» Articles » PMID: 21141969

Receptor-mediated Abeta Amyloid Antibody Targeting to Alzheimer's Disease Mouse Brain

Overview
Journal Mol Pharm
Specialty Pharmacology
Date 2010 Dec 15
PMID 21141969
Citations 18
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The goal of this work is the reduction in the Abeta amyloid peptide burden in brain of Alzheimer's disease (AD) transgenic mice without the concomitant elevation in plasma Abeta amyloid peptide. An anti-Abeta amyloid antibody (AAA) was re-engineered as a fusion protein with a blood-brain barrier (BBB) molecular Trojan horse. The AAA was engineered as a single chain Fv (ScFv) antibody, and the ScFv was fused to the heavy chain of a chimeric monoclonal antibody (mAb) against the mouse transferrin receptor (TfR), and this fusion protein was designated cTfRMAb-ScFv. The cTfRMAb-ScFv protein penetrates mouse brain from blood via transport on the BBB TfR, and the brain uptake is 3.5% of injected dose/gram brain following an intravenous administration. Double transgenic APPswe,PSEN1dE9 mice were studied at 12 months of age. The mice were shown to have extensive Abeta amyloid plaques in cerebral cortex based on immunocytochemistry. The mice were treated every 3-4 days by intravenous injections of either saline or the cTfRMAb-ScFv fusion protein at an injection dose of 1 mg/kg for 12 consecutive weeks. The brain Aβ¹⁻⁴² concentration was reduced 40% in the fusion protein treated mice, without any elevation in plasma Aβ¹⁻⁴² concentration. No cerebral microhemorrhage was observed in the treated mice. These results show that brain-penetrating antibody pharmaceutics can be developed for brain disorders such as AD following the re-engineering of the antibody as a fusion protein that is transported across the BBB via receptor-mediated transport.

Citing Articles

Strategies to identify, engineer, and validate antibodies targeting blood-brain barrier receptor-mediated transcytosis systems for CNS drug delivery.

Choi E, Shusta E Expert Opin Drug Deliv. 2023; 20(12):1789-1800.

PMID: 38007619 PMC: 10842915. DOI: 10.1080/17425247.2023.2286371.


Receptor-mediated drug delivery of bispecific therapeutic antibodies through the blood-brain barrier.

Pardridge W Front Drug Deliv. 2023; 3.

PMID: 37583474 PMC: 10426772. DOI: 10.3389/fddev.2023.1227816.


Carboxymethyl cellulose coated magnetic nanoparticles transport across a human lung microvascular endothelial cell model of the blood-brain barrier.

Aguilera G, Berry C, West R, Gonzalez-Monterrubio E, Angulo-Molina A, Arias-Carrion O Nanoscale Adv. 2022; 1(2):671-685.

PMID: 36132237 PMC: 9473188. DOI: 10.1039/c8na00010g.


IgG Fusion Proteins for Brain Delivery of Biologics via Blood-Brain Barrier Receptor-Mediated Transport.

Boado R Pharmaceutics. 2022; 14(7).

PMID: 35890374 PMC: 9322584. DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14071476.


Therapeutic TVs for Crossing Barriers in the Brain.

Zhao Z, Zlokovic B Cell. 2020; 182(2):267-269.

PMID: 32707092 PMC: 7737504. DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2020.06.041.


References
1.
Cummings B, Cotman C . Image analysis of beta-amyloid load in Alzheimer's disease and relation to dementia severity. Lancet. 1995; 346(8989):1524-8. DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(95)92053-6. View

2.
Jancso G, Domoki F, Santha P, Varga J, Fischer J, Orosz K . Beta-amyloid (1-42) peptide impairs blood-brain barrier function after intracarotid infusion in rats. Neurosci Lett. 1998; 253(2):139-41. DOI: 10.1016/s0304-3940(98)00622-3. View

3.
Hinton P, Johlfs M, Xiong J, Hanestad K, Ong K, Bullock C . Engineered human IgG antibodies with longer serum half-lives in primates. J Biol Chem. 2003; 279(8):6213-6. DOI: 10.1074/jbc.C300470200. View

4.
Bard F, Cannon C, Barbour R, Burke R, Games D, Grajeda H . Peripherally administered antibodies against amyloid beta-peptide enter the central nervous system and reduce pathology in a mouse model of Alzheimer disease. Nat Med. 2000; 6(8):916-9. DOI: 10.1038/78682. View

5.
Pardridge W, Boado R . Pharmacokinetics and safety in rhesus monkeys of a monoclonal antibody-GDNF fusion protein for targeted blood-brain barrier delivery. Pharm Res. 2009; 26(10):2227-36. PMC: 2737114. DOI: 10.1007/s11095-009-9939-6. View