Re-Engineering Biopharmaceuticals for Delivery to Brain with

Jun 12, 2008 - The engineering of IgG-avidin fusion proteins enables the BBB delivery of biotinylated drugs. ... The development of molecular Trojan h...
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2008 Volume 19, Number 7  Copyright 2008 by the American Chemical Society

REVIEWS Re-Engineering Biopharmaceuticals for Delivery to Brain with Molecular Trojan Horses William M. Pardridge* Department of Medicine, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90024. Received April 9, 2008; Revised Manuscript Received May 7, 2008

Biopharmaceuticals, including recombinant proteins, monoclonal antibody therapeutics, and antisense or RNA interference drugs, cannot be developed as drugs for the brain, because these large molecules do not cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Biopharmaceuticals must be re-engineered to cross the BBB, and this is possible with genetically engineered molecular Trojan horses. A molecular Trojan horse is an endogenous peptide, or peptidomimetic monoclonal antibody (mAb), which enters brain from blood via receptor-mediated transport on endogenous BBB transporters. Recombinant neurotrophins, single chain Fv antibodies, or therapeutic enzymes may be re-engineered as IgG fusion proteins. The engineering of IgG-avidin fusion proteins enables the BBB delivery of biotinylated drugs. The IgG fusion proteins are new chemical entities that are dual or triple function molecules that bind multiple receptors. The fusion proteins are able both to enter the brain, by binding an endogenous BBB receptor, and to induce the desired pharmacologic effect in brain, by binding target receptors in the brain behind the BBB. The development of molecular Trojan horses for BBB drug delivery allows the re-engineering of biopharmaceuticals that, owing to the BBB problem, could not otherwise be developed as new drugs for the human brain.

INTRODUCTION Biopharmaceuticals include recombinant proteins, monoclonal antibodies (mAb), and antisense drugs including RNA interference (RNAi) therapeutics. However, short of a trans-cranial injection of drug into the brain, biopharmaceuticals cannot presently be developed as new drugs for human brain diseases, because these drugs do not cross the brain capillary endothelial wall, which forms the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in vivo. While it is generally assumed that small molecules cross the BBB, in fact,