Modulating albumin-mediated transport of peptide-drug conjugates for antigen-specific Treg induction

Publication date

2022-08

Authors

Lau, Chun Yin JerryISNI 0000000492902617
Benne, NaomiORCID 0000-0003-3635-9798ISNI 0000000491592055
Lou, BoISNI 0000000492910633
Zharkova, Olga
Ting, Hui Jun
Braake, Daniëlle TerISNI 0000000507449764
van Kronenburg, NickyISNI 000000050777388X
Fens, Marcel H.ISNI 0000000387629137
Broere, FemkeORCID 0000-0001-9343-0111ISNI 0000000388807652
Hennink, WimISNI 0000000390382745

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

The therapeutic potential of antigen-specific regulatory T cells (Treg) has been extensively explored, leading to the development of several tolerogenic vaccines. Dexamethasone-antigen conjugates represent a prominent class of tolerogenic vaccines that enable coordinated delivery of antigen and dexamethasone to target immune cells. The importance of nonspecific albumin association towards the biodistribution of antigen-adjuvant conjugates has gained increasing attention, by which hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions govern the association capacity. Using an ensemble of computational and experimental techniques, we evaluate the impact of charged residues adjacent to the drug conjugation site in dexamethasone-antigen conjugates (Dex-K/E4-OVA323, K: lysine, E: glutamate) towards their albumin association capacity and induction of antigen-specific Treg. We find that Dex-K4-OVA323 possesses a higher albumin association capacity than Dex-E4-OVA323, leading to enhanced liver distribution and antigen-presenting cell uptake. Furthermore, using an OVA323-specific adoptive-transfer mouse model, we show that Dex-K4-OVA323 selectively upregulated OVA323-specific Treg cells, whereas Dex-E4-OVA323 exerted no significant effect on Treg cells. Our findings serve as a guide to optimize the functionality of dexamethasone-antigen conjugate amid switching vaccine epitope sequences. Moreover, our study demonstrates that moderating the residues adjacent to the conjugation sites can serve as an engineering approach for future peptide-drug conjugate development.

Keywords

Peptide-drug conjugates, Albumin transport, Supramolecular medicine, Drug delivery, Antigen-specific tolerance

Citation

Lau, C Y J, Benne, N, Lou, B, Zharkova, O, Ting, H J, Ter Braake, D, van Kronenburg, N, Fens, M H, Broere, F, Hennink, W E, Wang, J-W & Mastrobattista, E 2022, 'Modulating albumin-mediated transport of peptide-drug conjugates for antigen-specific Treg induction', Journal of controlled release : official journal of the Controlled Release Society, vol. 348, pp. 938-950. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jconrel.2022.06.025