PharmaDD Top News: Business, Technology, Strategic Briefings - Tracking leading techniques and approaches in therapeutic drug discovery and development

 

Sponsored Links:
Prescription Drug Addiction

 

 

January/February 2007

Designer Proteins: Engineering Drug-Like Properties
Researchers boost disease-fighting protein properties.

By Vicki Glaser

Growing at a healthy rate of 10-15% per year, the therapeutic proteins market is presently estimated at more than $30 billion. Natural proteins, such as recombinant insulin, erythropoietin (epo), and GCSF, together with the ever-expanding assortment of monoclonal antibody (mAb)-based drugs on the market, account for much of that growth and commercial success.

The ability to exploit molecular biology tools and high-speed computational analysis to modify, manipulate, and model natural proteins — engineering them in very directed ways to enhance their biological potency, improve their metabolic and pharmacokinetic properties, and increase their resistance to proteolytic degradation — offers enormous opportunities for creating more "druggable" disease-fighting proteins and more powerful second-generation mAb drugs.

Bassil Dahiyat, president and CEO at Xencor, sees "a lot of potential to engineer monoclonal antibodies to be more active, more potent, and better tolerated," by optimizing how they interact with and recruit the immune system. Today’s mAbs "are far from perfect," he says.

Building Better Proteins

The central challenge in engineering large, complex protein molecules, including mAbs, is determining how to optimize their innate biological function, while enhancing their selectivity and potency and minimizing their less desirable characteristics, such as their tendency to aggregate. These properties are often in conflict with one another, and molecular engineering strategies require a careful balance between fine-tuning a desirable feature without enhancing an undesirable one.

Xencor relies on sophisticated computational tools, computer modeling, and quantitative metrics to make "virtual" changes to protein molecules and rapidly and systematically analyze the effects of those modifications on a protein’s overall structure, predicted activity, and pharmacodynamics. This approach yields a limited set of engineered molecules that can then be tested in the laboratory against a disease target.

For example, Xencor has applied these tools to engineer the Fc (constant) region of monoclonal antibodies to enhance their immune effector function and has demonstrated a 100-fold improvement in an antibody’s killing potency against a tumor cell. The company hopes to take this compound into the clinic within the next 12 months. During the first half of 2007, Xencor plans to file an IND for an engineered mAb to treat Hodgkin’s disease.

Anticalins are engineered human proteins derived from a lipocalin scaffold. Similar to antibodies, lipocalins have a hypervariable region that Pieris, a German biopharmaceutical company, is using as a protein scaffold for engineering Anticalin drugs that tightly bind their targets. Pieris has generated 3D crystal structures of a target-specific Anticalin in complex with its ligand, cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen (CTLA)-4. The findings support the predicted plasticity of the human lipocalin scaffold.

PRS-010 and PRS-050, the company’s lead compounds, target the CTLA-4 co-receptor (to inhibit T-cell activation) and VEGF, respectively. Both have potential implications for treating cancer. Pieris is also exploring PRS-050’s potential for inhibiting retinal neovascularization.

Protein engineering could enable a single dose of a drug that might exert its effects at a target site for only a few hours to be effective for several weeks. Consider the recent example of an anti-inflammatory drug injected directly into an arthritic joint to treat osteoarthritis. Duke University researchers modified interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL1RA) by attaching to it a second protein, an elastin-like polypeptide (ELP). ELPs clump together at body temperature. As the ELPs aggregate they form a drug depot; their slow disaggregation enables prolonged release of the IL1RA at the site of inflammation (J. Controlled Release 2006;115(2):175-182).

Effective Engineering

At the core of protein engineering efforts is an understanding of the basic structure of natural proteins that have potential therapeutic applications. The National Institutes of Health’s Protein Structure Initiative (PSI) includes a planned Materials Repository that will offer a centralized store of PSI-generated clones available to researchers at a minimal fee. The repository will be housed at Harvard Medical School’s Institute of Proteomics, in Boston, Mass.

Another component of the 10-year initiative, begun in 2000, is a planned knowledge base, or information hub. The knowledge base, slated for fall 2007, will compile the structural information generated by participating centers and provide database-mining capabilities based on parameters of protein structure and function.

Email this page to a friend