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Research ArticleArticle

Development of a Carbon-14 Labeling Approach to Support Disposition Studies with a Pegylated Biologic

Haiqing Wang, Lifei Wang, Kai Cao, Stuart L. Emanuel, Paul Morin, Zheng Lin, Guoxiang Shen, Jennifer Hosbach, Donglu Zhang, Samuel Bonacorsi, A. David Rodrigues and Zheng Yang
Drug Metabolism and Disposition September 2012, 40 (9) 1677-1685; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.112.044792
Haiqing Wang
Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization (H.W., L.W., G.S., D.Z., A.D.R., Z.Y.) and Departments of Chemistry (K.C., S.B.), Biology (S.L.E., J.H.), and Protein Science and Structure (P.M., Z.L.), Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Princeton, New Jersey
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Lifei Wang
Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization (H.W., L.W., G.S., D.Z., A.D.R., Z.Y.) and Departments of Chemistry (K.C., S.B.), Biology (S.L.E., J.H.), and Protein Science and Structure (P.M., Z.L.), Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Princeton, New Jersey
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Kai Cao
Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization (H.W., L.W., G.S., D.Z., A.D.R., Z.Y.) and Departments of Chemistry (K.C., S.B.), Biology (S.L.E., J.H.), and Protein Science and Structure (P.M., Z.L.), Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Princeton, New Jersey
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Stuart L. Emanuel
Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization (H.W., L.W., G.S., D.Z., A.D.R., Z.Y.) and Departments of Chemistry (K.C., S.B.), Biology (S.L.E., J.H.), and Protein Science and Structure (P.M., Z.L.), Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Princeton, New Jersey
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Paul Morin
Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization (H.W., L.W., G.S., D.Z., A.D.R., Z.Y.) and Departments of Chemistry (K.C., S.B.), Biology (S.L.E., J.H.), and Protein Science and Structure (P.M., Z.L.), Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Princeton, New Jersey
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Zheng Lin
Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization (H.W., L.W., G.S., D.Z., A.D.R., Z.Y.) and Departments of Chemistry (K.C., S.B.), Biology (S.L.E., J.H.), and Protein Science and Structure (P.M., Z.L.), Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Princeton, New Jersey
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Guoxiang Shen
Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization (H.W., L.W., G.S., D.Z., A.D.R., Z.Y.) and Departments of Chemistry (K.C., S.B.), Biology (S.L.E., J.H.), and Protein Science and Structure (P.M., Z.L.), Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Princeton, New Jersey
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Jennifer Hosbach
Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization (H.W., L.W., G.S., D.Z., A.D.R., Z.Y.) and Departments of Chemistry (K.C., S.B.), Biology (S.L.E., J.H.), and Protein Science and Structure (P.M., Z.L.), Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Princeton, New Jersey
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Donglu Zhang
Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization (H.W., L.W., G.S., D.Z., A.D.R., Z.Y.) and Departments of Chemistry (K.C., S.B.), Biology (S.L.E., J.H.), and Protein Science and Structure (P.M., Z.L.), Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Princeton, New Jersey
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Samuel Bonacorsi
Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization (H.W., L.W., G.S., D.Z., A.D.R., Z.Y.) and Departments of Chemistry (K.C., S.B.), Biology (S.L.E., J.H.), and Protein Science and Structure (P.M., Z.L.), Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Princeton, New Jersey
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A. David Rodrigues
Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization (H.W., L.W., G.S., D.Z., A.D.R., Z.Y.) and Departments of Chemistry (K.C., S.B.), Biology (S.L.E., J.H.), and Protein Science and Structure (P.M., Z.L.), Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Princeton, New Jersey
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Zheng Yang
Pharmaceutical Candidate Optimization (H.W., L.W., G.S., D.Z., A.D.R., Z.Y.) and Departments of Chemistry (K.C., S.B.), Biology (S.L.E., J.H.), and Protein Science and Structure (P.M., Z.L.), Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Princeton, New Jersey
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Abstract

Although it is widely accepted that one can extend the pharmacokinetic half-life of a therapeutic protein by covalent conjugation with polyethylene glycol (PEG), the disposition properties of such biologics have not yet been fully evaluated. Therefore, a novel [14C]-labeling method was developed that can be applied to a biologic conjugated with PEG through a maleimide-cysteine reaction. The method was used to study the tissue and tumor distribution of a PEGylated Adnectin, a recombinant protein derived from the 10th type III domain of fibronectin, in nude mice bearing human xenograft tumors. The PEGylated Adnectin contained a 40-kDa branched PEG (P40B) that was labeled with [14C] at the linker region between the PEG and Adnectin, without compromising cellular activity and plasma half-life in mice. After a single intravenous or intraperitoneal dose (33 mg/kg, 1.7 μCi per mouse) of [14C]-P40B-Adnectin, quantitative whole-body autoradiography analysis revealed that the liver had the highest uptake of the radioactivity among nontumor tissues, followed by the kidneys and lung. The muscle and brain showed the least penetration of the radioactivity among all tissues examined. In addition, the [14C]-P40B-EI-tandem penetrated into the tumor tissue, although the extent of accumulation was largely dependent on tumor type. Therefore, it was possible to assess the tissue distribution of a PEGylated biologic after it had been [14C] labeled using the novel method described herein.

Footnotes

  • Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at http://dmd.aspetjournals.org.

    http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/dmd.112.044792.

  • ↵Embedded Image The online version of this article (available at http://dmd.aspetjournals.org) contains supplemental material.

  • ABBREVIATIONS:

    PEG
    polyethyleneglycol
    BMPS
    N-(β-maleimidopropyloxy)succinimide
    EGFR
    epidermal growth factor receptor
    EI-tandem
    anti-EGFR and anti-IGF-1R tandem Adenctin
    ELISA
    enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
    IGF-1R
    insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor
    Ni-NTA
    nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid
    P40B
    two-branch 40-kDa PEG
    P40B-NH2
    two-branch 40-kDa PEG-propylamine
    QWBA
    quantitative whole-body autoradiography
    PAGE
    polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
    ID/g
    injected dose per gram of tissue
    PET
    positron emission tomography
    125I
    iodine-125
    HPLC
    high-performance liquid chromatography.

  • Received February 6, 2012.
  • Accepted May 24, 2012.
  • Copyright © 2012 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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Drug Metabolism and Disposition: 40 (9)
Drug Metabolism and Disposition
Vol. 40, Issue 9
1 Sep 2012
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Research ArticleArticle

TISSUE DISTRIBUTION OF A PEGYLATED ADNECTIN

Haiqing Wang, Lifei Wang, Kai Cao, Stuart L. Emanuel, Paul Morin, Zheng Lin, Guoxiang Shen, Jennifer Hosbach, Donglu Zhang, Samuel Bonacorsi, A. David Rodrigues and Zheng Yang
Drug Metabolism and Disposition September 1, 2012, 40 (9) 1677-1685; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.112.044792

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Research ArticleArticle

TISSUE DISTRIBUTION OF A PEGYLATED ADNECTIN

Haiqing Wang, Lifei Wang, Kai Cao, Stuart L. Emanuel, Paul Morin, Zheng Lin, Guoxiang Shen, Jennifer Hosbach, Donglu Zhang, Samuel Bonacorsi, A. David Rodrigues and Zheng Yang
Drug Metabolism and Disposition September 1, 2012, 40 (9) 1677-1685; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.112.044792
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