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      Multivalent Antiviral XTEN–Peptide Conjugates with Long in Vivo Half-Life and Enhanced Solubility

      Bioconjugate Chemistry
      American Chemical Society (ACS)

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          HIV entry and its inhibition.

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            Strategies for extended serum half-life of protein therapeutics.

            With a growing number of protein therapeutics being developed, many of them exhibiting a short plasma half-life, half-life extension strategies find increasing attention by the biotech and pharmaceutical industry. Extension of the half-life can help to reduce the number of applications and to lower doses, thus are beneficial for therapeutic but also economic reasons. Here, a comprehensive overview of currently developed half-life extension strategies is provided including those aiming at increasing the hydrodynamic volume of a protein drug but also those implementing recycling processes mediated by the neonatal Fc receptor. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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              A recombinant polypeptide extends the in vivo half-life of peptides and proteins in a tunable manner.

              Increasing the in vivo residence times of protein therapeutics could decrease their dosing frequencies. We show that genetic fusion of an unstructured recombinant polypeptide of 864 amino acids, called XTEN, to a peptide or protein provides an apparently generic approach to extend plasma half-life. Allometric scaling suggests that a fusion of XTEN to the exenatide peptide should increase exenatide half-life in humans from 2.4 h to a projected time of 139 h. We confirmed the biological activity of the exenatide-XTEN fusion in mice. As extended stability might exacerbate undesirable side effects in some cases, we show that truncating the XTEN sequence can regulate plasma half-life. XTEN lacks hydrophobic amino acid residues that often contribute to immunogenicity and complicate manufacture. Based on data on XTEN fusions to exenatide, glucagon, GFP and human growth hormone, we expect that XTEN will enable dosing of otherwise rapidly cleared protein drugs at up to monthly intervals in humans.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                10.1021/bc500215m
                http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.html

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