Extending Serum Half-life of Albumin by Engineering Neonatal Fc Receptor (FcRn) Binding

Jan Terje Andersen(University of Oslo), Bjørn Dalhus(Oslo University Hospital), Dorthe Viuff(Novozymes (United Kingdom)), Birgitte Thue Ravn(Novozymes (Denmark)), Kristin Støen Gunnarsen(University of Oslo), Andrew Plumridge(Novozymes (United Kingdom)), Karen Bunting(Novozymes (United Kingdom)), Filipa Antunes(Novozymes (Denmark)), Rebecca Williamson(Novozymes (United Kingdom)), Steven Athwal(Novozymes (United Kingdom)), Elizabeth Allan(Novozymes (United Kingdom)), Leslie Evans(Novozymes (United Kingdom)), Magnar Bjørås(Oslo University Hospital), Søren Kjærulff(Novozymes (United Kingdom)), Darrell Sleep(Novozymes (United Kingdom)), Inger Sandlie(University of Oslo), Jason Cameron(Novozymes (United Kingdom))
Journal of Biological Chemistry
March 21, 2014
Cited by 162Open Access
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Abstract

A major challenge for the therapeutic use of many peptides and proteins is their short circulatory half-life. Albumin has an extended serum half-life of 3 weeks because of its size and FcRn-mediated recycling that prevents intracellular degradation, properties shared with IgG antibodies. Engineering the strictly pH-dependent IgG-FcRn interaction is known to extend IgG half-life. However, this principle has not been extensively explored for albumin. We have engineered human albumin by introducing single point mutations in the C-terminal end that generated a panel of variants with greatly improved affinities for FcRn. One variant (K573P) with 12-fold improved affinity showed extended serum half-life in normal mice, mice transgenic for human FcRn, and cynomolgus monkeys. Importantly, favorable binding to FcRn was maintained when a single-chain fragment variable antibody was genetically fused to either the N- or the C-terminal end. The engineered albumin variants may be attractive for improving the serum half-life of biopharmaceuticals. A major challenge for the therapeutic use of many peptides and proteins is their short circulatory half-life. Albumin has an extended serum half-life of 3 weeks because of its size and FcRn-mediated recycling that prevents intracellular degradation, properties shared with IgG antibodies. Engineering the strictly pH-dependent IgG-FcRn interaction is known to extend IgG half-life. However, this principle has not been extensively explored for albumin. We have engineered human albumin by introducing single point mutations in the C-terminal end that generated a panel of variants with greatly improved affinities for FcRn. One variant (K573P) with 12-fold improved affinity showed extended serum half-life in normal mice, mice transgenic for human FcRn, and cynomolgus monkeys. Importantly, favorable binding to FcRn was maintained when a single-chain fragment variable antibody was genetically fused to either the N- or the C-terminal end. The engineered albumin variants may be attractive for improving the serum half-life of biopharmaceuticals.


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