Prospects of PASylation® for the design of protein and peptide therapeutics with extended half-life and enhanced action

M Gebauer, A Skerra - Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 2018 - Elsevier
M Gebauer, A Skerra
Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 2018Elsevier
Pharmacokinetic (PK) extension is no longer just a means to create improved second
generation biologics (so-called biobetters), but constitutes an accepted strategy in
biopharmaceutical drug development today. Although PEGylation has become a widely
applied methodology to furnish therapeutic proteins and peptides with prolonged plasma
half-life, the immunogenicity and missing biodegradability of this synthetic polymer has
prompted an evident need for alternatives. PASylation is based on biological polypeptides …
Abstract
Pharmacokinetic (PK) extension is no longer just a means to create improved second generation biologics (so-called biobetters), but constitutes an accepted strategy in biopharmaceutical drug development today. Although PEGylation has become a widely applied methodology to furnish therapeutic proteins and peptides with prolonged plasma half-life, the immunogenicity and missing biodegradability of this synthetic polymer has prompted an evident need for alternatives. PASylation is based on biological polypeptides made of the small l-amino acids Pro, Ala and/or Ser (PAS), which adopt a random coil structure in aqueous buffers with surprisingly similar biophysical properties as PEG. In contrast, PAS sequences can be conjugated to pharmaceutically active proteins and peptides both via chemical coupling and at the genetic level, as so-called fusion proteins. PASylation has been successfully applied to numerous biologics, including cytokines, growth factors, antibody fragments, enzymes as well as various peptides, and validated in diverse animal models, from mice to monkeys. Here we compare PASylation with other current strategies for half-life extension and we discuss the utility of these approaches for the design of innovative peptide-based therapeutics.
Elsevier