The term PEGylation describes the modification of biological molecules by covalent conjugation with polyethylene glycol (PEG), a non-toxic, non-immunogenic polymer, and is used as a strategy to overcome disadvantages associated with some biopharmaceuticals. PEGylation changes the physical and chemical properties of the biomedical molecule, such as its conformation, electrostatic binding, and hydrophobicity, and results in an improvement in the pharmacokinetic behavior of the drug. In general, PEGylation improves drug solubility and decreases immunogenicity. PEGylation also increases drug stability and the retention time of the conjugates in blood, and reduces proteolysis and renal excretion, thereby allowing a reduced dosing frequency. In order to benefit from these favorable pharmacokinetic consequences, a variety of therapeutic proteins, peptides, and antibody fragments, as well as small molecule drugs, have been PEGylated. This paper reviews the chemical procedures and the conditions that have been used thus far to achieve PEGylation of biomedical molecules. It also discusses the importance of structure and size of PEGs, as well as the behavior of linear and branched PEGs. A number of properties of the PEG polymer--e.g. mass, number of linking chains, the molecular site of PEG attachment--have been shown to affect the biological activity and bioavailability of the PEGylated product. Releasable PEGs have been designed to slowly release the native protein from the conjugates into the blood, aiming at avoiding any loss of efficacy that may occur with stable covalent PEGylation. Since the first PEGylated drug was developed in the 1970s, PEGylation of therapeutic proteins has significantly improved the treatment of several chronic diseases, including hepatitis C, leukemia, severe combined immunodeficiency disease, rheumatoid arthritis, and Crohn disease. The most important PEGylated drugs, including pegademase bovine, pegaspargase, pegfilgrastim, interferons, pegvisomant, pegaptanib, certolizumab pegol, and some of the PEGylated products presently in an advanced stage of development, such as PEG-uricase and PEGylated hemoglobin, are reviewed. The adaptations and applications of PEGylation will undoubtedly prove useful for the treatment of many previously difficult-to-treat conditions.
ALICE is the heavy-ion experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. The experiment continuously took data during the first physics campaign of the machine from fall 2009 until early 2013, using proton and lead-ion beams. In this paper we describe the running environment and the data handling procedures, and discuss the performance of the ALICE detectors and analysis methods for various physics observables.
Polyoxazoline polymers with methyl (PMOZ), ethyl (PEOZ), and propyl (PPOZ) side chains were prepared by the living cationic polymerization method and purified by ion-exchange chromatography. The following properties of polyoxazoline (POZ) were measured: apparent hydrodynamic radius by aqueous size-exclusion chromatography, relative lipophilicity by reverse-phase chromatography, and viscosity by cone-plate viscometry. The PEOZ polymers of different molecular weights were first functionalized and then conjugated to model biomolecules such as bovine serum albumin, catalase, ribonuclease, uricase, and insulin. The conjugates of catalase, uricase, and ribonuclease were tested for in vitro activity using substrate-specific reaction methods. The conjugates of insulin were tested for glucose lowering activity by injection to naïve Sprague-Dawley rats. The conjugates of BSA were injected into New Zealand white rabbits and serum samples were collected periodically and tested for antibodies to BSA. The safety of POZ was also determined by acute and chronic dosing to rats. The results showed that linear polymers of POZ with molecular weights of 1 to 40 kDa can easily be made with polydispersity values below 1.10. Chromatography results showed that PMOZ and PEOZ have a hydrodynamic volume slightly lower than PEG; PEOZ is more lipophilic than PMOZ and PEG; and PEOZ is significantly less viscous than PEG especially at the higher molecular weights. When PEOZ was attached to the enzymes catalase, ribonuclease, and uricase, the in vitro activity of the resultant bioconjugates depended on the extent of protein modification. POZ conjugates of insulin lowered blood glucose levels for a period of 8 h when compared to 2 h for insulin alone. PEOZ, like PEG, was also able to successfully attenuate the immunogenic properties of BSA. The POZ polymers (10 and 20 kDa) are safe when administered intravenously to rats, and the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) was greater than 2 g/kg. Blood counts, serum chemistry, organ weights, and the histopathology of key organs were normal. These results conclude that POZ has the desired drug delivery properties for a new biopolymer.
Polymer-drug conjugates (polymer therapeutics) are finding increasing use as novel anticancer agents. Here a series of poly(ethylene glycol) PEG-doxorubicin (Dox) conjugates were synthesized using polymers of linear or branched architecture (molecular weight 5000-20000 g/mol) and with different peptidyl linkers (GFLG, GLFG, GLG, GGRR, and RGLG). The resultant conjugates had a drug loading of 2.7-8.0 wt % Dox and contained <2.0% free drug (% total drug). All conjugates containing a GFLG linker showed approximately 30% release of Dox at 5 h irrespective of PEG molecular weight or architecture. The GLFG linker was degraded more quickly (approximately 57% Dox release at 5 h), and the other linkers more slowly (<16% release at 5 h), by lysosomal enzymes in vitro. In vitro there was no clear relationship between cytotoxicity toward B16F10 cells and the observed Dox release rate. All PEG conjugates were more than 10-fold less toxic (IC50 values > 2 microg/mL) than free Dox (IC50 value = 0.24 microg/mL). Biodistribution in mice bearing sc B16F10 tumors was assessed after administration of PEGs (5000, 10000, or 20000 g/mol) radioiodinated using the Bolton and Hunter reagent or PEG-Dox conjugates by HPLC. The 125I-labeled PEGs showed a clear relationship between Mw and blood clearance and tumor accumulation. The highest Mw PEG had the longest plasma residence time and consequently the greatest tumor targeting. The PEG-Dox conjugates showed a markedly prolonged plasma clearance and greater tumor targeting compared to free Dox, but there was no clear molecular weight-dependence on biodistribution. This was consistent with the observation that the PEG-Dox conjugates formed micelles in aqueous solution comprising 2-20 PEG-Dox molecules depending on polymer Mw and architecture. Although PEG-Dox showed greater tumor targeting than free Dox, PEG conjugation led to significantly lower anthracycline levels in heart. Preliminary experiments to assess antitumor activity against sc B16F10 in vivo showed the PEG5000linear (L)-GFLG-Dox and PEG10000branched (B)-GLFG-Dox (both 5 mg/kg Dox-equiv) to be the most active with T/C values of 146 and 143%, respectively. Free Dox did not show significant activity in this model (T/C = 121%). Dose escalation of PEG5000(L)-GFLG-Dox to 10 mg/kg Dox-equiv prolonged further animal survival (T/C = 161%). Using the Dox-sensitive model ip L1210 (where Dox displayed a T/C = 150% after single ip dose), the PEG5000(L)-GFLG-Dox displayed a maximum T/C of 141% (10 mg/kg Dox-equiv) using a once a day (x3) schedule. Further studies are warranted with PEG5000(L)-GFLG-Dox to determine its spectrum of antitumor activity and also the optimum dosing schedule before clinical testing.
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