AI Article Synopsis

  • - The research focused on improving the drug properties of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) by PEGylating a mouse version of the protein, which showed better performance in rats compared to the original human version.
  • - The newly created PEG-T3C proteins had significantly longer circulation times (10-25 times longer) and were more effective at increasing neutrophil and white blood cell counts in rats, especially after administration.
  • - Treatment with PEG-T3C proteins effectively accelerated recovery of neutrophils in rats recovering from cyclophosphamide-induced neutropenia, suggesting potential applications for GM-CSF in rodent disease models.

Article Abstract

Previously we reported that site-specific modification of the human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) A3C analog with polyethylene glycol (PEG) dramatically improved the pharmacokinetic properties of the protein in rats. However, we could not evaluate the hematological properties of the PEG-A3C protein in rats because human GM-CSF is inactive in rodents. To study the biological effects of PEGylated GM-CSF analogs in rodents we created a homologous site-specific PEGylated murine (mu) GM-CSF (T3C) protein. muGM-CSF and the T3C protein were expressed in Escherichia coli and purified by column chromatography. The purified T3C protein was covalently modified with a linear 20 kDa- or a branched 40 kDa-maleimide-PEG, and the monoPEGylated proteins purified by column chromatography. muGM-CSF, T3C and the two PEG-T3C proteins had comparable in vitro biological activities, as measured by stimulation of proliferation of the murine FDC-P1 cell line. The PEG-T3C proteins had 10- to 25-fold longer circulating half-lives than muGM-CSF and stimulated greater and longer lasting increases in neutrophils and white blood cells than muGM-CSF following a single intravenous or subcutaneous administration to rats. Treatment of rats made neutropenic with cyclophosphamide with the PEG-T3C proteins shortened the time for recovery of neutrophils to normal levels from 9 or 10 days to 5 or 6 days, whereas muGM-CSF showed no benefit versus vehicle solution. Acceleration of neutrophil recovery in cyclophosphamide-treated rats required a minimum of three PEG-T3C treatments over five days. The PEG-T3C proteins should prove useful for evaluating the potential therapeutic benefits of GM-CSF and long-acting GM-CSF proteins in rodent disease models.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10930-020-09894-0DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

peg-t3c proteins
16
t3c protein
12
site-specific pegylated
8
pegylated murine
8
murine gm-csf
8
protein rats
8
mugm-csf t3c
8
purified column
8
column chromatography
8
gm-csf
7

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!