4 research outputs found

    Biotechnology Based Process for Production of a Disulfide-Bridged Peptide

    No full text
    A disulfide-bridged peptide drug development candidate contained two oligopeptide chains with 11 and 12 natural amino acids joined by a disulfide bond at the N-terminal end. An efficient biotechnology based process for the production of the disulfide-bridged peptide was developed. Initially, the two individual oligopeptide chains were prepared separately by designing different fusion proteins and expressing them in recombinant E. coli. Enzymatic or chemical cleavage of the two fusion proteins provided the two individual oligopeptide chains which could be conjugated via disulfide bond by conventional chemical reaction to the disulfide-bridged peptide. A novel heterodimeric system to bring the two oligopeptide chains closer and induce disulfide bond formation was designed by taking advantage of the self-assembly of a leucine zipper system. The heterodimeric approach involved designing fusion proteins with the acidic and basic components of the leucine zipper, additional amino acids to optimize interaction between the individual chains, specific cleavage sites, specific tag to ensure separation, and two individual oligopeptide chains. Computer modeling was used to identify the nature and number of amino acid residue to be inserted between the leucine zipper and oligopeptides for optimum interaction. Cloning and expression in rec E. coli, fermentation, followed by cell disruption resulted in the formation of heterodimeric protein with the interchain disulfide bond. Separation of the desired heterodimeric protein, followed by specific cleavage at methionine by cyanogen bromide provided the disulfide-bridged peptide

    Mapping the Energetic Epitope of an Antibody/Interleukin-23 Interaction with Hydrogen/Deuterium Exchange, Fast Photochemical Oxidation of Proteins Mass Spectrometry, and Alanine Shave Mutagenesis

    No full text
    Epitope mapping the specific residues of an antibody/antigen interaction can be used to support mechanistic interpretation, antibody optimization, and epitope novelty assessment. Thus, there is a strong need for mapping methods, particularly integrative ones. Here, we report the identification of an energetic epitope by determining the interfacial hot-spot that dominates the binding affinity for an anti-interleukin-23 (anti-IL-23) antibody by using the complementary approaches of hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS), fast photochemical oxidation of proteins (FPOP), alanine shave mutagenesis, and binding analytics. Five peptide regions on IL-23 with reduced backbone amide solvent accessibility upon antibody binding were identified by HDX-MS, and five different peptides over the same three regions were identified by FPOP. In addition, FPOP analysis at the residue level reveals potentially key interacting residues. Mutants with 3ā€“5 residues changed to alanine have no measurable differences from wild-type IL-23 except for binding of and signaling blockade by the 7B7 anti-IL-23 antibody. The M5 IL-23 mutant differs from wild-type by five alanine substitutions and represents the dominant energetic epitope of 7B7. M5 shows a dramatic decrease in binding to BMS-986010 (which contains the 7B7 Fab, where Fab is fragment antigen-binding region of an antibody), yet it maintains functional activity, binding to p40 and p19 specific reagents, and maintains biophysical properties similar to wild-type IL-23 (monomeric state, thermal stability, and secondary structural features)

    Discovery of BMS-641988, a Novel Androgen Receptor Antagonist for the Treatment of Prostate Cancer

    No full text
    BMS-641988 (<b>23</b>) is a novel, nonsteroidal androgen receptor antagonist designed for the treatment of prostate cancer. The compound has high binding affinity for the AR and acts as a functional antagonist <i>in vitro</i>. BMS-641988 is efficacious in multiple human prostate cancer xenograft models, including CWR22-BMSLD1 where it displays superior efficacy relative to bicalutamide. Based on its promising preclinical profile, BMS-641988 was selected for clinical development

    Discovery and Preclinical Evaluation of BMS-711939, an Oxybenzylglycine Based PPARĪ± Selective Agonist

    No full text
    BMS-711939 (<b>3</b>) is a potent and selective peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) Ī± agonist, with an EC<sub>50</sub> of 4 nM for human PPARĪ± and >1000-fold selectivity vs human PPARĪ³ (EC<sub>50</sub> = 4.5 Ī¼M) and PPARĪ“ (EC<sub>50</sub> > 100 Ī¼M) in PPAR-GAL4 transactivation assays. Compound <b>3</b> also demonstrated excellent <i>in vivo</i> efficacy and safety profiles in preclinical studies and thus was chosen for further preclinical evaluation. The synthesis, structureā€“activity relationship (SAR) studies, and <i>in vivo</i> pharmacology of <b>3</b> in preclinical animal models as well as its ADME profile are described
    corecore