Zwitterionic Nanocages Overcome the Efficacy Loss of Biologic Drugs

Bowen Li(University of Washington), Zhefan Yuan(University of Washington), Peng Zhang(University of Washington), Andrew Sinclair(University of Washington), Priyesh Jain(University of Washington), Kan Wu(University of Washington), Caroline Tsao(University of Washington), Jingyi Xie(University of Washington), Hsiang‐Chieh Hung(University of Washington), Xiaojie Lin(University of Washington), Tao Bai(University of Washington), Shaoyi Jiang(University of Washington)
Advanced Materials
February 19, 2018
Cited by 86

Abstract

For biotherapeutics that require multiple administrations to fully cure diseases, the induction of undesirable immune response is one common cause for the failure of their treatment. Covalent binding of hydrophilic polymers to proteins is commonly employed to mitigate potential immune responses. However, while this technique is proved to partially reduce the antibodies (Abs) reactive to proteins, it may induce Abs toward their associated polymers and thus result in the loss of efficacy. Zwitterionic poly(carboxybetaine) (PCB) is recently shown to improve the immunologic properties of proteins without inducing any antipolymer Abs against itself. However, it is unclear if the improved immunologic profiles can translate to better clinical outcomes since improved immunogenicity cannot directly reflect amelioration in efficacy. Here, a PCB nanocage (PCB NC) is developed, which can physically encase proteins while keeping their structure intact. PCB NC encapsulation of uricase, a highly immunogenic enzyme, is demonstrated to eradicate all the immune responses. To bridge the gap between immunogenicity and efficacy studies, the therapeutic performance of PCB NC uricase is evaluated and compared with its PEGylated counterpart in a clinical-mimicking gouty rat model to determine any loss of efficacy evoked after five administrations.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis