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Poly(Ethylene Glycol) – the Pioneer in Polymer Therapeutics
Poly(Ethylene Glycol) – the Pioneer in Polymer Therapeutics
Poly(Ethylene Glycol) – the Pioneer in Polymer Therapeutics
Published on 07/02/2017
PEGs show a spectrum of unique physical and chemical properties, which have been described in literature extensively by the pioneers in PEGylation: Harris, Veronese and recently by Hermanson. Here are summarized the most common known properties.
3. Poly(ethylene glycol) – the Pioneer in Polymer Therapeutics
PEGs show a spectrum of unique physical and chemical properties, which have been described in literature extensively by the pioneers in PEGylation: Harris, Veronese and recently by Hermanson. Here are summarized the most common known properties.
PEG fragments can be attached to many different positions in a protein. Amino groups of any solvent accessible lysines as well as the N-termini are the most prominent candidates for conjugation together with thiol functions of available cysteins. The C-terminus or carboxylic groups from aspartic acid and glutamic acid in theory are also possible for conjugation, however, are rarely used.
PEG can also serve as spacer or cross linker between two moieties.
PEG provides high solubility and does not contain charged side chains.
PEG is FDA approved for internal application, is nontoxic, lacks T-cell epitopes, and shows no signs of immunogenicity in animal experiments.
PEG derivatives are available from pure, monodisperse, discrete molecules with short chain lengths or even one ethylene oxide unit only, to long polydisperse both linear and branched constructs, allowing regio-specific chemical conjugation with small molecules, proteins, peptides and biopharmaceuticals through their broad variety of terminal chemical groups available.
Chemical and Physical Properties of PEGs:
Good solubility in BOTH hydrophilic AND hydrophobic solvents as: water, toluene, methylene chloride, and many other organic solvents.
The solubility is influenced by forming derivatives.
Highly mobile in water with high exclusion volume; large hydrodynamic radius.
Form complexes with metal cations.
Can be used to precipitate proteins and nucleic acids.
Form two-phase system with aqueous solutions of other polymers.
Non-toxic, FDA approved for internal consumption. PEGylating Biopharmaceuticals and Small Molecules has the following effects:
Improves solubility of conjugated molecules.
Renders proteins non immunogenic and toleragenic.
Reduces the rate of renal clearance through the kidney and alters pharmacokinetics.
Renders surface protein rejection.
Alters electro osmotic flow.
Moves molecules across cell membranes.
Table: PEG conjugates in the pharmaceutical market*
* References:
The dawning era of polymer therapeutics; R. Duncan; Nat Rev Drug Discov 2003; 2: 347-360.
PEGylation, successful approach to drug delivery; F. M. Veronese and G. Pasut; Drug Discovery Today 2005; 10: 1451-1458. doi:10.1016/S1359- 6446(05)03575-0
Poly(ethylene glycol) in Drug Delivery: Pros and Cons as Well as Potential Alternatives; K. Knop, R. Hoogenboom, D. Fischer and U. S. Schubert; Angew Chem. Int. Ed. 2010; 49: 6288-6308. doi:10.1002/anie.200902672
Poly(ethylene glycol)-Prodrug Conjugates: Concept, Design, and Applications; S. S. Banerjee, N. Aher, R. Patil and J. Khandare; J Drug Deliv. 2012; 2012: 17. doi:10.1155/2012/103973
General References to PEGylation:
Poly(ethylene glycol) chemistry biotechnical and biomedical applications J. Milton Harris, Ed; G. Whitesides; Appl Biochem Biotechnol 1993; 41: 233-234. doi:10.1007/bf02916424
Peptide and Protein PEGylation III: Advances in Chemistry and Clinical Applications; F. M. Veronese and J. M. Harris; Adv Drug Deliv Rev 2008; 60: 1-88.
PEGylation, successful approach to drug delivery; F. M. Veronese and G. Pasut; Drug Discovery Today 2005; 10: 1451-1458. doi:10.1016/ S1359-6446(05)03575-0
Introduction and overview of peptide and protein pegylation; F. M. Veronese and G. Pasut; Adv Drug Deliv Rev 2002; 54: 453-456. doi:10.1016/S0169-409X(02)00020-0
Bioconjugate Techniques; G. T. Hermanson; 2nd Edition; Elsevier 2008; ISBN 978-0-12-370501-3
A Stepwise Huisgen Cycloaddition Process: Copper(I)-Catalyzed Regioselective “Ligation” of Azides and Terminal Alkynes; V. V. Rostovtsev, L. G. Green, V. V. Fokin and K. B. Sharpless; Angew Chem. Int. Ed. 2002; 41: 2596-2599. doi:10.1002/1521- 3773(20020715)41:143.0.co;2-4
Click Chemistry: Diverse Chemical Function from a Few Good Reactions; H. C. Kolb, M. G. Finn and K. B. Sharpless; Angew Chem. Int. Ed. 2001; 40: 2004-2021. doi:10.1002/1521- 3773(20010601)40:113.0.co;2-5
Peptidotriazoles on Solid Phase: [1,2,3]-Triazoles by Regiospecific Copper(I)-Catalyzed 1,3-Dipolar Cycloadditions of Terminal Alkynes to Azides; C. W. Tornøe, C. Christensen and M. Meldal; J Org Chem 2002; 67: 3057-3064. doi:10.1021/jo011148j
The growing impact of click chemistry on drug discovery; H. C. Kolb and K. B. Sharpless; Drug Discovery Today 2003; 8: 1128-1137. doi:10.1016/S1359-6446(03)02933-7
CuI-Catalyzed Alkyne–Azide “Click” Cycloadditions from a Mechanistic and Synthetic Perspective; V. D. Bock, H. Hiemstra and J. H. van Maarseveen; Eur J Org Chem 2006; 2006: 51-68. doi:10.1002/ ejoc.200500483
A3-type star polymers via click chemistry; O. Altintas, B. Yankul, G. Hizal and U. Tunca; J. Polym. Sci.: Part A: Polym. Chem. 2006; 44: 6458-6465. doi:10.1002/pola.21728
Preparation of alumina supported copper nanoparticles and their application in the synthesis of 1,2,3-triazoles; M. L. Kantam, V. S. Jaya, B. Sreedhar, M. M. Rao and B. M. Choudary; J Mol Catal. A: Chem 2006; 256: 273-277. doi:10.1016/j.molcata.2006.04.054
A Rapid and Versatile Method to Label Receptor Ligands Using “Click” Chemistry: Validation with the Muscarinic M1 Antagonist Pirenzepine; D. Bonnet, B. Ilien, J.-L. Galzi, S. Riché, C. Antheaune and M. Hibert; Bioconjug Chem 2006; 17: 1618-1623. doi:10.1021/ bc060140j
Alkyne-azide click reaction catalyzed by metallic copper under ultrasound; P. Cintas, A. Barge, S. Tagliapietra, L. Boffa and G. Cravotto; Nat Protoc 2010; 5: 607-16. doi:10.1038/nprot.2010.1
The origin of pegnology; F. F. Davis; Adv Drug Deliv Rev 2002; 54: 457-458. doi:10.1016/S0169-409X(02)00021-2
Non-immunogenic polypeptides; F. F. Davis, T. Van Es and N. C. Palczuk; Patent 1979: US4179337.
Effect of covalent attachment of polyethylene glycol on immunogenicity and circulating life of bovine liver catalase; A. Abuchowski, J. R. McCoy, N. C. Palczuk, T. van Es and F. F. Davis; J Biol Chem 1977; 252: 3582-6.
PEG-proteins: Reaction engineering and separation issues; C. J. Fee and J. M. Van Alstine; Chemical Engineering Science 2006; 61: 924- 939. doi:10.1016/j.ces.2005.04.040
Protein conjugates purification and characterization, C.J. Fee, in PEGylated Protein Drugs: Basic Science and Clinical Applications, F.M. Veronese (Ed.). Birkhauser Publishing, Basel, 2009; 113-125.
Size-exclusion reaction chromatography (SERC): A new technique for protein PEGylation; C. J. Fee; Biotechnology and Bioengineering 2003; 82: 200-206. doi:10.1002/bit.10561
Advances in PEGylation of important biotech molecules: delivery aspects; S. M. Ryan, G. Mantovani, X. Wang, D. M. Haddleton and D. J. Brayden; Expert Opinion on Drug Delivery 2008; 5: 371-383. doi:10.1517/17425247.5.4.371
Protein PEGylation: An overview of chemistry and process considerations; V. B. Damodaran and C. J. Fee; European Pharmaceutical Review 2010; 15: 18-26.
3.1 Branched PEGylating Reagents
Branched PEGs impart significant water solubility and thus produce compounds with reduced aggregation or surfaces with reduced non-specific binding in diagnostic applications. The PEGylation reagent itself is nonimmunogenic and non-toxic, passing these properties to the PEGylated biopharmaceutical. These PEGs are potentially very useful as drug/protein modifiers to specifically increase the hydrodynamic volume. They are highly methylene chloride soluble - the ideal solvent for carboamide activations.
Reference:
Bioconjugate Techniques; G. T. Hermanson; 2nd Edition; Elsevier 2008; Ch. 18: 711-742; ISBN 978-0-12-370501-3