The present invention generally concerns new non-agglomerating bioconjugates of amylin-mimetic compounds and polyethylene glycol, their use mainly in the treatment of diseases associated with deposition or accumulation of extracellular amyloid, which contributes to the dysfunction or failure of systemic organs such as the pancreas.
A particular embodiment of the invention, without excluding any other, concerns the bioconjugates of natural or synthetic human amylin and polyethylene glycol, and the use thereof in the treatment of diabetes, and the toxic effects caused by build-up of amylin oligomers on the surface of pancreatic beta-cells membrane. Said build-up contributes to with the pathogenesis of diabetes. Preserving those cells, already deteriorated in diabetic patients, is therefore a benefit sought for in the art.
Amylin, an amyloid polypeptide of the Langerhans islets, identified with CAS RN: 106602-62-4, is a hormone of the pancreatic beta-cells, co-secreted with insulin in response to feeding, and complements the effects of insulin on the control of postprandial glucose. It is a 37-aminoacid polypeptide, co-secreted with insulin in a proportion insulin:amylin of 100:1.
The beneficial activities of amylin in diabetes and obesity are known: increase in satiety leading to reduced ingestion of food and consequent body weight reduction; slower gastric emptying, improved glucose metabolism profiles with postprandial peaks and reduction of glucagon levels in diabetic patients.
Type 1 diabetes patients have practically no natural amylin production, while patients with long-standing type 2 diabetes have lower levels than healthy individuals.
Because of its physicochemical properties, the use of structurally unmodified amylin as a pharmaceutical active is not possible. Its limited solubility in aqueous solution led to the development of a more soluble amylin-mimetic compound, the pramlintide, in which three of 37 aminoacids of murin amylin are replaced by proline. There is a corresponding commercial product of pramlintide named Symlin®.
Although the solubility of pramlintide is greater than that of human amylin, pramlintide is more similar to murine amylin than human, and does not have good stability in neutral pH, so the product Symlin® is provided as an acid solution. Murine amylin shows reduced propensity of amyloid agglomeration compared to human amylin, suggesting a general propensity for amylin and amylin-mimetic substances. This product has to be administered as subcutaneous injections right before the meals, aiming to increase postprandial amylin levels. Because of its short half-life from 10 to 15 min, such injections of pramlintide increase the concentration of amylin in the blood stream as a series of peaks, not able to restore the basal levels of amylin during fasting. In the scientific literature, pramlintide has been associated with increased risk of severe insulin-induced hypoglycemia, and other adverse effects such as nausea, vomiting, anorexia and fatigue.
The technical literature does not appear to have focused on a solution for the agglomerating tendency of human amylin, or amylin deposition and its harmful effects on pancreatic beta-cell membranes; and no solution is available.
Without being bound by theory, there are indications that cholesterol in the plasma membrane of beta-cells is the key factor in regulating the so-called polymerization of amylin, and its deposition upon said membranes. Absence or low level of cholesterol in the plasma membrane—which is an ordinary aspect in diabetes—inhibits the internalization of amylin oligomers, and favors the extracellular accumulation, potentiating amylin cytotoxicity in that state, said toxicity resulting apoptosis or destruction of beta-cells. On the other hand, the cellular internalization of monomeric amylin is independent of the cholesterol content of the plasma membrane.
Briefly, a series of studies correlates amylin polymerization and deposition—with corresponding toxicity—on the surface of the plasma membrane of beta-cells with absence or lesser presence of cholesterol and/or with increased severity of type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Up to the present there are no medicaments or pharmaceutical actives known for the control of glycemia that also inhibit the aggregation of human amylin or amylin-mimetic compounds.
The present invention generally aims at the conjugation of human amylin and polyethylene glycol, and the use thereof towards the inhibition of the extracellular aggregation of amylin, without inducing the toxicity related to the formation of amylin oligomers and clusters.
The text that follows is to be understood with the following aspects: (1) mention of bioconjugates of amylin with polyethylene glycol also encompasses bioconjugates of amylin-mimetic compounds with polyethylene glycol; (2) the expression “amylin-mimetic compounds” also includes, for ease of expression, human amylin, natural or synthetic, (3) mention of diabetes also encompasses other diseases and dysfunctions directly or indirectly related to the agglomeration/deposition of amylin-mimetic compounds.
The use of the bioconjugates of the invention, particularly bioconjugates of human amylin, shows various benefits, particularly higher stability of the diabetic organism, that are highly recommended by physicians as desirable characteristics for medicaments of this nature:
The invention generally concerns chemical entities that aim to avoid the typical toxicity caused by human amylin and amylin-mimetic compounds cause, by decreasing or avoiding agglomeration (also mentioned in the literature as polymerization), deposition and fibrillation upon the pancreatic beta-cells and, in consequence, avoiding harmful effects that apoptosis or destruction of said pancreatic beta-cells cause to the human organism.
In a first aspect, the invention concerns new non-agglomerating bioconjugates of amylin or amylin-mimetic compounds and polyethylene glycol, characterized by the fact that said bioconjugate contains at least one polyethylene glycol unit (therefore monoconjugate or polyconjugate compounds may be obtained), covalently bonded to the two nitrogen atoms originated from the alpha and epsilon amine moieties (lateral chain) of the lysine 1 residue of the amylin polypeptidic chain.
It is therefore an object of the invention non-agglomerating bioconjugates of amylin-mimetic compounds of formula I
(R1-COX)m—R2
where
(R1-X)m-R2
where
Mention of amylin-mimetic compounds in the bioconjugates of the invention encompasses active derivatives of said amylin-mimetic compounds such as salts, isomers, hydrates, solvates, prodrugs, metabolites, polymorphs and isosteres.
It is important to remember that mention of amylin-mimetic compounds, in this text, encompasses human amylin itself, either natural, synthetic or bio-semi-synthetic.
In another aspect, the present invention concerns the use of the new non-agglomerating bioconjugates of amylin-mimetic compounds with polyethylene glycol, in the prevention or treatment of diseases or problems, caused or favored by the amyloid deposition or accumulation that leads to dysfunction or failure of systemic organs (i.e. organs or tissues external to the central nervous system), such as hyperglycemia, diabetes, low tolerance to glucose or deficient glucose metabolism, obesity, metabolic syndrome and feeding disorders, and indirectly to problems and vascular diseases resulting from increase in blood pressure, such as atherosclerosis, myocardial infarction, stroke, coronary heart disease, cardiac diseases in general, Alzheimer disease.
In another aspect, the invention concerns the use of the new non-agglomerating bioconjugates of amylin-mimetic compounds with polyethylene glycol for the preparation of low toxicity products, medicaments, compositions and associations, useful in the prevention or treatment of diseases caused or favored by amyloid deposition or accumulation which leads to dysfunction or failure of systemic organs.
Still in another aspect, the invention concerns low toxicity pharmaceutical compositions comprising a therapeutically effective amount of one or more of the new non-agglomerating bioconjugates of amylin-mimetic compounds with polyethylene glycol and one or more pharmaceutically acceptable excipients. Such compositions are adequate for all variety of administration forms such as oral, enteral, parenteral, lingual, sublingual, nasal, dermal, epidermal, transdermal, mucosal, vaginal, rectal, ocular, etc.
The compositions of the invention present themselves in any necessary or adequate dosage forms, such as solutions, suspensions, emulsions, microemulsions, foams, pastes, creams, tablets, capsules (hard or soft, suppositories), bolus, gels, powders, aerosols, sprays, etc.
The pharmaceutically acceptable excipients employed in the compositions of the inventions are known to the person skilled in the art, such as the ones described, for instance, in “Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences”, 15th edition, Mack Publishing Co., New Jersey (1991). As known, specific excipients are chosen according to the desired administration route, within the practice of the pharmacological area.
The pharmaceutical compositions of the invention may additionally comprise one or more active principles, distinct from human amylin, such as (without excluding any other) insulin, ions (such as zinc and sodium), antidiabetics, antibiotics, anti-hypertensives, antiretrovirals, etc. Such compositions may be of immediate, retarded or slow release, also including the possibility that the administration of the new bioconjugate of human amylin be concomitant or sequential to other active principles.
Still another aspect of the invention concerns the use of non-agglomerating bioconjugates of human amylin and polyethyleneglycol as an adjuvant in the prevention or treatment of diseases caused or favored by amyloid deposition or accumulation that leads to dysfunction or failure of systemic organs.
Still another aspect of the invention concerns a medicament characterized by the fact that it comprises a therapeutically effective amount of one or more bioconjugates of human amylin and polyethylene glycol.
Still another aspect of the invention concerns bioconjugates of human amylin and polyethylene glycol, as well as products, medicaments, compositions and associations that comprise them, characterized for the use in medical therapy.
Still another aspect of the invention concerns a method or treatment or prevention of diseases caused or favored by amyloid deposition or accumulation, characterized by comprising the administration to a patient of a therapeutically effective amount of one or more bioconjugates of amylin-mimetic compounds, particularly human amylin, and polyethylene glycol.
The examples that follow concern particular embodiments of the present invention and are not intended to, in any way, limit the scope of the attached claims.
Reaction for 2 h at 25° C. of a 5 mg/mL human amylin solution in the presence of 10 mM PBS (phosphate buffer solution) pH 7.4, and a molar excess of 5 mPEG/1 human amylin.
The reaction is quenched by the addition of an equal amount of 30% acetonitrile/0.1% trifluoroacetic acid (in water) and then chromatographed in a C18 Kromasil reversed phase column at 4 mL/min, detector set at 220 nm. (Kromasil is a product line commercialized by Separation Products group, a department of AkzoNobel company, Sweden). This purification process is shown in
Matrix-assisted laser desorption and ionization-time-of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) was performed to characterized monoPEGylated human amylin.
Purified monoPEGylated human amylin was assayed for RAMP2 and RAMP3 coreceptor binding interaction.
RAMP (receptor activity modifying protein) was labeled with fluorescein isothiocianate for 1 h at 4° C. in PBS (fetal bovine serum) pH 7.4, and purified by size exclusion chromatography (SEC) in Sepharose G25 (agarose-based chromatography media, provided by the US company GE HealthCare) using the same buffer. Labelling was confirmed by UV absorbance measurements at A280 and A490, allowing estimation of coupling efficiency, relying on about 0.5 fluorescein/RAMP molecule. Binding was performed by measuring the fluorescence anisotropy of RAMP-FITC (fluorescein isothiocyanate) as a function of free murine amylin, human amylin-PEGylated and by using the unrelated protein hen egg white lisozyme (HEWL) as a control for non-specific binding.
According to
Purified monoPEGylated human amylin of example 1 was re-suspended in DMSO and diluted to PBS pH 7.4 and allowed to incubate at 37° C. Samples were evaluated for amyloid aggregates by using the amyloid chromogenic probe thioflavin T (ThT).
4—Pharmacokinetics of the PEGylated Human amylin Product
The pharmacokinetics of the monoPEGylated human amylin product were characterized in vivo in swiss mice. Mice were housed in a temperature-controlled room with a light-dark cycle of 12 h. Water and food were available ad libitum. Two groups were formed, control (free human amylin, not PEGylated) and PEGylated amylin. Animals received 100 uL of saline containing 10 μg of human amylin peptides, either free human amylin or purified monoPEGylated human amylin. Blood was collected retro-orbitally from mice (n=3 mice for each time interval), and the plasma was subjected to ELISA assay for human amylin as provided by the manufacturer (Millipore, Cat Number EZHA-52K—http://www.millipore.com/catalogue/item/ezha-52k).
A person skilled in the art may use the teachings of the description and examples given herein to perform the invention in equivalent embodiments which, though not expressly described, perform the same or similar functions to attain the same or similar results, and therefore are encompassed by the scope of protection of the attached claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BR 102013017626-5 | Jun 2013 | BR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/BR2014/000199 | 6/13/2014 | WO | 00 |