Engineering stable and non-immunogenic immunoenzymes for cancer therapy via in situ generated prodrugs.

Yi-Han Tseng, Hsuan-Pei Lin, Sung-Yao Lin,Bing-Mae Chen, Thanh Nguyet Nguyen Vo, Shih-Hung Yang,Yi-Chen Lin,Zeljko Prijovic, Andreas Czosseck,Yu-Lin Leu,Steve R Roffler

Journal of controlled release : official journal of the Controlled Release Society(2024)

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摘要
Engineering human enzymes for therapeutic applications is attractive but introducing new amino acids may adversely affect enzyme stability and immunogenicity. Here we used a mammalian membrane-tethered screening system (ECSTASY) to evolve human lysosomal beta-glucuronidase (hBG) to hydrolyze a glucuronide metabolite (SN-38G) of the anticancer drug irinotecan (CPT-11). Three human beta-glucuronidase variants (hBG3, hBG10 and hBG19) with 3, 10 and 19 amino acid substitutions were identified that display up to 40-fold enhanced enzymatic activity, higher stability than E. coli beta-glucuronidase in human serum, and similar pharmacokinetics in mice as wild-type hBG. The hBG variants were two to three orders of magnitude less immunogenic than E. coli beta-glucuronidase in hBG transgenic mice. Intravenous administration of an immunoenzyme (hcc49-hBG10) targeting a sialyl-Tn tumor-associated antigen to mice bearing human colon xenografts significantly enhanced the anticancer activity of CPT-11 as measured by tumor suppression and mouse survival. Our results suggest that genetically-modified human enzymes represent a good alternative to microbially-derived enzymes for therapeutic applications.
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