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Development of Efficient Chemistry to Generate Site-Specific Disulfide-Linked Protein- and Peptide-Payload Conjugates: Application to THIOMAB Antibody-Drug Conjugates.

Jack D SadowskyThomas H PillowJinhua ChenFang FanChangrong HeYanli WangGang YanHui YaoZijin XuShanique MartinDonglu ZhangPhillip ChuJosefa Dela Cruz-ChuhAimee O'DonohueGuangmin LiGeoffrey Del RosarioJintang HeLuna LiuCarl NgDian SuGail D Lewis PhillipsKatherine R KozakShang-Fan YuKeyang XuDouglas LeipoldJohn Wai
Published in: Bioconjugate chemistry (2017)
Conjugation of small molecule payloads to cysteine residues on proteins via a disulfide bond represents an attractive strategy to generate redox-sensitive bioconjugates, which have value as potential diagnostic reagents or therapeutics. Advancement of such "direct-disulfide" bioconjugates to the clinic necessitates chemical methods to form disulfide connections efficiently, without byproducts. The disulfide connection must also be resistant to premature cleavage by thiols prior to arrival at the targeted tissue. We show here that commonly employed methods to generate direct disulfide-linked bioconjugates are inadequate for addressing these challenges. We describe our efforts to optimize direct-disulfide conjugation chemistry, focusing on the generation of conjugates between cytotoxic payloads and cysteine-engineered antibodies (i.e., THIOMAB antibody-drug conjugates, or TDCs). This work culminates in the development of novel, high-yielding conjugation chemistry for creating direct payload disulfide connections to any of several Cys mutation sites in THIOMAB antibodies or to Cys sites in other biomolecules (e.g., human serum albumin and cell-penetrating peptides). We conclude by demonstrating that hindered direct disulfide TDCs with two methyl groups adjacent to the disulfide, which have heretofore not been described for any bioconjugate, are more stable and more efficacious in mouse tumor xenograft studies than less hindered analogs.
Keyphrases
  • small molecule
  • cancer therapy
  • primary care
  • stem cells
  • transcranial direct current stimulation
  • drug delivery
  • human serum albumin
  • drinking water
  • amino acid
  • binding protein