Acylated heptapeptide binds albumin with high affinity and application as tag furnishes long-acting peptides
The rapid renal clearance of peptides in vivo limits this attractive platform for the treatment of a broad range of diseases that require prolonged drug half-lives. An intriguing approach for extending peptide circulation times works through a ‘piggy-back’ strategy in which peptides bind via a ligan...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2017-07, Vol.8 (1), p.16092-16092, Article 16092 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The rapid renal clearance of peptides
in vivo
limits this attractive platform for the treatment of a broad range of diseases that require prolonged drug half-lives. An intriguing approach for extending peptide circulation times works through a ‘piggy-back’ strategy in which peptides bind via a ligand to the long-lived serum protein albumin. In accordance with this strategy, we developed an easily synthesized albumin-binding ligand based on a peptide-fatty acid chimera that has a high affinity for human albumin (
K
d
=39 nM). This ligand prolongs the elimination half-life of cyclic peptides in rats 25-fold to over seven hours. Conjugation to a peptide factor XII inhibitor developed for anti-thrombotic therapy extends the half-life from 13 minutes to over five hours, inhibiting coagulation for eight hours in rabbits. This high-affinity albumin ligand could potentially extend the half-life of peptides in human to several days, substantially broadening the application range of peptides as therapeutics.
A major challenge for the application of peptide therapeutics is their short half-life
in vivo
. Here, the authors design peptide-fatty acid chimeras bearing an engineered linker that promotes albumin binding and allows longer circulation times of therapeutic peptides in animal models. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/ncomms16092 |