4.8 Article

An engineered human albumin enhances half-life and transmucosal delivery when fused to protein-based biologics

Journal

SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 565, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abb0580

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Research Council of Norway in part through its Center of Excellence funding scheme [179573]
  2. Research Council of Norway in part through Global Health and Vaccination Research (GLOBVAC) [143822]
  3. Research Council of Norway in part through its program for biotechnology and innovation (BIOTEK2021) [267606]
  4. Research Council of Norway [230526, 251037/F20]
  5. South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority [40018, 40109, 2019095]
  6. Jon S. Larsens Foundation
  7. Bayer Early Career Investigator Award (Hemophilia Award Program) 2018
  8. PFIZER EuroAspire projects [WI199905, WI193137]

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Needle-free uptake across mucosal barriers is a preferred route for delivery of biologics, but the efficiency of unassisted transmucosal transport is poor. To make administration and therapy efficient and convenient, strategies for the delivery of biologics must enhance both transcellular delivery and plasma half-life. We found that human albumin was transcytosed efficiently across polarized human epithelial cells by a mechanism that depends on the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn). FcRn also transported immunoglobulin G, but twofold less than albumin. We therefore designed a human albumin variant, E505Q/T527M/K573P (QMP), with improved FcRn binding, resulting in enhanced transcellular transport upon intranasal delivery and extended plasma half-life of albumin in transgenic mice expressing human FcRn. When QMP was fused to recombinant activated coagulation factor VII, the half-life of the fusion molecule increased 3.6-fold compared with the wild-type human albumin fusion, without compromising the therapeutic properties of activated factor VII. Our findings highlight QMP as a suitable carrier of protein-based biologics that may enhance plasma half-life and delivery across mucosal barriers.

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