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Synthetic macromolecular peptide-mimetics with amino acid substructure residues as protein stabilising excipients

Foralosso, Ruggero; Kopiasz, Rafał Jerzy; Mantovani, Giuseppe; Stolnik, Snow; Alexander, Cameron

Synthetic macromolecular peptide-mimetics with amino acid substructure residues as protein stabilising excipients Thumbnail


Authors

Ruggero Foralosso

Rafał Jerzy Kopiasz

Snow Stolnik



Abstract

The clinical use of protein and peptide biotherapeutics requires fabrication of stable products. This particularly concerns stability towards aggregation of proteins or peptides. Here, we tested a hypothesis that interactions between a synthetic peptide, which is an aggregation-prone region analogue, and its homologous sequence on a protein of interest, could be exploited to design excipients which stabilise the protein against aggregation. A peptide containing the analogue of lysozyme aggregation-prone region (GILQINSRW) was conjugated to a RAFT agent and used to initiate the polymerisation of N-hydroxyethyl acrylamide, generating a GILQINSRW-HEA90 polymer, which profoundly reduced lysozyme aggregation. Substitution of tryptophan in GILQINSRW with glycine, to form GILQINSRG, revealed that tryptophan is a critical amino acid in the protein stabilisation by GILQINSRW-HEA90. Accordingly, polymeric peptide-mimetics of tryptophan, phenylalanine and isoleucine, which are often present in aggregation-prone regions, were synthesized. These were based on synthetic oligomers of acrylamide derivatives of indole-3 acetic acid (IND), phenylacetic acid (PHEN), or 2-methyl butyric acid (MBA), respectively, conjugated with hydrophilic poly(N-hydroxyethyl acrylamide) blocks to form amphiphilic copolymers denoted as INDm-, PHENm- and MTBm-b-HEAn. These materials were tested as protein stabilisers and it was shown that solution properties and the abilities of these materials to stabilise insulin and the peptide IDR 1018 towards aggregation are dependent on the chemical nature of their side groups. These data suggest a structure–activity relationship, whereby the indole-based INDm-b-HEAn peptide-mimetic displays properties of a potential stabilising excipient for protein formulations.

Citation

Foralosso, R., Kopiasz, R. J., Mantovani, G., Stolnik, S., & Alexander, C. (2024). Synthetic macromolecular peptide-mimetics with amino acid substructure residues as protein stabilising excipients. Journal of Materials Chemistry B, 12, 1022-1030. https://doi.org/10.1039/d3tb02102e

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 27, 2023
Online Publication Date Dec 29, 2023
Publication Date Jan 28, 2024
Deposit Date Jan 4, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jan 4, 2024
Journal Journal of Materials Chemistry B
Print ISSN 2050-750X
Electronic ISSN 2050-7518
Publisher Royal Society of Chemistry
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 12
Pages 1022-1030
DOI https://doi.org/10.1039/d3tb02102e
Keywords General Materials Science; Biomedical Engineering; General Chemistry; General Medicine
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/29268103
Publisher URL https://pubs.rsc.org/en/Content/ArticleLanding/2024/TB/D3TB02102E

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