Differential stability of therapeutic peptides with different proteolytic cleavage sites in blood, plasma and serum.

Proteolytic degradation of peptide-based drugs is often considered as major weakness limiting systemic therapeutic applications. Therefore, huge efforts are typically devoted to stabilize sequences against proteases present in serum or plasma, obtained as supernatants after complete blood coagulatio...

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Main Authors: Roland Böttger, Ralf Hoffmann, Daniel Knappe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5456363?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-57f257a88be345d08ef526aa7adfe6182020-11-25T00:02:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01126e017894310.1371/journal.pone.0178943Differential stability of therapeutic peptides with different proteolytic cleavage sites in blood, plasma and serum.Roland BöttgerRalf HoffmannDaniel KnappeProteolytic degradation of peptide-based drugs is often considered as major weakness limiting systemic therapeutic applications. Therefore, huge efforts are typically devoted to stabilize sequences against proteases present in serum or plasma, obtained as supernatants after complete blood coagulation or centrifugation of blood supplemented with anticoagulants, respectively. Plasma and serum are reproducibly obtained from animals and humans allowing consistent for clinical analyses and research applications. However, the spectrum of active or activated proteases appears to vary depending on the activation of proteases and cofactors during coagulation (serum) or inhibition of such enzymes by anticoagulants (plasma), such as EDTA (metallo- and Ca2+-dependent proteases) and heparin (e.g. thrombin, factor Xa). Here, we studied the presumed effects on peptide degradation by taking blood via cardiac puncture of CD-1 mice using a syringe containing a peptide solution. Due to absence of coagulation activators (e.g. glass surfaces and damaged cells), visible blood clotting was prevented allowing to study peptide degradation for one hour. The remaining peptide was quantified and the degradation products were identified using mass spectrometry. When the degradation rates (half-life times) were compared to serum derived freshly from the same animal and commercial serum and plasma samples, peptides of three different families showed indeed considerably different stabilities. Generally, peptides were faster degraded in serum than in plasma, but surprisingly all peptides were more stable in fresh blood and the order of degradation rates among the peptides varied among the six different incubation experiments. This indicates, that proteolytic degradation of peptide-based therapeutics may often be misleading stimulating efforts to stabilize peptides at degradation sites relevant only in vitro, i.e., for serum or plasma stability assays, but of lower importance in vivo.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5456363?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roland Böttger
Ralf Hoffmann
Daniel Knappe
spellingShingle Roland Böttger
Ralf Hoffmann
Daniel Knappe
Differential stability of therapeutic peptides with different proteolytic cleavage sites in blood, plasma and serum.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Roland Böttger
Ralf Hoffmann
Daniel Knappe
author_sort Roland Böttger
title Differential stability of therapeutic peptides with different proteolytic cleavage sites in blood, plasma and serum.
title_short Differential stability of therapeutic peptides with different proteolytic cleavage sites in blood, plasma and serum.
title_full Differential stability of therapeutic peptides with different proteolytic cleavage sites in blood, plasma and serum.
title_fullStr Differential stability of therapeutic peptides with different proteolytic cleavage sites in blood, plasma and serum.
title_full_unstemmed Differential stability of therapeutic peptides with different proteolytic cleavage sites in blood, plasma and serum.
title_sort differential stability of therapeutic peptides with different proteolytic cleavage sites in blood, plasma and serum.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Proteolytic degradation of peptide-based drugs is often considered as major weakness limiting systemic therapeutic applications. Therefore, huge efforts are typically devoted to stabilize sequences against proteases present in serum or plasma, obtained as supernatants after complete blood coagulation or centrifugation of blood supplemented with anticoagulants, respectively. Plasma and serum are reproducibly obtained from animals and humans allowing consistent for clinical analyses and research applications. However, the spectrum of active or activated proteases appears to vary depending on the activation of proteases and cofactors during coagulation (serum) or inhibition of such enzymes by anticoagulants (plasma), such as EDTA (metallo- and Ca2+-dependent proteases) and heparin (e.g. thrombin, factor Xa). Here, we studied the presumed effects on peptide degradation by taking blood via cardiac puncture of CD-1 mice using a syringe containing a peptide solution. Due to absence of coagulation activators (e.g. glass surfaces and damaged cells), visible blood clotting was prevented allowing to study peptide degradation for one hour. The remaining peptide was quantified and the degradation products were identified using mass spectrometry. When the degradation rates (half-life times) were compared to serum derived freshly from the same animal and commercial serum and plasma samples, peptides of three different families showed indeed considerably different stabilities. Generally, peptides were faster degraded in serum than in plasma, but surprisingly all peptides were more stable in fresh blood and the order of degradation rates among the peptides varied among the six different incubation experiments. This indicates, that proteolytic degradation of peptide-based therapeutics may often be misleading stimulating efforts to stabilize peptides at degradation sites relevant only in vitro, i.e., for serum or plasma stability assays, but of lower importance in vivo.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5456363?pdf=render
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