, while the present invention is applicable to a variety of bioactive
components conjugated using a variety of synthetic polymers; (2) the present invention
applies to both glycosylated and nonglycosylated "RN" and "RG" receptor-binding proteins,
whereas Burg
et al. disclose only the conjugation of glycoproteins; (3) the present invention encompasses
both alkoxyPEGs, such as mPEG, and monofunctionally-activated hydroxyPEGs, whereas
Burg
et al. disclose only the use of alkoxyPEGs; and (4) in the present invention, secondary
amine linkages between the polymer and the protein are preferred over the amide linkages
used by Burg
et al., since the former are more stable and conserve the positive charge on the amino group.
In analogous work from the same group,
J. Burg, et al., (U.S. Patent No. 6,340,742) disclose the production of amide-linked conjugates of erythropoietin glycoproteins,
wherein one to three strands of alkoxyPEG is/are linked to one to three amino groups
of the protein. In contrast to the present invention, however, this reference reports
no preference for the
alpha amino group of the N-terminal amino acid or for amino groups that are not in regions
that are involved in interactions with receptors.
[0110] C. Delgado et al., (U.S. Patent No. 6,384,195) disclose conjugates of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor that are
prepared using a reactive polymer that is represented as tresyl monomethoxyPEG and
is referred to therein as "TMPEG." This reference indicates that when TMPEG is contacted
with recombinant human GM-CSF, "[t]he modified material contains species with no activity
and with higher activity than unmodified material. As one of ordinary skill will readily
recognize, species with no activity are undesirable in a mixture of polymer-bioactive
component conjugates, particularly in compositions for therapeutic use that comprise
such conjugates, since they can contribute to the risks of administering the conjugate
to a patient in need of such administration without contributing to the beneficial
effects. As noted herein, the present invention overcomes this limitation in the art
at least in part by avoiding modification of GM-CSF and other receptor-binding proteins
at sites on the proteins that are involved in its receptor-binding activity, thereby
reducing or eliminating the synthesis of species with no activity. The present invention
also provides methods for the fractionation and purification of conjugates that have
different sizes, different charges and/or different extents of shielding of charges
on the protein by the polymer.
[0111] It is noteworthy that
U.S. Patent No. 6,384,195 does not mention the N-terminal PEGylation of GM-CSF and therefore does not recognize
the advantages of the methods of the present invention. Finally,
U.S. Patent No. 6,384,195 indicates a preference for conjugates in which more than one PEG is coupled to each
molecule of GM-CSF, without any consideration of where on the GM-CSF molecule those
PEG molecules are attached (other than being coupled to lysine residues). By stating
a preference for conjugates with up to six PEG molecules per GM-CSF, the reference
thus states a preference for conjugates in which PEG might be attached to all possible
lysine residues, thereby ensuring that PEG will be attached in positions that sterically
hinder close approach of the protein to its cell-surface receptors . By contrast,
the present invention indicates the undesirability of coupling PEG to lysine residues,
except when those lysine residues are remote from the domains of the receptor-binding
protein that are essential for interactions with the receptors and hence for signal
transduction (in the case of agonists) or in order to competitively inhibit signal
transduction (in the case of antagonists).
[0112] T. Nakamura, et al., (PCT Publication No. WO 02/32957 A1) discloses that increasing the molecular weight of PEG that is coupled to the
epsilon amino group of the lysine residue at position 52 of erythropoietin glycoprotein increases
the erythropoietic effect of the conjugate
in vivo while decreasing the affinity of the conjugate for erythropoietin receptors. In contrast
to the present invention, however, this reference does not disclose the coupling of
PEG at the amino terminus, nor does it recognize any advantage to doing so.
[0113] Hence, the present invention provides conjugates of bioactive components coupled
to synthetic polymers that have distinct structural and functional advantages to those
that have been previously disclosed.
Compositions
[0114] The invention provides conjugates or complexes comprising one or more bioactive components,
suitably one or more cytokines, coupled to one or more stabilizing polymers such as
one or more PEGs. Typically, such conjugates are produced by the methods of the present
invention described herein; however, conjugates having the structures and activities
described herein, regardless of the methods used to produce such conjugates, are considered
equivalent to those produced by the present methods and are therefore encompassed
by the present invention. In related aspects, the invention also provides compositions
comprising one or more such conjugates or complexes. Compositions according to this
aspect of the invention will comprise one or more (
e.g., one, two, three, four, five, ten,
etc.) of the above-described conjugates or complexes of the invention. In certain such
aspects, the compositions may comprise one or more additional components, such as
one or more buffer salts, one or more chaotropic agents, one or more detergents, one
or more proteins (
e.g., albumin or one or more enzymes), one or more unbound polymers, one or more osmotically
active agents . The compositions of this aspect of the invention may be in any form,
including solid (
e.g., dry powder) or solution (particularly in the form of a physiologically compatible
buffered salt solution comprising one or more of the conjugates of the invention).
A. Pharmaceutical Compositions
[0115] Certain compositions of the invention are particularly formulated for use as pharmaceutical
compositions for use in prophylactic, diagnostic or therapeutic applications. Such
compositions will typically comprise one or more of the conjugates, complexes or compositions
of the invention and one or more pharmaceutically acceptable carriers or excipients.
The term "pharmaceutically acceptable carrier or excipient," as used herein, refers
to a non-toxic solid, semisolid or liquid filler, diluent, encapsulating material
or formulation auxiliary of any type that is capable of being tolerated by a recipient
animal, including a. human or other mammal, into which the pharmaceutical composition
is introduced, without adverse effects resulting from its addition.
[0116] The pharmaceutical compositions of the invention may be administered to a recipient
via any suitable mode of administration, such as orally, rectally, parenterally, intrasystemically,
vaginally, intraperitoneally, topically (as by powders, ointments, drops or transdermal
patch), buccally, as an oral or nasal spray or by inhalation. The term "parenteral"
as used herein refers to modes of administration that include intravenous, intra-arterial,
intramuscular, intraperitoneal, intracisternal, subcutaneous and intra-articular injection
and infusion.
[0117] Pharmaceutical compositions provided by the present invention for parenteral injection
can comprise pharmaceutically acceptable sterile aqueous or nonaqueous solutions,
dispersions, suspensions or emulsions, as well as sterile powders for reconstitution
into sterile injectable solutions or dispersions prior to use. Examples of suitable
aqueous and nonaqueous carriers, diluents, solvents or vehicles include water, ethanol,
polyols (such as glycerol , propylene glycol, poly(ethylene glycol)), carboxymethylcellulose
and suitable mixtures thereof, vegetable oils (such as olive oil), and injectable
organic esters such as ethyl oleate. Proper fluidity can be maintained, for example,
by the use of coating materials such as lecithin, by the maintenance of the required
particle size in the case of dispersions, and by the use of surfactants.
[0118] Such pharmaceutical compositions of the present invention may also contain adjuvants
such as preservatives, wetting agents, emulsifying agents and dispersing agents. Prevention
of the action of microorganisms may be ensured by the inclusion of various antibacterial
and antifungal agents, for example, paraben, benzyl alcohol, chlorobutanol, phenol,
sorbic acid . It may also be desirable to include osmotic agents such as sugars, sodium
chloride. Prolonged absorption of the injectable pharmaceutical form may be brought
about by the inclusion of agents that delay absorption, such as aluminum, monostearate,
hydrogels and gelatin.
[0119] In some cases, in order to prolong the effect of the drugs, it is desirable to slow
the absorption from subcutaneous or intramuscular injection. This may be accomplished
by the use of a liquid suspension of crystalline or amorphous material with poor solubility
in aqueous body fluids. The rate of absorption of the drug then depends upon its rate
of dissolution, which, in turn, may depend upon its physical form. Alternatively,
delayed absorption of a parenterally administered drug form can be accomplished by
dissolving or suspending the drug in an oil vehicle.
[0120] Injectable depot forms are made by forming microencapsulated matrices of the drug
in biodegradable polymers such as polylactide-polyglycolide. Depending upon the ratio
of drug to carrier polymer and the nature of the particular carrier polymer employed,
the rate of drug release can be controlled. Examples of other biodegradable polymers
include biocompatible poly(orthoesters) and poly(anhydrides). Depot injectable formulations
are also prepared by entrapping the drug in liposomes or microemulsions that are compatible
with body tissues.
[0121] The injectable formulations can be sterilized, for example, by filtration through
a bacteria-retaining filter, or by incorporating sterilizing agents in the form of
sterile solid compositions that can be dissolved or dispersed in sterile water or
other sterile injectable medium prior to use.
[0122] Solid dosage forms for oral administration include capsules, tablets, pills, powders
and granules. In such solid dosage forms, the active compounds are mixed with at least
one pharmaceutically acceptable excipient or carrier such as sodium citrate or dicalcium
phosphate and/or a) fillers or extenders such as starches, lactose, sucrose, glucose,
mannitol, and silicic acid, b) binders such as, for example, carboxymethylcellulose,
alginates, gelatin, polyvinylpyrrolidone, sucrose, and gum acacia, c) humectants such
as glycerol, d) disintegrating agents such as agar-agar, calcium carbonate, potato
or tapioca starch, alginic acid, certain silicates, and sodium carbonate, e) solution
retarding agents such as paraffin, f) accelerators of absorption, such as quaternary
ammonium compounds, g) wetting agents such as, for example, cetyl alcohol and glycerol
monostearate, h) adsorbents such as kaolin and bentonite clay, and i) lubricants such
as talc, calcium stearate, magnesium stearate, solid PEGs, sodium lauryl sulfate,
and mixtures thereof. In the case of capsules, tablets and pills, the dosage form
may also comprise buffering agents.
[0123] Solid compositions of a similar type may also be employed as fillers in soft- and
hard-filled gelatin capsules using such excipients as lactose (milk sugar) as well
as high molecular weight PEGs.
[0124] The solid dosage forms of tablets, dragees, capsules, pills and granules can be prepared
with coatings and shells such as enteric or chronomodulating coatings and other coatings
well known in the pharmaceutical formulating art. They may optionally contain opacifying
agents and can also be of such a composition that they release the active ingredient(s)
only, or preferentially, in a certain part of the gastrointestinal tract, optionally,
in a delayed manner. Examples of embedding compositions that can be used include polymeric
substances and waxes. The active compounds can also be in microencapsulated form,
if appropriate, with one or more of the above-mentioned excipients.
[0125] Liquid dosage forms for oral administration can include pharmaceutically acceptable
emulsions, solutions, suspensions, syrups and elixirs. In addition to the active compounds,
the liquid dosage forms may contain inert diluents commonly used in the art such as,
for example, water or other solvents, solubilizing agents and emulsifiers such as
ethyl alcohol, isopropyl alcohol, ethyl carbonate, ethyl acetate, benzyl alcohol,
benzyl benzoate, propylene glycol, 1,3-butylene glycol, dimethyl formamide, oils (in
particular, cottonseed, groundnut, corn, germ, olive, castor, and sesame oils), glycerol,
tetrahydrofurfuryl alcohol, PEGs and fatty acid esters of sorbitan, and mixtures thereof.
[0126] In addition to inert diluents, the oral compositions can also include adjuvants such
as wetting agents, emulsifying and suspending agents, sweetening, flavoring and perfuming
agents.
[0127] Suspensions, in addition to the active compounds, may contain suspending agents as,
for example, ethoxylated isostearyl alcohols, polyoxyethylene sorbitol and sorbitan
esters, microcrystalline cellulose, aluminum metahydroxide, bentonite, agar-agar,
tragacanth, and mixtures thereof.
[0128] Topical administration includes administration to the skin or mucosa, including surfaces
of the lung and eye. Compositions for topical administration, including those for
inhalation, may be prepared as a dry powder which may be pressurized or non-pressurized.
In non-pressurized powder compositions, the active ingredients in finely divided form
may be used in admixture with a larger-sized pharmaceutically acceptable inert carrier
comprising particles having a size, for example, of up to 100 micrometers in diameter.
Suitable inert carriers include sugars such as lactose and sucrose. Desirably, at
least 95% by weight of the particles of the active ingredient have an effective particle
size in the range of 0.01 to 10 micrometer.
[0129] Alternatively, the pharmaceutical composition may be pressurized and contain a compressed
gas, such as nitrogen or a liquefied gas propellant. The liquefied propellant medium
and indeed the total composition may be preferably such that the active ingredients
do not dissolve therein to any substantial extent. The pressurized composition may
also contain a surface-active agent. The surface-active agent may be a liquid or solid
non-ionic surface-active agent or may be a solid anionic surface-active agent. It
is preferable to use the solid anionic surface-active agent in the form of a sodium
salt.
[0130] A further form of topical administration is to the eye. In this mode of administration,
the conjugates or compositions of the invention are delivered in a pharmaceutically
acceptable ophthalmic vehicle, such that the active compounds are maintained in contact
with the ocular surface for a sufficient time period to allow the compounds to penetrate
the conjunctiva or the corneal and internal regions of the eye, as for example the
anterior chamber, posterior chamber, vitreous body, aqueous humor, vitreous humor,
cornea, iris/ciliary, lens, choroid/retina and sclera. The pharmaceutically acceptable
ophthalmic vehicle may, for example, be an ointment, vegetable oil or an encapsulating
material.
[0131] Compositions for rectal or vaginal administration are preferably suppositories that
can be prepared by mixing the conjugates or compositions of the invention with suitable
non-irritating excipients or carriers such as cocoa butter, PEG or a suppository wax,
which are solid at room temperature but liquid at body temperature and therefore melt
in the rectum or vaginal cavity and release the drugs.
[0132] The pharmaceutical compositions used in the present therapeutic methods may also
be administered in the form of liposomes. As is known in the art, liposomes are generally
derived from phospholipids or other lipid substances. Liposomes are formed by mono-
or multi-lamellar hydrated liquid crystals that are dispersed in an aqueous medium.
Any non-toxic, physiologically acceptable and metabolizable lipid capable of forming
liposomes can be used. In addition to one or more of the conjugates or composition
of the invention, the present pharmaceutical compositions in liposome form can also
contain one or more stabilizers, preservatives, excipients. The preferred lipids are
the phospholipids and the phosphatidyl cholines (lecithins), both natural and synthetic.
Methods to form liposomes are known in the art (
see,
e.g.,
Zalipsky, S., et al., U.S. Patent No. 5,395,619). Liposomes that comprise phospholipids that are conjugated to PEG, most commonly
phosphatidyl ethanolamine coupled to monomethoxyPEG, have advantageous properties,
including prolonged lifetimes in the blood circulation of mammals (
Fisher, D., U.S. Patent No. 6,132,763).
B. Uses
[0133] As noted elsewhere herein, the methods, conjugates and compositions of the present
invention are advantageously used in methods for maintaining or enhancing the bioactivity
of the biological components without interfering with the ability of the biological
components to bind to their receptors. Certain such methods of the invention may entail
delivering one or more of the conjugates and compositions to cells, tissues, organs
or organisms. In particular, the invention provides controlled delivery of the one
or more components of the conjugates, complexes or compositions to cells, tissues,
organs or organisms, thereby providing the user with the ability to regulate, temporally
and spatially, the amount of a particular component that is released for activity
on the cells, tissues, organs or organisms.
[0134] In general, such methods of the invention involve one or more activities. For example,
one such method of the invention comprises: (a) preparing one or more conjugates or
compositions of the invention as detailed herein; and (b) contacting one or more cells,
tissues, organs or organisms with the one or more conjugates or compositions, under
conditions favoring the binding of the one or more conjugates or compositions of the
invention to the cells, tissues, organs or organisms. Once the bioactive components
of the conjugates and/or compositions of the invention have been bound by (or, in
some cases, internalized by) the cells, tissues, organs or organisms, the components
proceed to carry out their intended biological functions. For example, peptide components
may bind to receptors or other components on or within the cells, tissues, organs
or organisms; to participate in metabolic reactions within the cells, tissues, organs
or organisms; to carry out, upregulate or activate, or downregulate or inhibit, one
or more enzymatic activities within the cells, tissues, organs or organisms; to provide
a missing structural component to the cells, tissues, organs or organisms; to provide
one or more nutritional needs to the cells, tissues, organs or organisms; to inhibit,
treat, reverse or otherwise ameliorate one or more processes or symptoms of a disease
or physical disorder.
[0135] In additional embodiments, the conjugates and compositions of the invention can be
used in industrial cell culture, due to the unexpectedly high potencies of the bioactive
components of the conjugates that are obtained as a result of the combined effects
of substantial retention of their bioactivity and increased duration of action even
under the conditions of industrial use. These unexpectedly high potencies of the present
conjugates can lead to unusually high biomass production, unusually high levels of
expression of recombinant proteins, and other improvements in efficiencies of bioprocessing.
C. Dose Regimens
[0136] The conjugates, complexes or compositions of the invention can be administered
in vitro,
ex vivo or
in vivo to cells, tissues, organs or organisms to deliver thereto one or more bioactive components
(
i.e., one or more cytokines or antagonists thereof). One of ordinary skill will appreciate
that effective amounts of a given active compound, conjugate, complex or composition
can be determined empirically and may be employed in pure form or, where such forms
exist, in pharmaceutically acceptable formulation or prodrug form. The compounds,
conjugates, complexes or compositions of the invention may be administered to an animal
(including a mammal, such as a human) patient in need thereof as veterinary or pharmaceutical
compositions in combination with one or more pharmaceutically acceptable excipients.
The therapeutically effective dose level for any particular patient will depend upon
a variety of factors including the type and degree of the cellular response to be
achieved; the identity and/or activity of the specific compound(s), conjugate(s),
complex(es) or composition(s) employed; the age, body weight or surface area, general
health, gender and diet of the patient; the time of administration, route of administration,
and rate of excretion of the active compound(s); the duration of the treatment; other
drugs used in combination or coincidental with the specific compound(s), conjugate(s),
complex(es) or composition(s); and like factors that are well known to those of ordinary
skill in the pharmaceutical and medical arts. For example, it is well within the ordinary
skill of the art to start doses of a given compound, conjugate, complex or composition
of the invention at levels lower than those required to achieve the desired therapeutic
effect and to gradually increase the dosages until the desired effect is achieved.
[0137] Dose regimens may also be arranged in a patient-specific manner to provide a predetermined
concentration of a given active compound in the blood, as determined by techniques
accepted and routine in the art,
e.g. size-exclusion, ion-exchange or reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography
("HPLC"), bioassays or immunoassays. Thus, patient dose regimens may be adjusted to
achieve relatively constant blood levels, as measured by HPLC or immunoassays, according
to methods that are routine and familiar to those of ordinary skill in the medical,
pharmaceutical and/or pharmacological arts.
D. Diagnostic and Therapeutic Uses
[0138] A diagnostic use of a conjugate of the invention might be for locating cells or tissues
having unusually high binding capacity for the cytokine,
e.g., a cancer, within the body of an animal, especially a human, by administration of
a conjugate or composition of the invention, in which the conjugate (or one or more
components,
i.e., the bioactive component and/or the synthetic polymer) is labeled or comprises one
or more detectable labels so as to enable detection,
e.g., by optical, radiometric, fluorescent or resonant detection according to art-known
methods. For example, the majority of non-small cell lung cancers express unusually
high concentration of receptors for epidermal growth factor (Bunn, P.A., et al., (2002)
Semin Oncol 29(Suppl 14):38-44). Hence, in another aspect of the invention, the conjugates
and compositions of the invention may be used in diagnostic or therapeutic methods,
for example in diagnosing, treating or preventing a variety of physical disorders
in an animal, particularly a mammal such as a human, predisposed to or suffering from
such a disorder. In such approaches, the goal of the therapy is to delay or prevent
the development of the disorder, and/or to cure, induce a remission or maintain a
remission of the disorder, and/or to decrease or minimize the side effects of other
therapeutic regimens.
[0139] Hence, the conjugates, complexes and compositions of the present invention may be
used for protection, suppression or treatment of physical disorders, such as infections
or diseases. The term "protection" from a physical disorder, as used herein, encompasses
"prevention," "suppression" and "treatment." "Prevention" involves the administration
of a complex or composition of the invention prior to the induction of the disease
or physical disorder, while "suppression" involves the administration of the conjugate
or composition prior to the clinical appearance of the disease; hence, "prevention"
and "suppression" of a physical disorder typically are undertaken in an animal that
is predisposed to or susceptible to the disorder, but that is not yet suffering therefrom.
"Treatment" of a physical disorder, however, involves administration of the therapeutic
conjugate or composition of the invention after the appearance of the disease. It
will be understood that in human and veterinary medicine, it is not always possible
to distinguish between "preventing" and "suppressing" a physical disorder. In many
cases, the ultimate inductive event or events may be unknown or latent, and neither
the patient nor the physician may be aware of the inductive event until well after
its occurrence. Therefore, it is common to use the term "prophylaxis," as distinct
from "treatment," to encompass both "preventing" and "suppressing" as defined herein.
The term "protection," used in accordance with the methods of the present invention,
therefore is meant to include "prophylaxis." Methods according to this aspect of the
invention may comprise one or more steps that allow the clinician to achieve the above-described
therapeutic goals. One such method of the invention may comprise, for example: (a)
identifying an animal (preferably a mammal, such as a human) suffering from or predisposed
to a physical disorder; and (b) administering to the animal an effective amount of
one or more of the conjugates, complexes or compositions of the present invention
as described herein, such that the administration of the conjugate, complex or composition
prevents, delays or diagnoses the development of, or cures or induces remission of,
the physical disorder in the animal.
[0140] As used herein, an animal that is "predisposed to" a physical disorder is defined
as an animal that does not exhibit a plurality of overt physical symptoms of the disorder
but that is genetically, physiologically or otherwise at risk for developing the disorder.
In the present methods, the identification of an animal (such as a mammal, including
a human) that is predisposed to, at risk for, or suffering from a given physical disorder
may be accomplished according to standard art-known methods that will be familiar
to the ordinarily skilled clinician, including, for example, radiological assays,
biochemical assays (
e.g., assays of the relative levels of particular peptides, proteins, electrolytes,
etc., in a sample obtained from an animal), surgical methods, genetic screening, family
history, physical palpation, pathological or histological tests (
e.g., microscopic evaluation of tissue or bodily fluid samples or smears, immunological
assays,
etc.), testing of bodily fluids (
e.g., blood, serum, plasma, cerebrospinal fluid, urine, saliva, semen), imaging, (
e.g., radiologic, fluorescent, optical, resonant (
e.g., using nuclear magnetic resonance ("NMR") or electron spin resonance ("ESR")),
etc. Once an animal has been identified by one or more such methods, the animal may be
aggressively and/or proactively treated to prevent, suppress, delay or cure the physical
disorder.
[0141] Physical disorders that can be prevented, diagnosed or treated with the conjugates,
complexes, compositions of the present invention include any physical disorders for
which the bioactive component (typically, the cytokine or antagonist thereof) of the
conjugates or compositions may be used in the prevention, diagnosis or treatment.
Such disorders include a variety of cancers (
e.g., breast cancers, uterine cancers, ovarian cancers, prostate cancers, testicular cancers,
leukemias, lymphomas, lung cancers, neurological cancers, skin cancers, head and neck
cancers, bone cancers, colon and other gastrointestinal cancers, pancreatic cancers,
bladder cancers, kidney cancers and other carcinomas, sarcomas, adenomas and myelomas);
iatrogenic diseases; infectious diseases (
e.g., bacterial diseases, fungal diseases, viral diseases (including hepatitis, diseases
caused by cardiotropic viruses, HlV/AIDS), parasitic diseases); genetic disorders
(
e.g., cystic fibrosis, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, Gaucher's disease,
Pompe's disease, severe combined immunodeficiency disorder, dwarfism), anemia, neutropenia,
thrombocytopenia, hemophilia and other blood disorders; neurodegenerative disorders
(
e.g., multiple sclerosis ("MS," including relapsing-remitting MS, primary progressive
MS, secondary progressive MS, ), Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, Alzheimer's disease) ;
enzymatic disorders (
e.g., gout, uremia, hypercholesterolemia); disorders of uncertain or multifocal etiology
(
e.g., cardiovascular disease, hypertension, inflammatory bowel disease); autoimmune disorders
(
e.g., systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis ) and other disorders
of medical importance that will be readily familiar to the ordinarily skilled artisan.
The conjugates, complexes, compositions and methods of the present invention may also
be used in the prevention of disease progression, such as in chemoprevention of the
progression of a premalignant lesion to a malignant lesion.
[0142] One or more conjugates, complexes or compositions of the invention, or one or more
of the pharmaceutical compositions of the invention, may be administered to an animal
in need thereof by a variety of routes of administration, including orally, rectally,
parenterally (including intravenously, intra-arterially, intramuscularly, intraperitoneally,
intracisternally, subcutaneously and intra-articular injection and infusion), intrasystemically,
vaginally, intraperitoneally, topically (as by powders, ointments, drops or transdermal
patch), buccally, as an oral or nasal spray or by inhalation. By the invention, an
effective amount of the conjugates, complexes or compositions can be administered
in vitro,
ex vivo or
in vivo to cells or to animals suffering from or predisposed to a particular disorder, thereby
preventing, delaying, diagnosing or treating the disorder in the animal. As used herein,
"an effective amount of a conjugate (or complex or composition)" refers to an amount
such that the conjugate (or complex or composition) carries out the biological activity
of the bioactive component (
i.e., the cytokine or antagonist thereof) of the conjugate, complex or composition, thereby
preventing, delaying, diagnosing, treating or curing the physical disorder in the
animal to which the conjugate, complex or composition of the invention has been administered.
One of ordinary skill will appreciate that effective amounts of the conjugates, complexes
or compositions of the invention can be determined empirically, according to standard
methods well-known to those of ordinary skill in the pharmaceutical and medical arts;
see, e.g.,
Beers, M.H., et al., eds. (1999) Merck Manual of Diagnosis & Therapy, 17th edition,
Merck and Co., Rahway, NJ;
Hardman, J.G., et al., eds. (2001) Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis
of Therapeutics, 10th edition, McGraw-Hill Medical Publishing Division, New York;
Speight, T.M., et al., eds. (1997) Avery's Drug Treatment, 4th edition, Adis International,
Auckland, New Zealand;
Katzung, B.G. (2000) Basic & Clinical Pharmacology, 8th edition, Lange Medical Books/McGraw-Hill,
New York .
[0143] It will be understood that, when administered to a human patient, the total daily,
weekly or monthly dosage of the conjugates, complexes and compositions of the present
invention will be decided by the attending physician within the scope of sound medical
judgment. For example, satisfactory results are obtained by administration of certain
of the conjugates, complexes or compositions of the invention at appropriate dosages
depending on the specific bioactive compound used, which dosages will be readily familiar
to the ordinarily skilled artisan or which may be readily determined empirically using
only routine experimentation. According to this aspect of the invention, the conjugates,
complexes or compositions can be administered once or, in divided doses,
e.g., once or twice per day, or once or twice per week, or once or twice per month,
etc. Appropriate dose regimens for various modes of administration (
e.g., parenteral, subcutaneous, intramuscular, intraocular, intranasal,
etc.) can also be readily determined empirically, using only routine experimentation,
or will be readily apparent to the ordinarily skilled artisan, depending on the identity
of the bioactive component (
i.e., the cytokine or antagonist thereof) of the conjugate, complex or composition.
[0144] In additional applications, the conjugates, complexes and compositions of the invention
may be used to specifically target a diagnostic or therapeutic agent to a cell, tissue,
organ or organism that expresses a receptor for, binds, incorporates or otherwise
can take up, the bioactive component (
i.e., the cytokine or antagonist thereof) of the conjugate, complex or composition. Methods
according to this aspect may comprise, for example, contacting the cell, tissue, organ
or organism with one or more conjugates, complexes or compositions of the invention,
which additionally comprise one or more diagnostic or therapeutic agents, such that
the conjugate, complex or composition is bound to or taken up by the cell, tissue,
organ or organism, thereby delivering the diagnostic or therapeutic agent to the cell,
tissue, organ or organism. The diagnostic or therapeutic agent used may be at least
one agent selected from a nucleic acid, an organic compound, a protein or peptide,
an antibody, an enzyme, a glycoprotein, a lipoprotein, an element, a lipid, a saccharide,
an isotope, a carbohydrate, an imaging agent, a detectable probe, or any combination
thereof, which may be detectably labeled as described herein. A therapeutic agent
of the present invention may have a therapeutic effect on the target cell (or tissue,
organ or organism), the effect being selected from correcting a defective gene or
protein, a drug action, a toxic effect, a growth stimulating effect, a growth inhibiting
effect, a metabolic effect, a catabolic affect, an anabolic effect, an antiviral effect,
an antifungal effect, an antibacterial effect, a hormonal effect, a neurohumoral effect,
a cell differentiation stimulatory effect, a cell differentiation inhibitory effect,
a neuromodulatory effect, an anti-neoplastic effect, an anti-tumor effect, an insulin
stimulating or inhibiting effect, a bone marrow stimulating effect, a pluripotent
stem cell stimulating effect, an immune system stimulating effect, and any other known
therapeutic effect that may be provided by a therapeutic agent delivered to a cell
(or tissue, organ or organism) via a delivery system according to this aspect of the
present invention.
[0145] Such additional therapeutic agents may be selected from known and new compounds and
compositions including antibiotics, steroids, cytotoxic agents, vasoactive drugs,
antibodies and other therapeutic agents. Examples of such agents include antibiotics
and other drugs used in the treatment of bacterial shock, such as gentamycin, tobramycin,
nafcillin, parenteral cephalosporins,
etc.; adrenal corticosteroids and analogs thereof, such as dexamethasone, mitigate the
cellular injury caused by endotoxins; vasoactive drugs, such as an
alpha adrenergic receptor blocking agent (
e.g., phenoxybenzamine), a
beta adrenergic receptor agonist (
e.g., isoproterenol), and dopamine.
[0146] The conjugates, complexes and compositions of the invention may also be used for
diagnosis of disease and to monitor therapeutic response. In certain such methods,
the conjugates, complexes or compositions of the invention may comprise one or more
detectable labels (such as those described elsewhere herein). In specific such methods,
these detectably labeled conjugates, complexes or compositions of the invention may
be used to detect cells, tissues, organs or organisms expressing receptors for, or
otherwise taking up, the bioactive component (
i.e., cytokine or antagonist thereof) of the conjugates, complexes or compositions. In
one example of such a method, the cell, tissue, organ or organism is contacted with
one or more of the conjugates, complexes or compositions of the invention under conditions
that favor the binding or uptake of the conjugate by the cell, tissue or organism
(
e.g., by binding of the conjugate to a cell-surface receptor or by pinocytosis or diffusion
of the conjugate into the cell), and then detecting the conjugate bound to or incorporated
into the cell using detection means specific to the label used (
e.g., fluorescence detection for fluorescently labeled conjugates; magnetic resonance
imaging for magnetically labeled conjugates; radioimaging for radiolabeled conjugates;
etc.). Other uses of such detectably labeled conjugates may include, for example, imaging
a cell, tissue, organ or organism, or the internal structure of an animal (including
a human), by administering an effective amount of a labeled form of one or more of
the conjugates of the invention and measuring detectable radiation associated with
the cell, tissue, organ or organism (or animal). Methods of detecting various types
of labels and their uses in diagnostic and therapeutic imaging are well known to the
ordinarily skilled artisan, and are described elsewhere herein.
[0147] In another aspect, the conjugates and compositions of the invention may be used in
methods to modulate the concentration or activity of a specific receptor for the bioactive
component of the conjugate on the surface of a cell that expresses such a receptor.
By "modulating" the activity of a given receptor is meant that the conjugate, upon
binding to the receptor, either activates or inhibits the physiological activity (
e.g., the intracellular signaling cascade) mediated through that receptor. While not intending
to be bound by any particular mechanistic explanation for the regulatory activity
of the conjugates of the present invention, such conjugates can antagonize the physiological
activity of a cellular receptor by binding to the receptor via the bioactive component
of the conjugate, thereby blocking the binding of the natural agonist (
e.g., the unconjugated bioactive component) and preventing activation of the receptor
by the natural agonist, while not inducing a substantial activation of the physiological
activity of the receptor itself. Methods according to this aspect of the invention
may comprise one or more steps, for example contacting the cell (which may be done
in vitro or
in vivo) with one or more of the conjugates of the invention, under conditions such that
the conjugate (
i.e., the bioactive component portion of the conjugate) binds to a receptor for the bioactive
component on the cell surface but does not substantially activate the receptor. Such
methods will be useful in a variety of diagnostic, and therapeutic applications, as
the ordinarily skilled artisan will readily appreciate.
Kits
[0148] The invention also provides kits comprising the conjugates and/or compositions of
the invention. Such kits typically comprise a carrier, such as a box, carton, tube
or the like, having in close confinement therein one or more containers, such as vials,
tubes, ampoules, bottles, syringes and the like, wherein a first container contains
one or more of the conjugates and/or compositions of the present invention. The kits
encompassed by this aspect of the present invention may further comprise one or more
additional components (
e.g., reagents and compounds) necessary for carrying out one or more particular applications
of the conjugates and compositions of the present invention, such as one or more components
useful for the diagnosis, treatment or prevention of a particular disease or physical
disorder (
e.g., one or more additional therapeutic compounds or compositions, one or more diagnostic
reagents, one or more carriers or excipients, and the like), one or more additional
conjugate or compositions of the invention, and the like.
[0149] It will be readily apparent to one of ordinary skill in the relevant arts that other
suitable modifications and adaptations to the methods and applications described herein
may be made without departing from the scope of the invention or any embodiment thereof.
Having now described the present invention in detail, the same will be more clearly
understood by reference to the following examples, which are included herewith for
purposes of illustration only.
EXAMPLES
[0150] Figure 1 shows lysine residues distributed throughout the regions of Binding Site
1 and Binding Site 2 of interferon-
beta, whereas the amino terminus of the polypeptide chain is remote from the receptor-binding
regions of the protein, demonstrating that IFN-
beta is an RN cytokine.
[0151] These examples, especially as graphically illustrated by Figure 1, provide a readily
visualized basis for understanding the potential role of steric hindrance of protein-receptor
interactions by PEGylation of receptor-binding proteins within or adjacent to receptor-binding
domains of these bioactive components. The large volume that is occupied by the highly
extended and flexible PEG strands also would sterically hinder the association of
monomers of certain receptor-binding proteins into functional homodimers or homotrimers,
if the PEG were coupled in regions that are reported to be required for interactions
between the monomers. Thus, the targeting of PEGylation to sites that are remote from
receptor-binding regions of receptor-binding proteins decreases the likelihood that
PEGylation will interfere with the intermolecular interactions that are required for
their function. By proceeding in accordance with the method of this invention, more
of the benefits that are expected from PEGylation of receptor-binding proteins can
be realized. The resulting conjugates combine the expected benefits of improved solubility,
increased bioavailability, greater stability and decreased immunogenicity with an
unexpectedly high retention of bioactivity.
Example 1: PEGylation of Interferon-β-1b by Reductive Alkylation
[0152] In one series of embodiments, conjugates of interferon-β-1b ("IFN-β-1b;" SEQ ID NO:1)
with monomethoxyPEG ("mPEG") were synthesized by reductive alkylation with 20-kDa
or 30-kDa mPEG-aldehyde, using borane-pyridine complex as the reducing agent (Cabacungan,
J.C.,
et al., supra). Interferon-β-1b, free of carrier proteins and at a concentration of about 1.9 mg/mL
in a solution containing approximately 3 mg/mL SDS, was obtained from Chiron Corporation
(Emeryville, CA). This protein is referred to as "BETASERON®" in the formulation that
is marketed by Berlex Laboratories, a U.S. subsidiary of Schering AG, and as "BETAFERON®"
in the formulation that is marketed directly by Schering. Borane-pyridine complex
(Aldrich 17,975-2, Milwaukee, WI) was diluted to 450 mM borane in 60% (v/v) aqueous
acetonitrile. 20-kDa mPEG
n-propionaldehyde ("PEG-aldehyde;" NOF Corporation, Tokyo) was dissolved in 1 mM HCl
at a concentration of 30 mg/mL. After dissolution, 0.1 mL of the PEG-aldehyde solution
was added to 0.7 mL of IFN-β-1b solution and mixed. Addition of 0.05 mL of 100 mM
acetate buffer, pH 4.6, gave the reaction mixture a final pH of 5. To another reaction
mixture containing 0.1 mL of PEG-aldehyde solution and 0.7 mL of IFN-β-1b solution,
0.05 mL of a mixture of 200 mM acetic acid, 200 mM Na
2HPO
4 and 68 mM NaOH was added to give a final pH of 6.4. To three 0.85-mL aliquots of
each of these mixtures, 0.1 mL of either water, 1.5 M NaCl or 10 mg/mL SDS was added.
The diluted borane-pyridine complex was then added to each reaction mixture to give
a final concentration of 23 mM borane. Each of the resultant reaction mixtures was
divided into two tubes that were incubated for 2 days at either 4°C or room temperature.
Aliquots of the reaction mixtures were analyzed by size-exclusion HPLC in 10 mM Tris,
150 mM NaCl, pH 8.3, containing 0.3 mg/mL SDS, at a flow rate of 0.5 mL/min on a Superose™
12 column (Amersham Biosciences HR 10/30; Piscataway, NJ). The absorbance of the eluate
was monitored at 214 nm. With an input ratio of approximately 2 moles of PEG per mole
of protein, the predominant species was monoPEGylated interferon-β-1b (PEG
1-IFN-β-1b). The yield of PEG
1-IFN-β-1b was between 65% and 72% under all of the tested incubation conditions (at
pH 5 or pH 6.4; at 4°C or room temperature; in the presence or absence of NaCl or
additional SDS).
[0153] In other experiments, NaBH
3CN was used as the reducing agent and the samples were analyzed by size-exclusion
HPLC on a Superdex 200 HR 30/10 column (Amersham Biosciences) in 10 mM acetate, 150
mM NaCl, pH 4.6, containing 1 mg/mL SDS, at a flow rate of 0.5 mL/min. The results
of one such experiment are shown in Figure 2. The input concentrations of 20-kDa mPEG
were approximately 0.1 mM, 0.2 mM and 0.4 mM (designated "1x," "2x" and "4x" in Figure
2 respectively) and the reaction mixtures were incubated at room temperature for 3
days. The control sample (
bottom tracing) was incubated with only the reducing agent. When the same samples were chromatographed
under the same conditions except for the omission of SDS from the elution buffer,
the unPEGylated IFN-β-1b was not detected in the eluate. Similar results were obtained
when 30-kDa mPEG n-propionaldehyde was substituted for 20-kDa mPEG n-propionaldehyde
in the methods of this Example 1. Similar results were also obtained when 10-kDa mPEG
n-propionaldehyde was substituted for 20-kDa mPEG n-propionaldehyde. Alternatively,
mPEG-acetaldehydes or butyraldehydes can be employed. Selective N-terminal PEGylation
of IFN-
beta by the method of this example produces conjugates of enhanced bioactivity whether
the N-terminal amino acid is serine, as in IFN-β-1b, methionine, as in IFN-β-1 a,
or another amino acid.
Example 2: Determination of the Extent of N-terminal PEGylation by Oxidative Cleavage
[0154] The fraction of PEG coupled to the
alpha amino group of the N-terminal serine residue of a protein, rather than the
epsilon amino groups of accessible lysine residues, was assessed by a novel method involving
oxidative cleavage of the alkylated serine residue. A reaction mixture in which PEG
1-IFN-β-1b was the predominant species (approximately 70% of the total protein) was
dialyzed against 1 mg/mL SDS in acetate buffer, pH 4.6. The pH was then adjusted to
7.4 by the addition of 10 mM Na
3PO
4. Portions of this solution were incubated at 4°C for up to 20 hours in the absence
of sodium periodate or with final concentrations of 0.1 through 10 mM NaIO
4. Following incubation, the reaction mixtures were chromatographed on a Superose™
6 column in 10 mM acetate buffer, 150 mM NaCl, pH 4.6, containing 1 mg/mL SDS. Similar
results with respect to the recovery of monoPEGylated IFN-β-1b were obtained on a
Superose 12 column, with the advantage that the Superose 12 column permitted resolution
of the unmodified IFN-β-1b from the "salt peak." A graph of the areas under the peaks
of absorbance at 214 nm corresponding to PEG
1-IFB-β-1b
versus periodate concentration showed a steep decrease in the area up to about 1 mM periodate
and a nearly constant level of residual PEG
1-IFN-β-1b between about 1 mM and 10 mM periodate. Similar analyses after treatment
with ≥3 mM periodate for 0.2, 2 or 7 hours indicated that the oxidative cleavage of
the serine-linked PEG was substantially complete within 2 hours. The residual PEG
conjugates contained only lysine-linked PEG, which linkage was stable to treatment
with up to at least 10 mM periodate. The fraction of the conjugates that survived
oxidation with periodate was similar to the fraction estimated by Edman degradation
to be PEGylated at sites other than the amino terminal. Similar results are obtained
when the distribution of conjugates that are stable or unstable to the oxidative procedures
described in this example is assessed by a variety of analytical methods, including,
but not limited to reversed phase chromatography, capillary electrophoresis, gel electrophoresis,
ultracentrifugation, mass spectroscopy, light scattering or ultrafiltration.
[0155] Interferon-β-1b was coupled to 20-kDa PEG-aldehyde with borane-pyridine complex as
the reducing agent under various conditions, as described in Example 1. The monoPEGylated
IFN-β-1b was purified by chromatography on a Superose 12 column in 20 mM sodium phosphate
buffer, 150 mM NaCl, pH 7.4, containing 0.3 mg/mL SDS, at a flow rate of 0.5 mL/min.
Portions of the purified PEG
1-IFN-β-1b conjugates were incubated for 2 hours at room temperature in the absence
or presence of 3 mM sodium periodate. Figure 3 shows chromatograms of the untreated
and oxidatively cleaved samples of PEG
1-IFN-β-1b on a Superose 12 column in 10 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, pH 8.3, containing 0.3
mg/mL SDS, run at 0.5 mL/min. These data indicate that approximately 90% of the PEG
in PEG
1-IFN-β-1b synthesized at pH 6.4 was coupled to the N-terminal serine. This result
was not altered significantly by performing the coupling after the addition of either
150 mM NaCl (
lower curves) or 1 mg/mL SDS (
upper curves) to the reaction mixtures or by performing the coupling reactions at pH 5 (results
not shown). Similar results are obtained when monohydroxyPEG
n-propionaldehydes are substituted for mPEG
n-propionaldehydes or when PEG aldehydes other than
n-propionaldehyde are employed. Likewise, the method of this example measures the extent
of N-terminal reductively alkylated proteins other than IFN-β-1b, wherein such proteins
have an N-terminal serine or threonine residue. Similarly, oxidative cleavage of polymers
linked by reductive alkylation to N-terminal serine or threonine residues is achieved
using periodates other than sodium periodate, including: sodium metaperiodate (referred
to elsewhere herein and known in the art as sodium periodate), potassium metaperiodate,
lithium metaperiodate, calcium periodate, barium periodate and periodic acid.
[0156] Polymer conjugates synthesized by reductive alkylation of other cytokines to which
the method of this Example 2 are applicable include interleukin-1-
alpha (Geoghegan, K.F.,
et al.,
supra) and megakaryocyte growth and development factor (Guerra, P.I.,
et al.,
supra).
Example 3: Purification of Conjugates and Removal of Free PEG and SDS by Reversed Phase Chromatography
[0157] Reversed phase ("RP") chromatography was used by
S. Hershenson et al. (U.S. Patent No. 4,894,330), to purify IFN-β-1b after its expression in bacterial cell culture. The present
inventors adapted the methods of Hershenson
et al. to separate the individual PEGylated species synthesized as described in Example
1 from the unmodified protein. This procedure also resolved the free PEG and most
of the SDS from the protein peaks. Figure 4 shows an analytical chromatogram on a
Jupiter™ C4 300Å column (15 cm x 4.6 mm; Phenomenex; Torrance, CA) with a gradient
of 20% acetonitrile plus 0.04% trifluoroacetic acid to 80% acetonitrile plus 0.1%
trifluoroacetic acid. One-tenth milliliter of the reaction mixture was loaded and
0.5 mL fractions were collected at a flow rate of 1 mL/min. A peak of IFN-β-1b that
was unmodified except by exposure to the PEGylation reagents ("Mock PEGylated") and
peaks of PEG conjugates containing one or more strands of PEG per molecule of protein
were detected by monitoring the absorbance at 280 nm (
solid curve). In this experiment, the column was maintained at 40°C. Qualitatively similar results,
but with different retention times, were obtained by chromatography at room temperature.
[0158] The results of assays of SDS in the collected fractions are shown by the
open triangles. A stock solution of the SDS assay reagent contained 1 mg/mL of a carbocyanine dye,
Stains-All (Sigma, # E-9379; 3,3'-diethyl-9-methyl-4,5,4',5'-dibenzothiacarbocyanine),
in 50% (v/v) aqueous isopropanol (
Rusconi, F., et al., (2001) Anal Biochem 295:31-37). The working reagent was prepared just before use by mixing 2 mL of the stock solution
plus 2 mL of N,N-dimethylformamide and 41 mL of water. Addition of SDS to this reagent
caused spectral changes that are specific to SDS and resulted in a decrease in the
absorbance peak at 510-515 nm and the appearance of an absorbance peak at 439 nm.
The changes in absorbance at 439 nm upon addition of 2 mcL of each fraction from the
RP chromatography column to 250 mcL of the working reagent in a 96-well plate were
monitored in a SpectraMax 250 Plate reader (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA).
[0159] The results of an assay for PEG in the collected fractions are shown by the
filled circles in Figure 4. The PEG assay reagent was prepared immediately before use by mixing
1 volume of 20% (w/v) barium chloride in 1 N HCl with 4 volumes of 4 mg/mL iodine
in 1% (w/v) potassium iodide. From each fraction of the RP chromatography column (and
the PEG standards), a 10 mcL aliquot was added to 90 mcL of water in the wells of
a 96-well plate, followed by 100 mcL of PEG assay reagent. After the samples and reagent
were mixed and incubated at room temperature for 15 minutes, the absorbance at 508
nm was measured in a SpectraMax plate reader. The graphs in Figure 4 demonstrate that
RP chromatography under these conditions separated the Mock PEGylated protein from
conjugates containing one or more strands of 20-kDa PEG, while resolving the unbound
PEG and SDS from the conjugates. Similar results were obtained with conjugates containing
PEGs of other molecular weights (
e.g., 10-kDa or 30-kDa PEG) and other acid-stable linkages between the PEG and the IFN-β-1b.
Example 4: Chromatographic and Electrophoretic Analyses of Purified Fractions from Preparative
Reversed Phase HPLC
[0160] Reversed phase chromatography under conditions similar to those described in Example
3 was performed on larger samples (0.3 or 0.5 mL) of PEGylation reaction mixtures
on the same Jupiter C4 column with a modified gradient. When larger samples were loaded,
resolution among the various forms of interferon (Mock PEGylated, PEG
1-IFN-β-1b or conjugates with more than one strand of PEG) was not as clear as that
shown in Figure 4. Nevertheless, fractions that were highly enriched either in Mock
PEGylated or in monoPEGylated protein were obtained, as shown by rechromatography
of small aliquots of the partially purified fractions on the same RP column (Figure
5). The chromatograms were analyzed using EZChrom Elite software (Scientific Software,
Inc., Pleasanton, CA). From this analysis, the preparation shown in the
upper curve (Fraction 53 from the preparative RP column) contained about 70-80% Mock PEGylated
IFN-β-1b, while the preparation shown in the
middle curve (Fraction 51) contained about 99% PEG
1-IFN-β-1b. The
bottom curve in Figure 5 shows a chromatogram of the reaction mixture from which the fractions
were derived, in which about 19% of the absorbance was associated with the Mock PEGylated
protein, about 61% with the peak of PEG
1-IFN, about 12% with the peak labeled PEG
2-IFN, and 5-6% with forms that eluted earlier than PEG
2-IFN. Qualitatively similar results are obtained when reversed phase columns from
other manufacturers are used.
[0161] The same reaction mixture (analyzed by RP chromatography in Figure 5) and two fractions
of PEG-interferon purified by RP chromatography were analyzed by polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis in the presence of SDS ("SDS-PAGE"). The results are shown in Figures
6 and 7. Replicate samples were incubated with a reducing agent (Invitrogen, # NP0004;
Carlsbad, CA) or without reducing agent for 10 minutes either at ambient temperature
or at 102°C and electrophoresed for 140 minutes at 120 V through a 4-12% Bis-Tris
gel (Invitrogen, # NP0321B). The tracings shown in Figures 6 and 7 were from the samples
that were neither reduced nor heated. The proteins in the gel were stained with SYPRO
® Ruby Stain (Molecular Probes # S-12000, Eugene, OR), illuminated at 302 nm and photographed
using an Orange/Red visible light filter (Molecular Probes, # S-6655) (Figure 6).
The digital images were analyzed using ID Imaging Analysis software from Kodak (Rochester,
NY). The horizontal axis represents migration distance relative to the dye front (100
units) and the vertical axis represents the relative intensity of the fluorescent
protein stain. The baseline values for the various lanes have been shifted vertically
to clarify the presentation of the results. The
bottom tracing represents a mixture of standard proteins (Mark12™, # LC5677 from Invitrogen), in
which the peaks numbered 1 through 9 are identified as proteins having the following
molecular weights (all in kDa): 200, 116, 97.1, 66.3, 55.4, 36.5, 31.0, 21.5 and 14.4.
The
second tracing from the bottom shows the electrophoretic analysis of the reaction mixture. In this mixture, the
percentages of protein stain associated with each form of IFN-β-1b were: 14% Mock
PEGylated; 64% PEG
1-IFN; 20% PEG
2-IFN and about 2% of forms larger than PEG
2-IFN. The
third tracing from the bottom shows a fraction from the RP chromatographic column that contained 33±1% PEG
1-IFN; 64±1% PEG
2-IFN and about 6% of forms larger than PEG
2-IFN. The
top curve shows a fraction containing 95 ± 1% PEG
1-IFN, about 2% of Mock PEGylated IFN and about 2% of forms larger than PEG
2-IFN. The percentages indicated above are the mean and standard deviation of results
of four replicate analyses of each sample. Qualitatively similar results were obtained
with PEGs of 10 kDa and 30 kDa.
[0162] Figure 7 displays the results from SDS-PAGE analyses, as described for Figure 6,
except the gel was stained for PEG using 20% (w/v) BaCl
2 in 1 N HCl combined with 4 volumes of 4 mg/mL I
2 in 1% (w/v) KI. The
bottom tracing represents a mixture of pre-stained standard proteins (SeeBlue Plus2™, Invitrogen
# LC5625), in which the peaks numbered 1 through 9 identify the proteins with the
following
apparent molecular weights (in kDa): 204, 111, 68.8, 51.5, 40.2, 28.9, 20.7, 14.9 and
c. 6. Quantitative analysis of the PEG-stained gel indicates that about 99% of the
PEG in Fraction 51 from the RP column (
top curve) is associated with PEG
1-IFN, while the fraction enriched in the diPEG conjugate (
second curve from top) contained 25 ± 1% of PEG
1-IFN and about 3% of forms larger than PEG
2-IFN, in addition to about 71 % of PEG
2-IFN. In estimating the relative quantities of the various forms of IFN-β-1b stained
for PEG, the area under the PEG
2-IFN peak was divided by 2. In the reaction mixture (
second curve from bottom), about 50% of PEG stain was associated with unbound PEG, about 35% with PEG
1-IFN, about 14% with PEG
2-IFN and about 1% with forms larger than PEG
2-IFN.
Example 5: Selective N-terminal Oxidation of Interferon-β-1b and Coupling to a Low Molecular
Weight Carbazate
[0163] An alternative method of coupling mPEG to the amino terminus of IFN-β-1b was used
to increase the apparent selectivity for this attachment site to about 100% from the
value of about 90% obtained by reductive alkylation as described in Examples 1 and
2. The first step in this method of PEGylation is based on a similar principle to
the oxidative cleavage of reductively alkylated PEG-IFN-β-1b described in Example
2. This approach takes advantage of the unique sensitivity of an N-terminal serine
or threonine residue to be cleaved to an aldehyde by periodate, as reported by H.B.F.
Dixon (
supra) and by
K.F. Geoghegan et al., ((1992) Bioconjug Chem 3:138-146;
Geoghegan, K.F., U.S. Patent No. 5,362,852;
Drummond, R.J., et al., U.S. Patent No. 6,423,685). When the N-terminal serine residue of IFN-β-1b was maximally oxidized,
e.g., after treatment with 3 mM NaIO
4 for 2 hours at room temperature, the resulting peak of protein absorbance appeared
broad upon preliminary size-exclusion chromatography one a Superose 6 column. Subsequent
analysis on a Superose 12 column in 10 mM acetate, 150 mM NaCl, pH 4.6, containing
0.3 mg/mL SDS, clearly resolved the oxidized protein into two forms that were inferred
to be monomers and dimers of the protein. The identities of these two peaks were confirmed
by SDS-PAGE, performed as described in Example 4.
[0164] Analyses by reversed phase chromatography further documented the discovery that preferential
oxidation of the N-terminal serine was achieved with minimal oxidation of at least
one essential methionine residue.
L.S. Lin et al., ((1996) Pharm Biotechnol 9:275-301) and
L. Lin ((1998) Dev Biol Stand 96:97-104) showed that RP chromatography resolved preparations of IFN-β-1b into a major component
("Peak B") and a minor component that eluted earlier ("Peak A"). Lin ((1998)
supra) further demonstrated that Peak A contained IFN-β-1b in which a functionally active
methionine (Met 61 of BETASERON) was oxidized to a sulfoxide. The present inventors
have discovered conditions under which nearly complete oxidation of the N-terminal
serine can be achieved with minimal oxidation of Met 61, as reflected in the percentage
of Peak A in RP chromatograms. Oxidation of Met 61, as measured by RP chromatography,
was used as a surrogate marker for oxidation of the other methionine residues of IFN-β-1b
(Met 35 and Met 116 of BETASERON).
[0165] Studies of the extent of oxidation of Met 61 as a function of the pH and time of
incubation with 0.25 mM NaIO
4 at 4°C are summarized in Table 1.
Table 1: Effects of pH and the time of exposure to periodate on the extent of methionine oxidation,
as measured by the area of Peak A after reversed phase chromatography.
| Time of Exposure to 0.25 mM NaIO4 |
Percent Peak A pH 6.9 |
Percent Peak A pH 7.7 |
| 0 |
4.9 |
4.8' |
| 2 hours |
5.1 |
5.2 |
| 6 hours |
5.6 |
5.0 |
| 18 hours |
7.3 |
5.4 |
| 9 days |
21.2 |
15.7 |
[0166] The demonstration of aldehyde formation by N-terminal oxidation of IFN-β-1b was facilitated
by its conjugation to 9-fluorenylmethyl carbazate ("Fmoc-carbazate," also known in
the art as "Fmoc-hydrazide") (Fluka 46917;
Zhang, R.-E., et al., (1991) Anal Biochem 195:160-167). The distinctive absorbance spectra of Fmoc-carbazate adducts of IFN-β-1b enabled
their discrimination from the corresponding unconjugated forms of the protein without
the use of a fluorescence detector. Interferon-β-1b was oxidized by treatment with
various concentrations of NaIO
4 at pH 7.8 for various periods of time (0.5 to 2 hours at room temperature or up to
several days in the cold). In the experiments shown in Figure 8, the protein was incubated
for 1 hour at room temperature with 0.5 mM NaIO
4. The reaction was terminated by the addition of glycerol. After 30 minutes at room
temperature, the pH was reduced by the addition of acetic acid to a final concentration
of 19 mM. To each mL of resultant mixture, 182 mcL of 15 mM Fmoc-carbazate in methanol
was added to give a final concentration of 2.3 mM Fmoc-carbazate. This reaction mixture
was incubated overnight at 4-8°C prior to analysis by reversed phase chromatography.
[0167] Figure 8 illustrates the effects on RP chromatographic behavior of incubation of
IFN-β-1b with 0.5 mM NaIO
4 for 1 hour at room temperature and of coupling of the products of oxidation to Fmoc-carbazate.
A comparison of the results for the control sample
(upper curve) with those for the oxidized sample (
middle curve with open circles) shows that the retention times of both the main component and of Peak A (reflecting
the presence of about 5% of IFN-β-1b with an oxidized methionine residue) are increased
by 0.2 to 0.3 minutes by oxidation. As measured by the percentage of Peak A, compared
to Peak A', less than 1% oxidation of methionine was detected after incubation with
NaIO
4 under these conditions.
[0168] The results of bioassays that are described in Example 8 provide additional evidence
that controlled oxidation (
e.g., for up to 2 hours in the cold) with 0.1 to 0.3 mM periodate preserved the integrity
of the amino acid residues of the protein that are essential for bioactivity.
[0169] As shown in the
lower curve with filled triangles in Figure 8, evidence for the formation of Fmoc adducts was provided by the shift
to longer retention times for both the major component and Peak A' (the N-terminal
aldehyde derivative of Peak A). Furthermore, there was a 50% increase in the ratio
of absorbance at 278 nm to that at 214 nm for the shifted peaks. For both forms of
the protein, the increases in retention times due to formation of the corresponding
N-terminal aldehydes (0.2-0.3 minutes) were much smaller than the increases resulting
from formation of the corresponding Fmoc derivatives (1.0-1.2 minutes).
Example 6: Synthesis of PEG-carbazate Adducts of N-Terminally Oxidized Interferon-β-1b
[0170] Interferon-β-1b, selectively oxidized at the amino terminus as described in Example
5, was also coupled to a carbazate derivative of PEG, by an adaptation of methods
described by
R.J. Drummond et al. (PCT Publication No WO 99/45026;
U.S. Patent No. 6,423,685) and by
S. Zalipsky et al., (PCT Publication No. WO 92/16555 A1 and in.
Harris, J.M, et al., eds., (1997) Chemistry and Biological Applications of Poly(ethylene
glycol), pp. 318-341, Washington, D.C., American Chemical Society). PEG-carbazate was synthesized by the reaction of hydrazine with a p-nitrophenyl
carbonate derivative of 20-kDa PEG ("NPC-PEG" from NOF Corporation). After incubation
of the protein at room temperature in the absence of periodate or in the presence
of 0.125 mM NaIO
4 for 0.5, 1 or 2 hours, the samples were diluted with 4 volumes of 20-kDa PEG-carbazate
in 10 mM acetate buffer, 150 mM NaCl, pH 4.6, containing 1 mg/mL SDS, and incubated
for 1 day at room temperature. The samples were analyzed by size-exclusion chromatography
on a Superose 12 column in 10 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, pH 8.3, containing 0.3 mg/mL SDS.
As shown in Figure 9, oxidation of the protein for up to 2 hours prior to reaction
with PEG-carbazate resulted in a progressive decrease in the concentration of the
unmodified protein (eluted at a retention time of about 25 minutes) and a progressive
increase in the proportion of absorbance associated with the PEG
1-IFN-β-1b conjugate (eluted at a retention time of about 20 minutes). Yields of PEG
1-IFN-β-1b exceeding 80% have been obtained by this method. Similar results were obtained
using monocarbazate derivatives of 10-kDa or 30-kDa PEG.
Example 7 Bioassay of MonoPEGylated Interferon-β-1b, Purified by Reversed Phase HPLC
[0171] The use of human Daudi Burkitt's lymphoma cells (ATCC #CCL-231, Manassas, VA) for
antiproliferative assays of interferon-β-1a and various muteins was described by
L. Runkel et al. ((2000) Biochemistry 39:2538-2551). Figure 10 depicts the results of assays of the antiproliferative activities on
Daudi cells of untreated IFN-β-1b and an N-terminally monoPEGylated conjugate that
was partially purified by RP chromatography. The cells were grown in supplemented
RPMI1640 medium (Gibco #11875-093, Grand Island, NY) with 10% (v/v) fetal calf serum
(Irvine Scientific #3000, Santa Ana, CA). One hundred thousand cells were inoculated
into 250 mcL of medium in each well of a 48-well plate and allowed to grow at 37°C
with 5% CO
2 for 4 hours prior to being mixed with an equal volume of pre-warmed medium or dilutions
of IFN-β-1b or a PEG conjugate in medium. During 3 days, the number of cells diluted
only with medium increased to 590 +/- 24% (s.d.) of the number at time zero, based
on cell counts with a Coulter counter (Model Z1, Miami, FL). Under conditions of maximal
growth inhibition by IFN-β-1b or its PEG conjugates, the number of cells increased
to 283 +/- 8% of the number at time zero. Thus the maximal percent of growth inhibition
observed in this experiment was 48%. The data in Figure 10 for various concentrations
of two preparations of IFN-β-1b are expressed as a percent of the inhibitable cell
growth.
[0172] Figure 10 shows the results from a study using dilutions of the stock solution of
IFN-β-1b and of fractions from the preparative reversed phase chromatographic experiment
described in Example 4 that contained either nearly pure monoPEG conjugate, as shown
in Figures 5-7 (Fraction 51), or nearly pure Mock PEGylated IFN-β-1b (Fraction 53
of the column shown in Figure 5). The samples were diluted, in triplicate, to 1 mcg/mL
in medium supplemented with fetal calf serum and sterilized by filtration through
a 0.2-micrometer filter. From each of the initial dilutions, a 32 ng/mL dilution and
subsequent serial dilutions were made. From the data in Figure 10, the concentration
of each preparation required for inhibition of 50% of the inhibitable cell growth
("IC
50") was calculated. The results showed that the mono-PEGylated IFN-β-1b (IC
50 = c. 40 pg/mL) was approximately 6 times as potent as the unmodified IFN-β-1b (IC
50 = c. 250 pg/mL). The mean increases in antiproliferative potencies of conjugates
with PEGs of various sizes, tested in a series of experiments similar to that shown
in Figure 22, had a range of about 2.5-fold (for 10 kDa PEG) to about 5-fold (for
30 kDa PEG).
[0173] Surprisingly, the Mock PEGylated preparation shown in Figure 10 had an IC
50 of about 80 pg/mL, which was intermediate between those of the stock solution of
IFN-β-1b and the monoPEGylated preparation. While not intending to be bound by theory
or any particular mechanistic explanation, it is plausible that the enhanced antiproliferative
potency of the Mock PEGylated preparation reflects the removal during reversed phase
chromatography of some inhibitory material that is present in the stock IFN-β-1b solution.
This interpretation is consistent with the results of size-exclusion chromatography
on a column of Superose 6 in a buffer containing SDS (as described in Example 1),
which revealed an absorbance peak at both. 214 nm and 280 mm that eluted between the
elution positions of IFN-β-1b and the "salt peak." Bioassay experiments similar to
those shown in Figure 10 were performed on Fraction 49 from the RP column, which contained
a mixture of PEG
2- and PEG
1-IFN-β-1b (see Figures 6 and 7). As in the case of the Mock PEGylated sample, the
multiply PEGylated sample had antiproliferative potency that was greater than that
of the stock solution of IFN-β-1b, but less than that of the monoPEGylated conjugate.
In other experiments, the increase in potency observed with monoPEGylated IFN-β-1b
ranged from six-fold to ten-fold. Similar increases in potency were observed with
the carbazate adducts described in Example 6, employing PEGs of 10, 20 and 30 kDa.
[0174] The antiproliferative potencies on Daudi cells obtained with the conjugates of this
invention can be compared with the reported specific activities of three pharmaceutical
forms of interferon-β measured in an antiviral assay. According to the respective
package inserts, the activities are .32 x 10
6 IU/mg for Berlex's BETASERON
® flan-β-16), 200 x 10
6 IU/mg for AVONEX
® (Biogen's formulation of IFN-β-1a) and 270 x 10
6 IU/mg for REBIF
® (Serono's formulation of IFN-β-1a). Accordingly, the increase of at least six-fold
in the potency of monoPEGylated BETASERON in the antiproliferative assay illustrated
in Figure 10 indicates that N-terminal PEGylation of BETASERON by the methods of this
invention has increased its potency to the range expected for the commercially available
glycosylated preparations, AVONEX and REBIF.
[0175] Previously, the solubility of nonglycosylated interferon-β (expressed in
Escherichia coli), has been enhanced by the use of acidic solutions (
Hanisch, W.H. et al., U.S. Patent No. 4,462,940) or by the addition of SDS (
Thomson, J.W., U.S. Patent No. 4,816,440). Without intending to be bound by theory, one mechanism by which PEGylation may
increase the antiproliferative efficacy of IFN-β-1b measured
in vitro is by decreasing its tendency to self-associate in the culture medium. Accordingly,
the observation that the sample enriched in PEG
2-IFN-β-1b was less effective than PEG
1-IFN-β-1b indicates that the positive effects of decreased aggregation may be overcome
by the negative effect of excessive PEGylation on the ability of this cytokine to
bind to its receptors and/or to initiate the signal transduction responsible for its
antiproliferative activity.
Example 8 Bioassays of Selectively Oxidized Interferon-β-1b
[0176] Assays of the antiproliferative activity on Daudi cells of IFN-β-1b oxidized to various
extents were performed as described in Example 7. The tested samples included the
stock solution of IFN-β-41b and samples that had been treated for several days at
4°C with 0.1, 0.3 or 3 mM periodate. The samples were diluted as described in Example
7 and mixed with an equal volume of Daudi cell suspension, 4 hours after inoculation
of the cells. The cells were grown for 2 days at 37°C with 5% CO
2 and then counted with a Coulter counter. The antiproliferative activity of IFN-β-1b
was unaffected or increased by treatment with 0.075-0.5 mM NaIO
4 under the conditions tested. Similar results were obtained in 3-day antiproliferative
assays, as described in Example 7. Antiproliferative potency was further enhanced
by conjugation of the selectively oxidized 1FN-β-1b with PEG-carbazate, as described
in Example 6. Similar results to those obtained with PEG-carbazate are obtained with
products of conjugation of selectively oxidized IFN-β-1b to PEG-hydrazide. In contrast,
the antiproliferative effect on Daudi cells was suppressed or completely abolished
by treatment of IFN-β-1b with higher concentrations of periodate,
e.g. 1-3 mM. These high concentrations of NaIO
4 induced dimerization of the protein, which was detected by size-exclusion HPLC on
a Superose 12 column, as described in Example 2, and oxidation of methionine, as detected
by reversed phase chromatography, as described in Example 3 (results not shown).
[0177] Bioactivities of the conjugates of this invention can be measured by art-known antiproliferative
and antiviral assays based on various cell lines or primary cultures, wherein the
cells bear cell-surface receptors for IFN-
beta. Alternatively, one can monitor responses to IFN-
beta that include the induction of neopterin (Pepinsky, R.B.,
et al., supra), β
2-microglobulin (Pepinsky, R.B.,
et al., supra), or 2'-5'-oligoadenylate synthetase (
Bruchelt, G., et al., (1992) Eur J. Clin Chem Clin Biochem 30:521-528) or reporter proteins operatively linked to the promoters of proteins that are inducible
by IFN-
beta. Additional methods for assaying the bioactivity of polymer conjugates of IFN-
beta include signal transduction assays and gene activation assays (
e.g., Pungor, E., et al., (1998) J Interferon Cytokine Res 18:1025-1030).
SEQUENCE LISTING
[0178]
<110> Mountain View Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
3475-S Edison Way
Menlo Park, California 94025
United States of America
<120> POLYMER CONJUGATES OF INTERFERON-BETA WITH ENHANCED BIOLOGICAL POTENCY
<130> 2057.012PC01/JAG/BJD
<140> (To be assigned)
<141> (herewith)
<150> US 60/479,914
<151> 2003-06-20
<150> US 60/479,913
<151> 2003-06-20
<150> US 60/436,020
<151> 2002-12-26
<160> 2
<170> FastSEQ for Windows Version 4.0
<210> 1
<211> 165
<212> PRT
<213> Homo sapiens
<400> 1


<210> 2
<211> 166
<212> PRT
<213> Homo sapiens
<400> 2
