COMPOSITIONS AND METHODS FOR TREATING INFECTIONS USING CATIONIC PEPTIDES ALONE OR IN COMBINATION WITH ANTIBIOTICS
Compositions and methods for treating infections, especially bacterial infections, are provided. Indolicidin peptide analogues containing at least two basic amino acids are prepared. The analogues are administered as modified peptides, preferably containing photo-oxidized solubilizer.
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The present application is a continuation of allowed U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/277,233 filed Oct. 18, 2002, which application claims priority from U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/030,619, filed Feb. 25, 1998 and issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,503,881, which application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/040,649, filed Mar. 10, 1997, and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/060,099, filed Sep. 26, 1997, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/030,619 is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 08/915,314, filed Aug. 20, 1997, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,180,604 on Jan. 30, 2001 which claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/024,754, filed Aug. 21, 1996, and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/034,949, filed Jan. 13, 1997, all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates generally to methods of treating microorganism-caused infections using cationic peptides or a combination of cationic peptides and antibiotic agents, and more particularly to using these peptides and antibiotic agents to overcome acquired resistance, tolerance, and inherent resistance of an infective organism to the antibiotic agent.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONFor most healthy individuals, infections are irritating, but not generally life-threatening. Many infections are successfully combated by the immune system of the individual. Treatment is an adjunct and is generally readily available in developed countries. However, infectious diseases are a serious concern in developing countries and in immunocompromised individuals.
In developing countries, the lack of adequate sanitation and consequent poor hygiene provide an environment that fosters bacterial, parasitic, fungal and viral infections. Poor hygiene and nutritional deficiencies may diminish the effectiveness of natural barriers, such as skin and mucous membranes, to invasion by infectious agents or the ability of the immune system to clear the agents. As well, a constant onslaught of pathogens may stress the immune system defenses of antibody production and phagocytic cells (e.g., polymorphic neutrophils) to subnormal levels. A breakdown of host defenses can also occur due to conditions such as circulatory disturbances, mechanical obstruction, fatigue, smoking, excessive drinking, genetic defects, AIDS, bone marrow transplant, cancer, and diabetes. An increasingly prevalent problem in the world is opportunistic infections in individuals who are HIV positive.
Although vaccines may be available to protect against some of these organisms, vaccinations are not always feasible, due to factors such as inadequate delivery mechanisms and economic poverty, or effective, due to factors such as delivery too late in the infection, inability of the patient to mount an immune response to the vaccine, or evolution of the pathogen. For other pathogenic agents, no vaccines are available. When protection against infection is not possible, treatment of infection is generally pursued. The major weapon in the arsenal of treatments is antibiotics. While antibiotics have proved effective against many bacteria and thus saved countless lives, they are not a panacea. The overuse of antibiotics in certain situations has promoted the spread of resistant bacterial strains. And of great importance, antibacterials are useless against viral infections.
A variety of organisms make cationic (positively charged) peptides, molecules used as part of a non-specific defense mechanism against microorganisms. When isolated, these peptides are toxic to a wide variety of microorganisms, including bacteria, fungi, and certain enveloped viruses. One cationic peptide found in neutrophils is indolicidin. While indolicidin acts against many pathogens, notable exceptions and varying degrees of toxicity exist.
Although cationic peptides show efficacy in vitro against a variety of pathogenic cells including gram-positive bacteria, gram-negative bacteria, and fungi, these peptides are generally toxic to mammals when injected, and therapeutic indices are usually quite small. Approaches to reducing toxicity have included development of a derivative or delivery system that masks structural elements involved in the toxic response or that improves the efficacy at lower doses. Other approaches under evaluation include liposomes and micellular systems to improve the clinical effects of peptides, proteins, and hydrophobic drugs, and cyclodextrins to sequester hydrophobic surfaces during administration in aqueous media. For example, attachment of polyethylene glycol (PEG) polymers, most often by modification of amino groups, improves the medicinal value of some proteins such as asparaginase and adenosine deaminase, and increases circulatory half-lives of peptides such as interleukins.
None of these approaches are shown to improve administration of cationic peptides. For example, methods for the stepwise synthesis of polysorbate derivatives that can modify peptides by acylation reactions have been developed, but acylation alters the charge of a modified cationic peptide and frequently reduces or eliminates the antimicrobial activity of the compound. Thus, for delivery of cationic peptides, as well as other peptides and proteins, there is a need for a system combining the properties of increased circulatory half-lives with the ability to form a micellular structure.
The present invention discloses analogues of indolicidin, designed to broaden its range and effectiveness, and further provide other related advantages. The present invention also provides methods and compositions for modifying peptides, proteins, antibiotics and the like to reduce toxicity, as well as providing other advantages.
In addition neither antibiotic therapy alone of cationic peptide therapy alone can effectively combat all infections. By expanding the categories of microorganisms that respond to therapy, or by overcoming the resistance of a microorganism to antibiotic agents, health and welfare will be improved. Additionally quality of life will be improved, due to, for example, decreased duration of therapy, reduced hospital stay including high-care facilities, with the concomitant reduced risk of serious nosocomial (hospital-acquired) infections.
The present invention discloses cationic peptides, including analogues of indolicidin, cecropin/melittin fusion peptides, in combination with antibiotics such that the combination either synergistic, able to overcome microorganismal tolerance, able to overcome resistance to antibiotic treatment, or further provides other related advantages.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention generally provides the co-administration of cationic peptides with an antibiotic agent and also provides indolicidin analogues.
In related aspects, an indolicidin analogue is provided, comprising up to 25 amino acids and containing the formula: RXZXXZXB (SEQ ID NO:1); BXZXXZXB (SEQ ID NO:2) wherein at least one Z is valine; BBBXZXXZXB (SEQ ID NO:3); BXZXXZXBBBn(AA)nMILBBAGS (SEQ ID NOs:5-8); BXZXXZXBB(AA)nM (SEQ ID NOs:9-10); LBBnXZnXXZnXRK (SEQ ID NOs:11-18); LKnXZXXZXRRK (SEQ ID NOs:19-20); BBXZXXZXBBB (SEQ ID NO:21), wherein at least two X residues are phenylalanine; BBXZXXZXBBB (SEQ ID NO:22), wherein at least two X residues are tyrosine; and wherein Z is proline or valine; X is a hydrophobic residue; B is a basic amino acid; AA is any amino acid, and n is 0 or 1. In preferred embodiments, Z is proline, X is tryptophan and B is arginine or lysine. In other aspects, indolicidin analogues having specific sequences are provided. In certain embodiments, the indolicidin analogues are coupled to form a branched peptide. In other embodiments, the analogue has one or more amino acids altered to a corresponding D-amino acid, and in certain preferred embodiments, the N-terminal and/or the C-terminal amino acid is a D-amino acid. Other preferred modifications include analogues that are acetylated at the N-terminal amino acid, amidated at the C-terminal amino acid, esterified at the C-terminal amino acid, modified by incorporation of homoserine/homoserine lactone at the C-terminal amino acid, and conjugated with polyethylene glycol or derivatives thereof.
In other aspects, the invention provides an isolated nucleic acid molecule whose sequence comprises one or more coding sequences of the indolicidin analogues, expression vectors, and host cells transfected or transformed with the expression vector.
Other aspects provide a pharmaceutical composition comprising at least one indolicidin analogue and a physiologically acceptable buffer, optionally comprising an antibiotic agent.
In other embodiments, the pharmaceutical composition further comprises an antiviral agent, an antiparasitic agent; and an antifungal agent. In yet other embodiments, the composition is incorporated in a liposome or a slow-release vehicle.
In yet another aspect, the invention provides a method of treating an infection, comprising administering to a patient a therapeutically effective amount of a pharmaceutical composition. The infection may be caused by, for example, a microorganism, such as a bacterium (e.g., Gram-negative or Gram-positive bacterium or anaerobe; parasite or virus).
In other aspects, a composition is provided, comprising an indolicidin analogue and an antibiotic. In addition, a device, which may be a medical device, is provided that is coated with the indolicidin analogue and may further comprise an antibiotic agent.
In other aspects, antibodies that react specifically with any one of the analogues described herein are provided. The antibody is preferably a monoclonal antibody or single chain antibody.
In a preferred aspect, the invention provides a composition comprising a compound modified by derivatization of an amino group with a conjugate comprising activated polyoxyalkylene and a lipophilic moiety. In preferred embodiments, the conjugate comprises sorbitan linking polyoxyalkylene glycol and fatty acid, and more preferably is polysorbate. In preferred embodiments, the fatty acid is from 12-18 carbons, and the polyoxyalkylene glycol is polyoxyethylene, such as with a chain length of from 2 to 100. In certain embodiments, the compound is a peptide or protein, such as a cationic peptide (e.g., indolicidin or an indolicidin analogue). In preferred embodiments, the polyoxyalkylene glycol is activated by irradiation with ultraviolet light or by treatment with ammonium persulfate.
The invention also provides a method of making a compound modified with a conjugate of an activated polyoxyalkylene and a lipophilic moiety, comprising: (a) freezing a mixture of the conjugate of an activated polyoxyalkylene and lipophilic moiety with the compound; and (b) lyophilizing the frozen mixture; wherein the compound has a free amino group. In preferred embodiments, the compound is a peptide or antibiotic. In other preferred embodiments, the mixture in step (a) is in an acetate buffer. In a related aspect, the method comprises mixing the conjugate of an activated polyoxyalkylene and lipophilic moiety with the compound; for a time sufficient to form modified compounds, wherein the mixture is in a carbonate buffer having a pH greater than 8.5 and the compound has a free amino group. The modified compound may be isolated by reversed-phase HPLC and/or precipitation from an organic solvent.
The invention also provides a pharmaceutical composition comprising at least one modified compound and a physiologically acceptable buffer, and in certain embodiments, further comprises an antibiotic agent, antiviral agent, an antiparasitic agent, and/or antifungal agent. The composition may be used to treat an infection, such as those caused by a microorganism (e.g., bacterium, fungus, parasite and virus).
This invention also generally provides methods for treating infections caused by a microorganism using a combination of cationic peptides and antibiotic agents. In one aspect, the method comprises administering to a patient a therapeutically effective dose of a combination of an antibiotic agent and a cationic peptide, wherein administration of an antibiotic agent alone is ineffective. Preferred peptides are provided.
In another aspect, a method of enhancing the activity of an antibiotic agent against an infection in a patient caused by a microorganism is provided, comprising administering to the patient a therapeutically effective dose of the antibiotic agent and a cationic peptide. In yet another aspect, a method is provided for enhancing the antibiotic activity of lysozyme or nisin, comprising administering lysozyme or nisin with a cationic peptide.
In other aspects, methods of treating an infection in a patient caused by a bacteria that is tolerant to an antibiotic agent, caused by a microorganism that is inherently resistant to an antibiotic agent; or caused by a microorganism that has acquired resistance to an antibiotic agent; comprises administering to the patient a therapeutically effective dose of the antibiotic agent and a cationic peptide, thereby overcoming tolerance, inherent or acquired resistance to the antibiotic agent.
In yet other related aspects, methods are provided for killing a microorganism that is tolerant, inherently resistant, or has acquired resistance to an antibiotic agent, comprising contacting the microorganism with the antibiotic agent and a cationic peptide, thereby overcoming tolerance, inherent resistance or acquired resistance to the antibiotic agent.
These and other aspects of the present invention will become evident upon reference to the following detailed description and attached drawings. In addition, various references are set forth below which describe in more detail certain procedures or compositions (e.g., plasmids, etc.), and are therefore incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Prior to setting forth the invention, it may be helpful to an understanding thereof to set forth definitions of certain terms that are used herein.
The amino acid designations herein are set forth as either the standard one- or three-letter code. A capital letter indicates an L-form amino acid; a small letter indicates a D-form amino acid.
As used herein, an “antibiotic agent” refers to a molecule that tends to prevent, inhibit, or destroy life. The term “antimicrobial agent” refers to an antibiotic agent specifically directed to a microorganism.
As used herein, “cationic peptide” refers to a peptide that has a net positive charge within the pH range of 4-10. A cationic peptide is at least 5 amino acids in length and has at least one basic amino acid (e.g., arginine, lysine, histidine). Preferably, the peptide has measurable anti-microbial activity when administered alone.
As used herein, “indolicidin” refers to an antimicrobial cationic peptide. Indolicidins may be isolated from a variety of organisms. One indolicidin is isolated from bovine neutrophils and is a 13 amino acid peptide amidated at the carboxy-terminus in its native form (Selsted et al., J. Biol. Chem. 267:4292, 1992). An amino acid sequence of indolicidin is presented in SEQ ID NO: 1.
As used herein, a “peptide analogue”, “analogue”, or “variant” of a cationic peptide, such as indolicidin, is at least 5 amino acids in length, has at least one basic amino acid (e.g., arginine and lysine) and has anti-microbial activity. Unless otherwise indicated, a named amino acid refers to the L-form. Basic amino acids include arginine, lysine, histidine and derivatives. Hydrophobic residues include tryptophan, phenylalanine, isoleucine, leucine, valine, and derivatives.
Also included within the scope of the present invention are amino acid derivatives that have been altered by chemical means, such as methylation (e.g., a methylvaline), amidation, especially of the C-terminal amino acid by an alkylamine (e.g., ethylamine, ethanolamine, and ethylene diamine) and alteration of an amino acid side chain, such as acylation of the 2-amino group of lysine. Other amino acids that may be incorporated in the analogue include any of the D-amino acids corresponding to the 20 L-amino acids commonly found in proteins, imino amino acids, rare amino acids, such as hydroxylysine, or non-protein amino acids, such as homoserine and ornithine. A peptide analogue may have none or one or more of these derivatives, and D-amino acids. In addition, a peptide may also be synthesized as a retro-, inverto- or retro-inverto-peptide.
As used herein “inherent resistance” of a microorganism to an antibiotic agent refers to a natural resistance to the action of the agent even in the absence of prior exposure to the agent. (R. C. Moellering Jr., Principles of Anti-infective Therapy; In: Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases, 4th Edition, Eds.; G. L. Mandell, J. E. Bennett, R. Dolin. Churchill Livingstone, New York USA, 1995, page 200).
As used herein, “acquired resistance” of a microorganism to an antibiotic agent refers to a resistance that is not inhibited by the normal achievable serum concentrations of a recommended antibiotic agent based on the recommended dosage. (NCCLS guidelines).
As used herein, “tolerance” of a microorganism to an antibiotic agent refers to when there is microstatic, rather than microcidal effect of the agent. Tolerance is measured by an MBC:MIC ratio greater than or equal to 32. (Textbook of Diagnostic Microbiology, Eds., C. R. Mahon and G. Manuselis, W.B. Saunders Co., Toronto Canada, 1995, page 92).
As noted above, this invention provides methods of treating infections caused by a microorganism, methods of killing a microorganism, and methods of enhancing the activity of an antibiotic agent. In particular, these methods are especially applicable when a microorganism is resistant to an antibiotic agent, by a mechanism, such as tolerance, inherent resistance, or acquired resistance. In this invention, infections are treated by administering a therapeutically effective dose of a cationic peptide alone or in combination with an antibiotic agent to a patient with an infection. Similarly, the combination can be contacted with a microorganism to effect killing.
I. Cationic PeptidesAs noted above, a cationic peptide is a peptide that has a net positive charge within the pH range 4-10. A peptide is at least 5 amino acids long and preferably not more than 25, 27, 30, 35, or 40 amino acids. Peptides from 12 to 30 residues are preferred. Examples of native cationic peptides include, but are not limited to, representative peptides presented in the following table.
In addition to the peptides listed above, chimeras and analogues of these peptides are useful within the context of the present invention. For this invention, analogues of native cationic peptides must retain a net positive charge, but may contain D-amino acids, amino acid derivatives, insertions, deletions, and the like, some of which are discussed below. Chimeras include fusions of cationic peptide, such as the peptides of fragments thereof listed above, and fusions of cationic peptides with non-cationic peptides.
As described herein, modification of any of the residues including the N- or C-terminus is within the scope of the invention. A preferred modification of the C-terminus is amidation. Other modifications of the C-terminus include esterification and lactone formation. N-terminal modifications include acetylation, acylation, alkylation, PEGylation, myristylation, and the like. Additionally, the peptide may be modified to form an polymer-modified peptide as described below. The peptides may also be labeled, such as with a radioactive label, a fluorescent label, a mass spectrometry tag, biotin and the like.
Unless otherwise indicated, a named amino acid refers to the L-form. Basic amino acids include arginine, lysine, histidine, and derivatives. Hydrophobic residues include tryptophan, phenylalanine, isoleucine, leucine, valine, and derivatives. The peptide may contain derivatives of amino acids that have been altered by chemical means, such as methylation (e.g., α-methylvaline), amidation, especially of the C-terminal amino acid by an alkylamine (e.g., ethylamine, ethanolamine, and ethylene diamine) and alteration of an amino acid side chain, such as acylation of the ε-amino group of lysine. Other amino acids that may be incorporated include any of the D-amino acids corresponding to the 20 L-amino acids commonly found in proteins, rare amino acids, such as hydroxylysine, or non-protein amino acids, such as homoserine and ornithine. A peptide may have none or one or more of these derivatives, and may contain D-amino acids (specified as a lower case letter when using the 1-letter code). Furthermore, modification of the N- or C-terminus is within the scope of the invention. A preferred modification of the C-terminus is amidation. Other modifications of the C-terminus include ester additions. N-terminal modifications include acetylation, myristlyation, and the like.
A. Indolicidin and Analogues
As noted above, the present invention provides cationic peptides, including indolicidin and indolicidin analogues. Analogues include peptides that have one or more insertions, deletions, modified amino acids, D-amino acids and the like. These analogues may be synthesized by chemical methods, especially using an automated peptide synthesizer, or produced by recombinant methods. The choice of an amino acid sequence is guided by a general formula presented herein.
The indolicidin analogues of the present invention are at least 5 or 7 amino acids in length and preferably not more than 15, 20, 25, 27, 30, or 35 amino acids. Analogues from 9 to 14 residues are preferred. General formulas for peptide analogues in the scope of the present invention may be set forth as:
wherein standard single letter amino abbreviations are used and; Z is proline, glycine or a hydrophobic residue, and preferably Z is proline or valine; X is a hydrophobic residue, such as tryptophan, phenylalanine, isoleucine, leucine and valine, and preferably tryptophan; B is a basic amino acid, preferably arginine or lysine; AA is any amino acid, and n is 0 or 1. In formula (2), at least one Z is valine; in formula (8), at least two Xs are phenylalanine; and in formula (9), at least two Xs are tyrosine. Additional residues may be present at the N-terminus, C-terminus, or both.
B. Cecropin Peptides
Cecropins are cationic peptides that have antimicrobial activity against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. Cecropins have been isolated from both invertebrates (e.g., insect hemolymph) as well as vertebrates (e.g. pig intestines). Generally, these peptides are 35 to 39 residues. An exemplary cecropin has the sequence KWKLFKKIEKVGQNIRDGIIKAGPAVAWGQATQIAK (SEQ ID NO:176). Some additional cecropin sequences are presented in Table 1. Within the context of this invention, cecropins include analogues that have one or more insertions, deletions, modified amino acids, D-amino acids and the like.
C. Melittin Peptides
Melittin is a cationic peptide found in bee venom. An amino acid sequence of an exemplary melittin peptide is GIGAVLKVLTTGLPALISWIKRKKRQQ (SEQ ID NO:216). Like the cecropins, melittin exhibits antimicrobial activity against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. Within the context of this invention, melittin includes analogues that have one or more insertions, deletions, modified amino acids, D-amino acids and the like.
D. Cecropin-Melittin Chimeric Peptides
As noted herein, cationic peptides include fusion peptides of native cationic peptides and analogues of fusion peptides. In particular, fusions of cecropin and melittin are provided. An exemplary fusion has the sequence: cecropin A (residues 1-8)/melittin (residues 1-18). Other fusion peptides useful within the context of this invention are described by the general formulas below.
wherein R1 is a hydrophobic amino acid residue, R2 is a hydrophilic amino acid residue, and X is from about 14 to 24 amino acid residues.
E. Drosocin and Analogues
As noted herein, cationic peptides include drosocin and drosocin analogues. Drosocins are isolated from Drosophila melanogaster. An exemplary drosocin is a 19 amino acid peptide having the sequence: GKPRPYSPRPTSHPRPIRV (SEQ ID NO:202); GenBank Accession No. S35984). Analogues of drosocin include peptides that have insertions, deletions, modified amino acids, D-amino acids and the like.
F. Peptide Synthesis
Peptides may be synthesized by standard chemical methods, including synthesis by automated procedure. In general, peptide analogues are synthesized based on the standard solid-phase Fmoc protection strategy with HATU as the coupling agent. The peptide is cleaved from the solid-phase resin with trifluoroacetic acid containing appropriate scavengers, which also deprotects side chain functional groups. Crude peptide is further purified using preparative reversed-phase chromatography. Other purification methods, such as partition chromatography, gel filtration, gel electrophoresis, or ion-exchange chromatography may be used.
Other synthesis techniques, known in the art, such as the tBoc protection strategy, or use of different coupling reagents or the like can be employed to produce equivalent peptides.
Peptides may be synthesized as a linear molecule or as branched molecules. Branched peptides typically contain a core peptide that provides a number of attachment points for additional peptides. Lysine is most commonly used for the core peptide because it has one carboxyl functional group and two (alpha and epsilon) amine functional groups. Other diamino acids can also be used. Preferably, either two or three levels of geometrically branched lysines are used; these cores form a tetrameric and octameric core structure, respectively (Tam, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85:5409, 1988). Schematically, examples of these cores are represented as shown (SEQ ID NO:92):
The attachment points for the peptides are typically at their carboxyl functional group to either the alpha or epsilon amine groups of the lysines. To synthesize these multimeric peptides, the solid phase resin is derivatized with the core matrix, and subsequent synthesis and cleavage from the resin follows standard procedures. The multimeric peptides may be used within the context of this invention as for any of the linear peptides and are preferred for use in generating antibodies to the peptides.
G. Recombinant Production of Peptides
Peptides may alternatively be synthesized by recombinant production (see e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 5,593,866). A variety of host systems are suitable for production of the peptide analogues, including bacteria (e.g., E. coli), yeast (e.g., Saccharomyces cerevisiae), insect (e.g., Sf9), and mammalian cells (e.g., CHO, COS-7). Many expression vectors have been developed and are available for each of these hosts. Generally, bacteria cells and vectors that are functional in bacteria are used in this invention. However, at times, it may be preferable to have vectors that are functional in other hosts. Vectors and procedures for cloning and expression in E. coli are discussed herein and, for example, in Sambrook et al. (Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., 1987) and in Ausubel et al. (Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, Greene Publishing Co., 1995).
A DNA sequence encoding a cationic peptide is introduced into an expression vector appropriate for the host. In preferred embodiments, the gene is cloned into a vector to create a fusion protein. The fusion partner is chosen to contain an anionic region, such that a bacterial host is protected from the toxic effect of the peptide. This protective region effectively neutralizes the antimicrobial effects of the peptide and also may prevent peptide degradation by host proteases. The fusion partner (carrier protein) of the invention may further function to transport the fusion peptide to inclusion bodies, the periplasm, the outer membrane, or the extracellular environment. Carrier proteins suitable in the context of this invention specifically include, but are not limited to, glutathione-S-transferase (GST), protein A from Staphylococcus aureus, two synthetic IgG-binding domains (ZZ) of protein A, outer membrane protein F, β-galactosidase (lacZ), and various products of bacteriophage λ and bacteriophage T7. From the teachings provided herein, it is apparent that other proteins may be used as carriers. Furthermore, the entire carrier protein need not be used, as long as the protective anionic region is present. To facilitate isolation of the peptide sequence, amino acids susceptible to chemical cleavage (e.g., CNBr) or enzymatic cleavage (e.g., V8 protease, trypsin) are used to bridge the peptide and fusion partner. For expression in E. coli, the fusion partner is preferably a normal intracellular protein that directs expression toward inclusion body formation. In such a case, following cleavage to release the final product, there is no requirement for renaturation of the peptide. In the present invention, the DNA cassette, comprising fusion partner and peptide gene, may be inserted into an expression vector, which can be a plasmid, virus or other vehicle known in the art. Preferably, the expression vector is a plasmid that contains an inducible or constitutive promoter to facilitate the efficient transcription of the inserted DNA sequence in the host. Transformation of the host cell with the recombinant DNA may be carried out by Ca++-mediated techniques, by electroporation, or other methods well known to those skilled in the art.
Briefly, a DNA fragment encoding a peptide is derived from an existing cDNA or genomic clone or synthesized. A convenient method is amplification of the gene from a single-stranded template. The template is generally the product of an automated oligonucleotide synthesis. Amplification primers are derived from the 5′ and 3′ ends of the template and typically incorporate restriction sites chosen with regard to the cloning site of the vector. If necessary, translational initiation and termination codons can be engineered into the primer sequences. The sequence encoding the protein may be codon-optimized for expression in the particular host. Thus, for example, if the analogue fusion protein is expressed in bacteria, codons are optimized for bacterial usage. Codon optimization is accomplished by automated synthesis of the entire gene or gene region, ligation of multiple oligonucleotides, mutagenesis of the native sequence, or other techniques known to those in the art.
At minimum, the expression vector should contain a promoter sequence. However, other regulatory sequences may also be included. Such sequences include an enhancer, ribosome binding site, transcription termination signal sequence, secretion signal sequence, origin of replication, selectable marker, and the like. The regulatory sequences are operationally associated with one another to allow transcription and subsequent translation. In preferred aspects, the plasmids used herein for expression include a promoter designed for expression of the proteins in bacteria. Suitable promoters, including both constitutive and inducible promoters, are widely available and are well known in the art. Commonly used promoters for expression in bacteria include promoters from T7, T3, T5, and SP6 phages, and the trp, lpp, and lac operons. Hybrid promoters (see, U.S. Pat. No. 4,551,433), such as tac and trc, may also be used.
Within a preferred embodiment, the vector is capable of replication in bacterial cells. Thus, the vector may contain a bacterial origin of replication. Preferred bacterial origins of replication include f1-ori and col E1 ori, especially the on derived from pUC plasmids. Low copy number vectors (e.g., pPD100) may also be used, especially when the product is deleterious to the host.
The plasmids also preferably include at least one selectable marker that is functional in the host. A selectable marker gene confers a phenotype on the host that allows transformed cells to be identified and/or selectively grown. Suitable selectable marker genes for bacterial hosts include the chloroamphenicol resistance gene (Cmr), ampicillin resistance gene (Ampr), tetracycline resistance gene (Tcr) kanamycin resistance gene (Kanr), and others known in the art. To function in selection, some markers may require a complementary deficiency in the host.
In some aspects, the sequence of nucleotides encoding the peptide also encodes a secretion signal, such that the resulting peptide is synthesized as a precursor protein, which is subsequently processed and secreted. The resulting secreted protein may be recovered from the periplasmic space or the fermentation medium. Sequences of secretion signals suitable for use are widely available and are well known (von Heijne, J. Mol. Biol. 184:99-105, 1985).
The vector may also contain a gene coding for a repressor protein, which is capable of repressing the transcription of a promoter that contains a repressor binding site. Altering the physiological conditions of the cell can depress the promoter. For example, a molecule may be added that competitively binds the repressor, or the temperature of the growth media may be altered. Repressor proteins include, but are not limited to the E. coli lacl repressor (responsive to induction by IPTG), the temperature sensitive λcl857 repressor, and the like.
Examples of plasmids for expression in bacteria include the pET expression vectors pET3a, pET 11a, pET 12a-c, and pET 15b (see U.S. Pat. No. 4,952,496; available from Novagen, Madison, Wis.). Low copy number vectors (e.g., pPD100) can be used for efficient overproduction of peptides deleterious to the E. coli host (Dersch et al., FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 123: 19, 1994).
Bacterial hosts for the T7 expression vectors may contain chromosomal copies of DNA encoding T7 RNA polymerase operably linked to an inducible promoter (e.g., lacUV promoter; see, U.S. Pat. No. 4,952,496), such as found in the E. coli strains HMS174(DE3)pLysS, BL21(DE3)pLysS, HMS174(DE3) and BL21(DE3). T7 RNA polymerase can also be present on plasmids compatible with the T7 expression vector. The polymerase may be under control of a lambda promoter and repressor (e.g., pGP1-2; Tabor and Richardson, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 82: 1074, 1985).
The peptide product is isolated by standard techniques, such as affinity, size exclusion, or ionic exchange chromatography, HPLC and the like. An isolated peptide should preferably show a major band by Coomassie blue stain of SDS-PAGE that is at least 90% of the material.
H. Generation of Analogues by Amplification-Based Semi-Random Mutagenesis
Cationic peptide analogues can be generated using an amplification (e.g., PCR)-based procedure in which primers are designed to target sequences at the 5′ and 3′ ends of an encoded parent peptide, for example indolicidin. Amplification conditions are chosen to facilitate misincorporation of nucleotides by the thermostable polymerase during synthesis. Thus, random mutations are introduced in the original sequence, some of which result in amino acid alteration(s). Amplification products may be cloned into a coat protein of a phage vector, such as a phagemid vector, packaged and amplified in an acceptable host to produce a display library.
These libraries can then be assayed for antibiotic activity of the peptides. Briefly, bacteria infected with the library are plated, grown, and overlaid with agarose containing a bacterial strain that the phage are unable to infect. Zones of growth inhibition in the agarose overlay are observed in the area of phage expressing an analogue with anti-bacterial activity. These inhibiting phage are isolated and the cloned peptide sequence determined by DNA sequence analysis. The peptide can then be independently synthesized and its antibiotic activity further investigated.
5. Antibodies to Cationic Peptides
Antibodies may be generated to a specific peptide analogue using multiple antigenic peptides (MAPs) that contain approximately eight copies of the peptide linked to a small non-immunogenic peptidyi core to form an immunogen. (See, in general, Harlow and Lane, supra) Alternatively, the target peptide can be conjugated to bovine serum albumin (BSA), ovalbumin or another suitable conjugate. The MAP or peptide conjugate is injected subcutaneously into rabbits or into mice or other rodents, where they may have sufficiently long half-lives to facilitate antibody production. After twelve weeks blood samples are taken, serum is separated and tested in an ELISA assay against the original peptide, with a positive result indicating the presence of antibodies specific to the target peptide. This serum can then be stored and used in ELISA assays to specifically measure the amount of the specific analogue. Alternatively, other standard methods of antibody production may be employed, for example generation of monoclonal antibodies.
Within the context of the present invention, antibodies are understood to include monoclonal antibodies, polyclonal antibodies, anti-idiotypic antibodies, antibody fragments (e.g., Fab, and F(ab′)2, Fv variable regions, or complementarity determining regions). Antibodies are generally accepted as specific against indolicidin analogues if they bind with a Kd of greater than or equal to 10−7 M, preferably greater than of equal to 10−8 M. The affinity of a monoclonal antibody or binding partner can be readily determined by one of ordinary skill in the art (see Scatchard, Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 51:660-672, 1949). Once suitable antibodies have been obtained, they may be isolated or purified by many techniques well known to those of ordinary skill in the art.
Monoclonal antibodies may also be readily generated from hybridoma cell lines using conventional techniques (see U.S. Pat. Nos. RE 32,011, 4,902,614, 4,543,439, and 4,411,993; see also Antibodies: A Laboratory Manual, Harlow and Lane (eds.), Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 1988). Briefly, within one embodiment, a subject animal such as a rat or mouse is injected with peptide, generally administered as an emulsion in an adjuvant such as Freund's complete or incomplete adjuvant in order to increase the immune response. The animal is generally boosted at least once prior to harvest of spleen and/or lymph nodes and immortalization of those cells. Various immortalization techniques, such as mediated by Epstein-Barr virus or fusion to produce a hybridoma, may be used. In a preferred embodiment, immortalization occurs by fusion with a suitable myeloma cell line to create a hybridoma that secretes monoclonal antibody. Suitable myeloma lines include, for example, NS-1 (ATCC No. TIB 18), and P3X63 Ag 8.653 (ATCC No. CRL 1580). The preferred fusion partners do not express endogenous antibody genes. After about seven days, the hybridomas may be screened for the presence of antibodies that are reactive against a telomerase protein. A wide variety of assays may be utilized (see Antibodies: A Laboratory Manual, Harlow and Lane (eds.), Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 1988).
Other techniques may also be utilized to construct monoclonal antibodies (see Huse et al., Science 246:1275-1281, 1989; Sastry et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86:5728-5732, 1989; Alting-Mees et al., Strategies in Molecular Biology 3:1-9, 1990; describing recombinant techniques). These techniques include cloning heavy and light chain immunoglobulin cDNA in suitable vectors, such as λImmunoZap(H) and λImmunoZap(L). These recombinants may be screened individually or co-expressed to form Fab fragments or antibodies (see Huse et al., supra; Sastry et al., supra). Positive plaques may subsequently be converted to a non-lytic plasmid that allows high level expression of monoclonal antibody fragments from E. coli.
Similarly, portions or fragments, such as Fab and Fv fragments, of antibodies may also be constructed utilizing conventional enzymatic digestion or recombinant DNA techniques to yield isolated variable regions of an antibody. Within one embodiment, the genes which encode the variable region from a hybridoma producing a monoclonal antibody of interest are amplified using nucleotide primers for the variable region. In addition, techniques may be utilized to change a “murine” antibody to a “human” antibody, without altering the binding specificity of the antibody.
II. TestingCationic peptides of the present invention are assessed either alone or in combination with an antibiotic agent or another analogue for their potential as antibiotic therapeutic agents using a series of assays. Preferably, all peptides are initially assessed in vitro, the most promising candidates are selected for further assessment in vivo, and then candidates are selected for pre-clinical studies. The in vitro assays include measurement of antibiotic activity, toxicity, solubility, pharmacology, secondary structure, liposome permeabilization and the like. In vivo assays include assessment of efficacy in animal models, antigenicity, toxicity, and the like. In general, in vitro assays are initially performed, followed by in vivo assays.
Generally, cationic peptides are initially tested for (1) anti-microbial activity in vitro; (2) in vitro toxicity to normal mammalian cells; and (3) in vivo toxicity in an animal model. Peptides that have some anti-microbial activity are preferred, although such activity may not be necessary for enhancing the activity of an antibiotic agent. Also, for in vivo use, peptides should preferably demonstrate acceptable toxicity profiles, as measured by standard procedures. Lower toxicity is preferred. Additional assays may be performed to demonstrate that the peptide is not immunogenic and to examine antimicrobial activity in vivo.
A. In Vitro Assays
Cationic peptides, including indolicidin analogues, are assayed by, for example, an agarose dilution MIC assay, a broth dilution, time-kill assay, or equivalent methods. Antibiotic activity is measured as inhibition of growth or killing of a microorganism (e.g., bacteria, fungi).
Briefly, a candidate peptide in Mueller Hinton broth supplemented with calcium and magnesium is mixed with molten agarose. Other broths and agars may be used as long as the peptide can freely diffuse through the medium. The agarose is poured into petri dishes or wells, allowed to solidify, and a test strain is applied to the agarose plate. The test strain is chosen, in part, on the intended application of the peptide. Thus, by way of example, if an indolicidin analogue with activity against S. aureus is desired, an S. aureus strain is used. It may be desirable to assay the analogue on several strains and/or on clinical isolates of the test species. Plates are incubated overnight and inspected visually for bacterial growth. A minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of a cationic peptide is the lowest concentration of peptide that completely inhibits growth of the organism. Peptides that exhibit good activity against the test strain, or group of strains, typically having an MIC of less than or equal to 16 □g/ml are selected for further testing.
Alternatively, time kill curves can be used to determine the differences in colony counts over a set time period, typically 24 hours. Briefly, a suspension of organisms of known concentration is prepared and a candidate peptide is added. Aliquots of the suspension are removed at set times, diluted, plated on medium, incubated, and counted. MIC is measured as the lowest concentration of peptide that completely inhibits growth of the organism. In general, lower MIC values are preferred.
Candidate cationic peptides may be further tested for their toxicity to normal mammalian cells. An exemplary assay is a red blood cell (RBC) (erythrocyte) hemolysis assay. Briefly, in this assay, red blood cells are isolated from whole blood, typically by centrifugation, and washed free of plasma components. A 5% (v/v) suspension of erythrocytes in isotonic saline is incubated with different concentrations of peptide analogue. Generally, the peptide will be in a suitable formulation buffer. After incubation for approximately 1 hour at 37° C., the cells are centrifuged, and the absorbance of the supernatant at 540 nm is determined. A relative measure of lysis is determined by comparison to absorbance after complete lysis of erythrocytes using NH4Cl or equivalent (establishing a 100% value). A peptide with <10% lysis at 100 μg/ml is suitable. Preferably, there is <5% lysis at 100 μg/ml. Such peptides that are not lytic, or are only moderately lytic, are desirable and suitable for further screening. Other in vitro toxicity assays, for example measurement of toxicity towards cultured mammalian cells, may be used to assess in vitro toxicity.
Solubility of the peptide in formulation buffer is an additional parameter that may be examined. Several different assays may be used, such as appearance in buffer. Briefly, peptide is suspended in solution, such as broth or formulation buffer. The appearance is evaluated according to a scale that ranges from (a) clear, no precipitate, (b) light, diffuse precipitate, to (c) cloudy, heavy precipitate. Finer gradations may be used. In general, less precipitate is more desirable. However, some precipitate may be acceptable.
Additional in vitro assays may be carried out to assess the potential of the peptide as a therapeutic. Such assays include peptide solubility in formulations, pharmacology in blood or plasma, serum protein binding, analysis of secondary structure, for example by circular dichroism, liposome permeabilization, and bacterial inner membrane permeabilization. In general, it is desirable that analogues are soluble and perform better than the parent peptide (e.g., indolicidin).
B. In Vivo Assays
Peptides, including peptide analogues, selected on the basis of the results from the in vitro assays can be tested in vivo for efficacy, toxicity and the like.
The antibiotic activity of selected peptides may be assessed in vivo for their ability to ameliorate microbial infections using animal models. A variety of methods and animal models are available. Within these assays, a peptide is useful as a therapeutic if inhibition of microorganismal growth compared to inhibition with vehicle alone is statistically significant. This measurement can be made directly from cultures isolated from body fluids or sites, or indirectly, by assessing survival rates of infected animals. For assessment of antibacterial activity several animal models are available, such as acute infection models including those in which (a) normal mice receive a lethal dose of microorganisms, (b) neutropenic mice receive a lethal dose of microorganisms or (c) rabbits receive an inoculum in the heart, and chronic infection models. The model selected will depend in part on the intended clinical indication of the analogue.
By way of example, in a normal mouse model, mice are inoculated ip or iv with a lethal dose of bacteria. Typically, the dose is such that 90-100% of animals die within 2 days. The choice of a microorganismal strain for this assay depends, in part, upon the intended application of the analogue, and in the accompanying examples, assays are carried out with three different Staphylococcus strains. Briefly, shortly before or after inoculation (generally within 60 minutes), analogue in a suitable formulation buffer is injected. Multiple injections of analogue may be administered. Animals are observed for up to 8 days post-infection and the survival of animals is recorded. Successful treatment either rescues animals from death or delays death to a statistically significant level, as compared with non-treatment control animals. Analogues that show better efficacy than indolicidin itself are preferred.
In vivo toxicity of a peptide is measured through administration of a range of doses to animals, typically mice, by a route defined in part by the intended clinical use. The survival of the animals is recorded and LD50, LD90-100, and maximum tolerated dose (MTD) can be calculated to enable comparison of analogues. Indolicidin analogues less toxic than indolicidin are preferred.
Furthermore, for in vivo use, low immunogenicity is preferred. To measure immunogenicity, peptides are injected into normal animals, generally rabbits. At various times after a single or multiple injections, serum is obtained and tested for antibody reactivity to the peptide analogue. Antibodies to peptides may be identified by ELISA, immunoprecipitation assays, Western blots, and other methods. (see, Harlow and Lane, Antibodies: A Laboratory Manual, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., 1988). No or minimal antibody reactivity is preferred. Additionally, pharmacokinetics of the analogues in animals and histopathology of animals treated with analogues may be determined.
Selection of cationic peptides as potential therapeutics is based on in vitro and in vivo assay results. In general, peptides that exhibit low toxicity at high dose levels and high efficacy at low dose levels are preferred candidates.
III. Antibiotic AgentsAn antibiotic agent includes any molecule that tends to prevent, inhibit or destroy life and as such, includes anti-bacterial agents, anti-fungicides, anti-viral agents, and anti-parasitic agents. These agents may be isolated from an organism that produces the agent or procured from a commercial source (e.g., pharmaceutical company, such as Eli Lilly, Indianapolis, Ind.; Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.).
Anti-bacterial antibiotic agents include, but are not limited to, penicillins, cephalosporins, carbacephems, cephamycins, carbapenems, monobactams, aminoglycosides, glycopeptides, quinolones, tetracyclines, macrolides, and fluoroquinolones (see Table below). Examples of antibiotic agents include, but are not limited to, Penicillin G (CAS Registry No.: 61-33-6); Methicillin (CAS Registry No.: 61-32-5); Nafcillin (CAS Registry No.: 147-52-4); Oxacillin (CAS Registry No.: 66-79-5); Cloxacillin (CAS Registry No.: 61-72-3); Dicloxacillin (CAS Registry No.: 3116-76-5); Ampicillin (CAS Registry No.: 69-53-4); Amoxicillin (CAS Registry No.: 26787-78-0); Ticarcillin (CAS Registry No.: 34787-01-4); Carbenicillin (CAS Registry No.: 4697-36-3); Mezlocillin (CAS Registry No.: 51481-65-3); Azlocillin (CAS Registry No.: 37091-66-0); Piperacillin (CAS Registry No.: 61477-96-1); Imipenem (CAS Registry No.: 74431-23-5); Aztreonam (CAS Registry No.: 78110-38-0); Cephalothin (CAS Registry No.: 153-61-7); Cefazolin (CAS Registry No.: 25953-19-9); Cefaclor (CAS Registry No.: 70356-03-5); Cefamandole formate sodium (CAS Registry No.: 42540-40-9); Cefoxitin (CAS Registry No.: 35607-66-0); Cefuroxime (CAS Registry No.: 55268-75-2); Cefonicid (CAS Registry No.: 61270-58-4); Cefmetazole (CAS Registry No.: 56796-20-4); Cefotetan (CAS Registry No.: 69712-56-7); Cefprozil (CAS Registry No.: 92665-29-7); Loracarbef (CAS Registry No.: 121961-22-6); Cefetamet (CAS Registry No.: 65052-63-3); Cefoperazone (CAS Registry No.: 62893-19-0); Cefotaxime (CAS Registry No.: 63527-52-6); Ceftizoxime (CAS Registry No.: 68401-81-0); Ceftriaxone (CAS Registry No.: 73384-59-5); Ceftazidime (CAS Registry No.: 72558-82-8); Cefepime (CAS Registry No.: 88040-23-7); Cefixime (CAS Registry No.: 79350-37-1); Cefpodoxime (CAS Registry No.: 80210-62-4); Cefsulodin (CAS Registry No.: 62587-73-9); Fleroxacin (CAS Registry No.: 79660-72-3); Nalidixic acid (CAS Registry No.: 389-08-2); Norfloxacin (CAS Registry No.: 70458-96-7); Ciprofloxacin (CAS Registry No.: 85721-33-1); Ofloxacin (CAS Registry No.: 82419-36-1); Enoxacin (CAS Registry No.: 74011-58-8); Lomefloxacin (CAS Registry No.: 98079-51-7); Cinoxacin (CAS Registry No.: 28657-80-9); Doxycycline (CAS Registry No.: 564-25-0); Minocycline (CAS Registry No.: 10118-90-8); Tetracycline (CAS Registry No.: 60-54-8); Amikacin (CAS Registry No.: 37517-28-5); Gentamicin (CAS Registry No.: 1403-66-3); Kanamycin (CAS Registry No.: 8063-07-8); Netilmicin (CAS Registry No.: 56391-56-1); Tobramycin (CAS Registry No.: 32986-56-4); Streptomycin (CAS Registry No.: 57-92-1); Azithromycin (CAS Registry No.: 83905-01-5); Clarithromycin (CAS Registry No.: 81103-11-9); Erythromycin (CAS Registry No.: 114-07-8); Erythromycin estolate (CAS Registry No.: 3521-62-8); Erythromycin ethyl succinate (CAS Registry No.: 41342-53-4); Erythromycin glucoheptonate (CAS Registry No.: 23067-13-2); Erythromycin lactobionate (CAS Registry No.: 3847-29-8); Erythromycin stearate (CAS Registry No.: 643-22-1); Vancomycin (CAS Registry No.: 1404-90-6); Teicoplanin (CAS Registry No.: 61036-64-4); Chloramphenicol (CAS Registry No.: 56-75-7); Clindamycin (CAS Registry No.: 18323-44-9); Trimethoprim (CAS Registry No.: 738-70-5); Sulfamethoxazole (CAS Registry No.: 723-46-6); Nitrofurantoin (CAS Registry No.: 67-20-9); Rifampin (CAS Registry No.: 13292-46-1); Mupirocin (CAS Registry No.: 12650-69-0); Metronidazole (CAS Registry No.: 443-48-1); Cephalexin (CAS Registry No.: 15686-71-2); Roxithromycin (CAS Registry No.: 80214-83-1); Co-amoxiclavuanate; combinations of Piperacillin and Tazobactam; and their various salts, acids, bases, and other derivatives.
A table presenting categories of antibiotics, their mode of action, and examples of antibiotics is shown below.
Anti-fungal agents include, but are not limited to, terbinafine hydrochloride, nystatin, amphotericin B, griseofulvin, ketoconazole, miconazole nitrate, flucytosine, fluconazole, itraconazole, clotrimazole, benzoic acid, salicylic acid, and selenium sulfide.
Anti-viral agents include, but are not limited to, amantadine hydrochloride, rimantadin, acyclovir, famciclovir, foscarnet, ganciclovir sodium, idoxuridine, ribavirin, sorivudine, trifluridine, valacyclovir, vidarabin, didanosine, stavudine, zalcitabine, zidovudine, interferon alpha, and edoxudine.
Anti-parasitic agents include, but are not limited to, pirethrins/piperonyl butoxide, permethrin, iodoquinol, metronidazole, diethylcarbamazine citrate, piperazine, pyrantel pamoate, mebendazole, thiabendazole, praziquantel, albendazole, proguanil, quinidine gluconate injection, quinine sulfate, chloroquine phosphate, mefloquine hydrochloride, primaquine phosphate, atovaquone, co-trimoxazole (sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim), and pentamidine isethionate.
IV. Enhanced Activity of Combinations of Cationic Peptides and Antibiotic AgentsEnhanced activity occurs when a combination of peptide and antibiotic agent potentiates activity beyond the individual effects of the peptide or antibiotic agent alone or additive effects of peptide plus antibiotic agent. Enhanced activity is especially desirable in at least four scenarios: (1) the microorganism is sensitive to the antibiotic agent, but the dosage has associated problems; (2) the microorganism is tolerant to the antibiotic agent, and is inhibited from growing but is not killed; (3) the microorganism is inherently resistant to the antibiotic agent; and (4) the microorganism has acquired resistance to the antibiotic agent. Enhanced efficacy resulting from administration of the antibiotic agent in combination with a cationic peptide in the above scenarios: (1) allows for administration of lower dosages or antibiotic agent and cationic peptide; (2) restores a cytocidal effect; (3) overcomes inherent resistance; and (4) overcomes acquired resistance.
A. Enhancement of Antibiotic Agent or Cationic Peptide Activity
A synergistic combination of cationic peptide and antibiotic agent may permit a reduction in the dosage of one or both agents in order to achieve a similar therapeutic effect. This would allow smaller doses to be used, thus, decreasing the incidence of toxicity (e.g., from aminoglycosides) and lowering costs of expensive antibiotics (e.g., vancomycin). Concurrent or sequential administration of peptide and antibiotic agent is expected to provide more effective treatment of infections caused by micro-organisms (bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites). In particular, this could be achieved by using doses that the peptide or antibiotic agent alone would not achieve therapeutic success. Alternatively, the antibiotic agent and peptide can be administered at therapeutic doses for each, but wherein the combination of the two agents provides even more potent effects.
As used herein, “synergy” refers to the in vitro effect of administration of a combination of a cationic peptide and antibiotic agent such that (1) the fractional inhibitory concentration (FIC) is less than or equal to 0.5 in an FIC assay described herein; or (2) there is at least a 100-fold (2 log10) increase in killing at 24 hours for the combination as compared with the antibiotic agent alone in a time kill curve assay as described herein.
Such synergy is conveniently measured in an in vitro assay, such as kinetic kill studies or a fractional inhibitory concentration (FIC) assay as determined by agarose or broth dilution assay. The agarose dilution assay is preferred.
Briefly, in the dilution assay, a checkerboard array of cationic peptides and antibiotic agents titrated in doubling dilutions are inoculated with a microbial (e.g., bacterial) isolate. The FIC is determined by observing the impact of one antibiotic agent on the MIC (“minimal inhibitory concentration”) of the cationic peptide and vice versa. FIC is calculated by the following formula:
An FIC of ≦0.5 is evidence of synergy. An additive response has an FIC value of >0.5 and less than or equal to 1, while an indifferent response has an FIC value of >1 and ≦2. Although a synergistic effect is preferred, an additive effect may still indicate that the combination of antibiotic agent and cationic peptide are therapeutically useful.
B. Overcoming Tolerance
Tolerance is associated with a defect in bacterial cellular autolytic enzymes such that an antibacterial agent demonstrates bacteriostatic rather than bactericidal activity (Mahon and Manuselis, Textbook of Diagnostic Microbiology, W.B. Saunders Co., Toronto, Canada, p. 92, 1995). For antibiotic agents that have only bacteriostatic activity, the administration of cationic peptides in combination with antibiotic agents can restore bactericidal activity. Alternatively, the addition of a peptide to an antibiotic agent may increase the rate of a bactericidal effect of an antibiotic.
Bactericidal effects of antibiotics can be measured in vitro by a variety of assays. Typically, the assay is a measurement of MBC (“minimal bactericidal concentration”), which is an extension of the MIC determination. The agarose dilution assay is adapted to provide both MBC and MIC for an antimicrobial agent alone and the agent in combination with a cationic peptide. Alternatively, kinetic time-kill (or growth) curves can be used to determine MIC and MBC.
Briefly, following determination of MIC, MBC is determined from the assay plates by swabbing the inocula on plates containing antibiotic agent in concentrations at and above the MIC, resuspending the swab in saline or medium, and plating an aliquot on agarose plates. If the number of colonies on these agarose plates is less than 0.1% of the initial inoculum (as determined by a plate count immediately after inoculation of the MIC test plates), then ≧99.9% killing has occurred. The MBC end point is defined as the lowest concentration of the antimicrobial agent that kills 99.9% of the test bacteria.
Thus, tolerance of a microorganism to an antimicrobial agent is indicated when the number of colonies growing on subculture plates exceeds the 0.1% cutoff for several successive concentrations above the observed MIC. A combination of antimicrobial agent and cationic peptide that breaks tolerance results in a decrease in the MBC:MIC ratio to <32.
C. Overcoming Inherent Resistance
The combination of a cationic peptide with an antibiotic agent, for which a microorganism is inherently resistant (i.e., the antibiotic has never been shown to be therapeutically effective against the organism in question), is used to overcome the resistance and confer susceptibility of the microorganism to the agent. Overcoming inherent resistance is especially useful for infections where the causative organism is becoming or has become resistant to most, if not all, of the currently prescribed antibiotics. Additionally, administering a combination therapy provides more options when toxicity of an antibiotic agent and/or price are a consideration.
Overcoming resistance can be conveniently measured in vitro. Resistance is overcome when the MIC for a particular antibiotic agent against a particular microorganism is decreased from the resistant range to the sensitive range (according to the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards (NCCLS)) (see also, Moellering, in Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases, 4th edition, Mandell et al., eds. Churchill Livingstone, NY, 1995). NCCLS standards are based on microbiological data in relation to pharmacokinetic data and clinical studies. Resistance is determined when the organism causing the infection is not inhibited by the normal achievable serum concentrations of the antibiotic agent based on recommended dosage. Susceptibility is determined when the organism responds to therapy with the antibiotic agent used at the recommended dosage for the type of infection and microorganism.
D. Overcoming Acquired Resistance
Acquired resistance in a microorganism that was previously sensitive to an antibiotic agent is generally due to mutational events in chromosomal DNA, acquisition of a resistance factor carried via plasmids or phage, or transposition of a resistance gene or genes from a plasmid or phage to chromosomal DNA.
When a microorganism acquires resistance to an antibiotic, the combination of a peptide and antibiotic agent can restore activity of the antibiotic agent by overcoming the resistance mechanism of the organism. This is particularly useful for organisms that are difficult to treat or where current therapy is costly or toxic. The ability to use a less expensive or less toxic antibiotic agent, which had been effective in the past, is an improvement for certain current therapies. The re-introduction of an antibiotic agent would enable previous clinical studies and prescription data to be used in its evaluation. Activity is measured in vitro by MICs or kinetic kill curves and in vivo using animal and human clinical trials.
E. Enhancement of Effect of Lysozyme and Nisin
The combination of cationic peptides and lysozyme or nisin may improve their antibacterial effectiveness and allow use in situations in which the single agent is inactive or inappropriate.
Lysozymes disrupt certain bacteria by cleaving the glycosidic bond between N-acetylglucosamine and N-acetylmuramic acid in the polysaccharide component of bacterial cell walls. However, lysozyme exhibits only weak antibacterial activity with a narrow spectrum of activity. The addition of cationic peptide may improve the effectiveness of this activity and broaden the spectrum of activity.
Nisins are 34-residue peptide lantibiotics with primarily anti-Gram-positive bacterial activity. Nisin is used in the food processing industry as a preservative, especially for cheese, canned fruits and vegetables. Nisin forms transient potential-dependent pores in the bacterial cytoplasmic membranes but also exhibits weak antibacterial activity with a narrow spectrum of activity. The addition of cationic peptide may improve the effectiveness of nisin and broaden the spectrum of activity.
F. In Vivo Assays
In vivo testing involves the use of animal models of infection. Typically, but not exclusively, mice are used. The test organism is chosen according to the intended combination of cationic peptide and antibiotic to be evaluated. Generally, the test organism is injected intraperitoneally (IP) or intravenously (IV) at 10 to 100 times the fifty percent lethal dose (LD50). The LD50 is calculated using a method described by Reed and Muench (Reed L J and Muench H. The American Journal of Hygiene, 27:493-7.). The antibiotic agent and the cationic peptide are injected IP, IV, or subcutaneously (SC) individually as well as in combination to different groups of mice. The antimicrobial agents may be given in one or multiple doses. Animals are observed for 5 to 7 days. Other models of infection may also be used according to the clinical indication for the combination of antibiotic agents.
The number of mice in each group that survive the infectious insult is determined after 5 to 7 days. In addition, when bacteria are the test organisms, bacterial colony counts from blood, peritoneal lavage fluid, fluid from other body sites, and/or tissue from different body sites taken at various time intervals can be used to assess efficacy. Samples are serially diluted in isotonic saline and incubated for 20-24 hours, at 37° C., on a suitable growth medium for the bacterium.
Synergy between the cationic peptide and the antibiotic agent is assessed using a model of infection as described above. For a determination of synergy, one or more of the following should occur. The combination group should show greater survival rates compared to the groups treated with only one agent; the combination group and the antibiotic agent group have equivalent survival rates with the combination group receiving a lower concentration of antibiotic agent; the combination group has equivalent or better survival compared to an antibiotic agent group with a lower microorganismal load at various time points.
Overcoming tolerance can be demonstrated by lower bacterial colony counts at various time points in the combination group over the antibiotic agent group. This may also result in better survival rates for the combination group.
Similar animal models to those described above can be used to establish when inherent or acquired resistance is overcome. The microorganism strain used is, by definition, resistant to the antibiotic agent and so the survival rate in the antibiotic agent group will be close, if not equal, to zero percent. Thus, overcoming the inherent resistance of the microorganism to the antibiotic agent is demonstrated by increased survival of the combination group. Testing for reversing acquired resistance may be performed in a similar manner.
V. Combinations of Peptides and Antibiotic AgentsAs discussed herein, cationic peptides are administered in combination with antibiotic agents. The combination enhances the activity of the antibiotic agents. Such combinations may be used to effect a synergistic result, overcome tolerance, overcome inherent resistance, or overcome acquired resistance of the microorganism to the antibiotic agent.
To achieve a synergistic effect, a combination of antibiotic agent and cationic peptide is administered to a patient or administered in such a manner as to contact the microorganism. Any combination of antibiotic agent and cationic peptide may result in a synergistic effect and, thus, is useful within the context of this invention.
In particular, certain microorganisms are preferred targets. In conjunction with these microorganisms, certain commonly used antibiotic agents are preferred to be enhanced. The table below sets out these microorganisms, antibiotic agents, and cationic peptide combinations that are preferred.
To overcome tolerance, a combination of antibiotic agent and cationic peptide is administered to a patient or administered in such a manner as to contact the microorganism. Any combination of antibiotic agent and cationic peptide that overcomes tolerance is useful within the context of this invention. In particular, certain microorganisms, which exhibit tolerance to specific antibiotic agents are preferred targets. The table below sets out these microorganisms, antibiotic agents, and cationic peptide combinations that are preferred.
To overcome inherent resistance, a combination of antibiotic agent and cationic peptide is administered to a patient or administered in such a manner as to contact the microorganism. Any combination of antibiotic agent and cationic peptide that overcomes resistance is useful within the context of this invention. In particular, certain microorganisms, which exhibit inherent resistance to specific antibiotic agents are preferred targets. The table below sets out these microorganisms, antibiotic agents, and cationic peptide combinations that are preferred.
To overcome acquired resistance, a combination of antibiotic agent and cationic peptide is administered to a patient or administered in such a manner as to contact the microorganism. Any combination of antibiotic agent and cationic peptide that overcomes resistance is useful within the context of this invention. In particular, certain microorganisms, which exhibit acquired resistance to specific antibiotic agents are preferred targets. The table below sets out these microorganisms, antibiotic agents, and cationic peptide combinations that are preferred.
Additional preferred combinations for indolicidin analogues are listed below:
As noted herein, the present invention provides methods and compositions for modifying a compound with a free amine group. The amine group may be part of the native structure of the compound or added by a chemical method. Thus, peptides, proteins, and antibiotics and the like can be modified with an activated polyoxyalkylene and derivatives. When the compounds are peptides or proteins, the modified or derivatized forms are referred to herein as “APO-modified peptides” or “APO-modified proteins”. Similarly, modified forms of antibiotics are referred to as “APO-modified antibiotics.” APO-modified compounds (e.g., APO-cationic peptides) generally exhibit improved pharmacological properties.
A. Characteristics of an Activated Polyoxyalkylene Reagent
As discussed herein, a suitable reagent for formation of APO-modified compounds (e.g., peptides and proteins) comprises a hydrophobic region and a hydrophilic region, and optionally a linker. The hydrophobic region is a lipophilic compound with a suitable functional group for conjugation to the hydrophilic region or linker. The hydrophilic region is a polyoxyalkylene. As used herein, “polyoxyalkylene” refers to 2 or 3 carbon polyoxyalkylene polymers. The polymer chain is of a length 2 units or greater. Two carbon polyoxyalkylenes include polyoxyethylene and its derivatives, polyethylene glycol (PEG) of various molecular weights, and its derivatives, such as polysorbate. Three carbon polyoxyalkylenes include polyoxypropylene and derivatives and polypropylene glycol and its derivatives. Derivatives include alkyl- and aryl-polyoxyethylene compounds.
The hydrophobic region is a lipophilic moiety, generally a fatty acid, but may be a fatty alcohol, fatty thiol, hydrocarbons (such as 4-(1,1,3,3-tetramethylbutyl)-cyclohexyl), aryl compounds (such as 4-(1,1,3,3-tetramethylbutyl)-phenyl) and the like, which are also lipophilic compounds. The fatty acid may be saturated or unsaturated. The chain length does not appear to be important, although typically commercially available fatty acids are used and have chain lengths of C12-18. The length may be limited however by solubility or solidity of the compound, that is longer lengths of fatty acids are solid at room temperature. Fatty acids of 12 carbons (lauryl), 14 carbons, 16 carbons (palmitate), and 18 carbons (monostearate or oleate) are preferred chain lengths.
The hydrophilic region is a polyoxyalkylene, such as polyethylene, polypropylene glycol monoether (for example Triton X114), and polysorbate. For polysorbate, the ether function is formed by the linkage between the polyoxyethylene chain, preferably having a chain length of from 2 to 100 monomeric units, and the sorbitan group. Polymethylene glycol is unsuitable for administration in animals due to formation of formaldehydes, and glycols with a chain length of 4 may be insoluble. Mixed polyoxyethylene-polyoxypropylene chains are also suitable.
A linker for bridging the hydrophilic and hydrophobic regions is not required, but if used, should be able to bridge both a polyoxyalkylene and the hydrophobic region. Suitable linkers include sorbitan, sugar alcohols, ethanolamine, ethanolthiol, 2-mercaptoethanol, 1,6-diaminohexane, an amino acid (e.g., glutamine, lysine), other reduced sugars, and the like. For example, sorbitan forms an ester linkage with the fatty acid in a polysorbate.
Suitable compounds include polyoxyethylenesorbitans, such as the monolaurate, monooleate, monopalmitate, monostearate, trioleate, and tristearate esters. These and other suitable compounds may be synthesized by standard chemical methods or obtained commercially (e.g., Sigma Chemical Co., MO; Aldrich Chemical Co., Wisconsin; J. B. Baker, New Jersey).
B. Activation of Reagent
The reagent is activated by exposure to UV light with free exchange of air or by chemical treatment with ammonium persulfate, or a combination of these methods.
Photoactivation is achieved using a lamp that irradiates at 254 nm or 302 nm. Preferably, the output is centered at 254 nm. Longer wave lengths may require longer activation time. While some evidence exists that fluorescent room light can activate the polysorbates, experiments have shown that use of UV light at 254 nm yields maximal activation before room light yields a detectable level of activation.
Air plays an important role in the activation of the polysorbates. Access to air doubles the rate of activation relative to activations performed in sealed containers. A shallow reaction chamber with a large surface area would facilitate oxygen exchange. It is not yet known which gas is responsible; an oxygen derivative is likely, although peroxides are not involved. UV exposure of compounds with ether linkages is known to generate peroxides, which can be detected and quantified using peroxide test strips. In a reaction, hydrogen peroxide at 1 to 10 fold higher level than found in UV-activated material was added to a polysorbate solution in the absence of light. No activation was obtained.
The reagent is placed in a suitable vessel for irradiation. Studies with 2% polysorbate 80 indicate that 254 nm light at 1800 μW/cm2 is completely absorbed by the solution at a depth of 3-4 cm. Thus, the activation rate can be maximized by irradiating a relatively thin layer.
As such, a consideration for the vessel is the ability to achieve uniform irradiation. As noted above, a large shallow reaction chamber is desirable, however, it may be difficult to achieve on a large scale. To compensate, simple stirring that facilitates the replenishment of air in the solution achieves an equivalent result. Thus, if the pathlength is long or the reaction chamber is not shallow, the reagent may be mixed or agitated. The reagent can be activated in any aqueous solution and buffering is not required.
An exemplary activation takes place in a cuvette with a 1 cm liquid thickness. The reagent is irradiated at a distance of less than 9 cm at 1500 μW/cm2 (initial source output) for approximately 24 hours. Under these conditions, the activated reagent converts a minimum of 85% of the peptide to APO-peptide.
As noted above, the polyoxyalkylenes can be activated via chemical oxidation with ammonium persulfate. The activation is rapid and the extent of activation increases with the concentration of ammonium persulfate. Ammonium persulfate can be used in a range from about 0.01%-0.5%, and most preferably from 0.025 to 0.1%. If the levels of ammonium persulfate are too high, the peroxide byproducts can have an adverse effect on the compounds being modified. This adverse effect can be diminished by treatment of activated polyoxyalkylenes with mercaptoethanol, or another mild reducing agent, which does not inhibit the formation of APO-therapeutics. Peroxides generated from UV treatment can also be reduced by treatment with mercaptoethanol. Furthermore, as noted above, the UV procedure can be performed in conjunction with chemical activation.
C. Modification of Peptides or Proteins with Activated Reagent
The therapeutics are reacted with the APO reagent in either a liquid or solid phase and become modified by the attachment of the APO derivative. The methods described herein for attachment offer the advantage of maintaining the charge on the therapeutic, such as a peptide or protein. When the charge of the peptide is critical to its function, such as the antibiotic activity of cationic peptides described herein, these attachment methods offer additional advantages. Methods that attach groups via acylation result in the loss of positive charge via conversion of amino to amido groups. In addition, no bulky or potentially antigenic linker, such as a triazine group, is known to be introduced by the methods described herein.
As noted above, APO-therapeutic formation occurs in solid phase or in aqueous solution. By way of example, briefly, in the solid phase method, a peptide or other therapeutic is suspended in a suitable buffer, such as an acetate buffer. Other suitable buffers that support APO-therapeutic formation may also be used. The acetate buffer may be sodium, potassium, lithium, and the like. Other acetate solutions, such as HAc or HAc-NaOH, are also suitable. A preferred pH range for the buffer is from 2 to 8.3, although a wider range may be used. When the starting pH of the acetic acid-NaOH buffer is varied, subsequent lyophilization from 200 mM acetic acid buffer yields only the Type I modified peptide (see Example 14). The presence of an alkaline buffer component results in the formation of Type II modified peptides. A typical peptide concentration is 1 mg/ml, which results in 85-95% modified peptide, however other concentrations are suitable. The major consideration for determining concentration appears to be economic. The activated polymer (APO) is added in molar excess to the therapeutic. Generally, a starting ratio of approximately 2.5:1 (APO:therapeutic) to 5:1 (APO:therapeutic) generates APO-modified therapeutic in good yield.
The reaction mix is then frozen (e.g., −80° C.) and lyophilized. Sodium acetate disproportionates into acetic acid and NaOH during lyophilization; removal of the volatile acetic acid by the vacuum leaves NaOH dispersed throughout the result solid matrix. This loss of acetic acid is confirmed by a pH increase detected upon dissolution of the lyophilizate. No APO-modified therapeutic is formed in acetate buffer if the samples are only frozen then thawed.
The modification reaction can also take place in aqueous solution. However, APO modifications do not occur at ambient temperature in any acetate buffer system tested regardless of pH. APO modifications also are not formed in phosphate buffers as high as pH 11.5. APO modification does occur in a sodium carbonate buffer at a pH greater than about 8.5. Other buffers may also be used if they support derivatization. A pH range of 9-11 is also suitable, and pH 10 is most commonly used. The reaction occurs in two phases: Type I modified peptides form first, followed by formation of Type II modified peptides.
In the present invention, linkage occurs at an amino or a nucleophilic group. The amino group may be a primary amine, a secondary amine, or an aryl amine. Nucleophilic groups that may be APO-modified include, but are not limited to, hydrazine derivatives, hydroxylamine derivatives, and sulfhydryl compounds. Preferably, the modification occurs at an amino group, more preferably at a primary or secondary amino group, and most preferably at a primary amino group.
For a peptide, linkage can occur at the α-NH2 of the N-terminal amino acid or ε-NH2 group of lysine. Other primary and secondary amines may also be modified. Complete blocking of all amino groups by acylation (MBI 11CNY1) inhibits APO-peptide formation. Thus, modification of arginine or tryptophan residues does not occur. If the only amino group available is the α-amino group (e.g., MBI 11B9CN and MBI 11G14CN), the Type I form is observed. The inclusion of a single lysine (e.g., MBI 11B1CN, MBI 11B7CN, MBI 11B8CN), providing an ε-amino group, results in Type II forms as well. The amount of Type II formed increases for peptides with more lysine residues.
Many antibiotics have free amine groups. Such antibiotics include but are not limited to ampicillin, amoxicillin, amikacin, ciprofloxacin, gentamicin, teicoplanin, tobramycin, and vancomycin. Using the methods described herein, several peptides, including indolicidin, indolicidin analogues, gramicidin and bacitracin-2 have been polymer modified.
Examples of compounds that have modified by the solid phase method are listed in the table below.
D. Purification and Physical Properties of APO-Modified Therapeutics
The APO-modified therapeutics may be purified. In circumstances in which the free therapeutic, such as a peptide is toxic, purification may be necessary to remove unmodified therapeutic and/or unreacted polyoxyalkylenes. Any of a variety of purification methods may be used. Such methods include reversed phase HPLC, precipitation by organic solvent to remove polysorbate, size exclusion chromatography, ion exchange chromatography, filtration and the like. RP-HPLC is preferred. Procedures for these separation methods are well known.
APO-therapeutic formation can result in the generation of products that are more hydrophobic than the parent compound. This property can be exploited to effect separation of the conjugate from free compound by RP-HPLC. As shown herein, peptide-conjugates are resolved into two populations based on their hydrophobicity as determined by RP-HPLC; the Type I population elutes slightly earlier than the Type II population.
The MBI 11 series of peptides have molecular weights between 1600 and 2500. When run on a Superose 12 column, a size exclusion column, these peptides adsorb to the resin, giving long retention times. In contrast, the APO-modified peptides do not adsorb and elute at 50 kDa (MBI11CN-Tw80) and at 69 kDa (MBI 11A3CN-Tw80), thus demonstrating a large increase in apparent molecular mass (Stokes radius).
An increase in apparent molecular mass could enhance the pharmacokinetics of peptides in particular because increased molecular mass reduces the rate at which peptides and proteins are removed from blood. Micelle formation may offer additional benefits by delivering “packets” of peptide molecules to microorganisms rather than relying on the multiple binding of single peptide molecules. In addition, APO-modified peptides are soluble in methylene chloride or chloroform (e.g., to at least 10 mg/mL), whereas the parent peptide is essentially insoluble. This increased organic solubility may significantly enhance the ability to penetrate tissue barriers and may be exploited for a simplified purification of the APO-peptide. The increased solubility in organic media may also allow the formulation of peptides in oil or lipid based delivery systems which target specific sites, such as solid tumors.
In addition, by circular dichroism (CD) studies, APO-modified peptides are observed to have an altered 3-dimensional conformation. As shown in the Examples, MBI 11CN and MBI 11B7CN have unordered structures in phosphate buffer or 40% aqueous trifluoroethanol (TFE) and form a β-turn conformation only upon insertion into liposomes. In contrast, CD spectra for APO-modified MBI 11CN and APO-modified MBI 11B7CN indicate β-turn structure in phosphate buffer.
Cationic peptides appear to maintain their original charge after modification with an APO, thereby preventing loss of activity sometimes caused by acylation reactions. Moreover, the present methods are not known to introduce antigenic linkers.
E. Biological Properties of APO-Modified Therapeutics
The biological properties of APO-modified therapeutics appear to be improved compared to unmodified therapeutics. For example, modified and unmodified peptides are compared. Because the product consists of a peptide of known composition coupled to one or more polyoxyalkylene components derived from a polymeric mixture, defining an exact molecular weight for concentration calculations is not readily achieved. It is possible, however, to determine the concentration by spectrophotometric assay. Such a measurement is used to normalize APO-peptide concentrations for biological assays. For example, a 1 mg/mL MBI11CN-Tw80 solution contains the same amount of cationic peptide as a 1 mg/mL solution of the parent peptide, thus allowing direct comparison of toxicity and efficacy data. The modified peptides have an equivalent MIC to unmodified peptides. In vivo, however, the modified peptides demonstrate a lower LC50 than the unmodified peptides against a panel of tumor cell lines. Thus, formation of APO-peptides increases the potency of cationic peptides against cancer cells in culture.
In general, the efficacy of a modified therapeutic is determined by in vitro and in vivo assays used for the unmodified therapeutic. Thus, the assays employed depend upon the therapeutic. Assays for the therapeutics disclosed herein are well known. Assays include those for biological activity, pharmacokinetics, toxicity, adverse reactions, immunogenicity, and the like. Such assays are available to those skilled in the art.
VII. Formulations and AdministrationAs noted above, the present invention provides methods for treating and preventing infections by administering to a patient a therapeutically effective amount of a peptide analogue of indolicidin as described herein. Patients suitable for such treatment may be identified by well-established hallmarks of an infection, such as fever, pus, culture of organisms, and the like. Infections that may be treated with peptide analogues include those caused by or due to microorganisms. Examples of microorganisms include bacteria (e.g., Gram-positive, Gram-negative), fungi, (e.g., yeast and molds), parasites (e.g., protozoans, nematodes, cestodes and trematodes), viruses, and prions. Specific organisms in these classes are well known (see for example, Davis et al., Microbiology, 3rd edition, Harper & Row, 1980). Infections include, but are not limited to, toxic shock syndrome, diphtheria, cholera, typhus, meningitis, whooping cough, botulism, tetanus, pyogenic infections, dysentery, gastroenteritis, anthrax, Lyme disease, syphilis, rubella, septicemia and plague.
More specifically, clinical indications include, but are not limited to: 1/infections following insertion of intravascular devices or peritoneal dialysis catheters; 2/infection associated with medical devices or prostheses; 3/infection during hemodialysis; 4/S. aureus nasal and extra-nasal carriage; 5/burn wound infections; 6/surgical wounds, 7/acne, including severe acne vulgaris; 8/nosocomial pneumonia; 9/meningitis; 10/cystic fibrosis; 11/infective endocarditis; 12/osteomyelitis; and 13/sepsis in an immunocompromised host.
1/Infections following insertion of contaminated intravascular devices, such as central venous catheters, or peritoneal dialysis catheters. These catheters are cuffed or non-cuffed, although the infection rate is higher for non-cuffed catheters. Both local and systemic infection may result from contaminated intravascular devices, more than 25,000 patients develop device related bacteremia in the United States each year. The main organisms responsible are coagulase-negative staphylococci (CoNS), Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcus spp, E. coli and Candida spp.
The peptide and/or antibiotic, preferably as an ointment or cream, can be applied to the catheter site prior to insertion of the catheter and then again at each dressing change. The peptide may be incorporated into the ointment or cream at a concentration preferably of about 0.5 to about 2% (w/v).
2/Infection associated with medical devices or prostheses, e.g. catheter, grafts, prosthetic heart valves, artificial joints, etc. One to five percent of indwelling prostheses become infected which usually requires removal or replacement of the prostheses. The main organisms responsible for these infections are CoNS and S. aureus.
Preferably, the peptide and/or antibiotic can be coated, either covalently bonded or by any other means, onto the medical device either at manufacture of the device or after manufacture but prior to insertion of the device. In such an application, the peptide antibiotic is preferably applied as a 0.5 to 2% solution.
3/Infection during hemodialysis. Infection is the second leading cause of death in patients on chronic hemodialysis. Approximately 23% of bacteremias are due to access site infections. The majority of graft infections are caused by coagulate-positive (S. aureus) and coagulate-negative staphylococci. To combat infection, the peptide alone or in combination with an antibiotic can be applied as an ointment or cream to the dialysis site prior to each hemodialysis procedure.
4/S. aureus nasal and extra-nasal carriage. Infection by this organism may result in impetigenous lesions or infected wounds. It is also associated with increased infection rates following cardiac surgery, hemodialysis, orthopedic surgery and neutropenia, both disease induced and iatrogenic. Nasal and extra-nasal carriage of staphylococci can result in hospital outbreaks of the same staphylococci strain that is colonizing a patient's or hospital worker's nasal passage or extra-nasal site. Much attention has been paid to the eradication of nasal colonization, but the results of treatment have been generally unsatisfactory. The use of topical antimicrobial substances, such as Bacitracin, Tetracycline, or Chlorhexidine, results in the suppression of nasal colonization, as opposed to its eradication.
The peptide alone or in combination with an antibiotic are preferably applied intra-nasally, formulated for nasal application, as a 0.5 to 2% ointment, cream or solution. Application may occur once or multiple times until the colonization of staphylococci is reduced or eliminated.
5/Burn wound infections. Although the occurrence of invasive burn wound infections has been significantly reduced, infection remains the most common cause of morbidity and mortality in extensively burned patients. Infection is the predominant determinant of wound healing, incidence of complications, and outcome of burn patients. The main organisms responsible are Pseudomonas aeruginosa, S. aureus, Streptococcus pyogenes, and various gram-negative organisms. Frequent debridements and establishment of an epidermis, or a surrogate such as a graft or a skin substitute, is essential for prevention of infection.
The peptide alone or in combination with antibiotics can be applied to burn wounds as an ointment or cream and/or administered systemically. Topical application may prevent systemic infection following superficial colonization or eradicate a superficial infection. The peptide is preferably administered as a 0.5 to 2% cream or ointment. Application to the skin could be done once a day or as often as dressings are changed. The systemic administration could be by intravenous, intramuscular or subcutaneous injections or infusions. Other routes of administration could also be used.
6/Surgical wounds, especially those associated with foreign material, e.g. sutures. As many as 71% of all nosocomial infections occur in surgical patients, 40% of which are infections at the operative site. Despite efforts to prevent infection, it is estimated that between 500,000 and 920,000 surgical wound infections complicate the approximately 23 million surgical procedures performed annually in the United States. The infecting organisms are varied but staphylococci are important organisms in these infections.
The peptide alone or with an antibiotic may be applied as an ointment, cream or liquid to the wound site or as a liquid in the wound prior to and during closure of the wound. Following closure the peptide antibiotic could be applied at dressing changes. For wounds that are infected, the peptide antibiotic could be applied topically and/or systemically.
7/Acne, including severe acne vulgaris. This condition is due to colonization and infection of hair follicles and sebaceous cysts by Propionibacterium acne. Most cases remain mild and do not lead to scarring although a subset of patients develop large inflammatory cysts and nodules, which may drain and result in significant scarring.
The peptide alone or with an antibiotic can be incorporated into soap or applied topically as a cream, lotion or gel to the affected areas either once a day or multiple times during the day. The length of treatment may be for as long as the lesions are present or used to prevent recurrent lesions. The peptide antibiotic could also be administered orally or systemically to treat or prevent acne lesions.
8/Nosocomial pneumonia. Nosocomial pneumonias account for nearly 20% of all nosocomial infections. Patients most at risk for developing nosocomial pneumonia are those in an intensive care units, patients with altered levels of consciousness, elderly patients, patients with chronic lung disease, ventilated patients, smokers and post-operative patients. In a severely compromised patient, multiantibiotic-resistant nosocomial pathogens are likely to be the cause of the pneumonia.
The main organisms responsible are P. aeruginosa, S. aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Enterobacter spp. The peptide alone or in combination with other antibiotics could be administered orally or systemically to treat pneumonia. Administration could be once a day or multiple administrations per day. Peptide antibiotics could be administered directly into the lung via inhalation or via installation of an endotracheal tube.
9/Meningitis. Bacterial meningitis remains a common disease worldwide. Approximately 25,000 cases occur annually, of which 70% occur in children under 5 years of age. Despite an apparent recent decline in the incidence of severe neurologic sequelae among children surviving bacterial meningitis, the public health problems as a result of this disease are significant worldwide. The main responsible organisms are H. influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Neisseria meningitidis. Community acquired drug resistant S. pneumoniae are emerging as a widespread problem in the United States. The peptide alone or in combination with known antibiotics could be administered orally or systemically to treat meningitis. The preferred route would be intravenously either once a day or multiple administration per day. Treatment would preferably last for up to 14 days.
10/Cystic fibrosis. Cystic fibrosis (CF) is the most common genetic disorder of the Caucasian population. Pulmonary disease is the most common cause of premature death in cystic fibrosis patients. Optimum antimicrobial therapy for CF is not known, and it is generally believed that the introduction of better anti-pseudomonal antibiotics has been the major factor contributing to the increase in life expectancy for CF patients. The most common organisms associated with lung disease in CF are S. aureus, P. aeruginosa and H. influenzae.
The peptide alone or in combination with other antibiotics could be administrated orally or systemically or via aerosol to treat cystic fibrosis. Preferably, treatment is effected for up to 3 weeks during acute pulmonary disease and/or for up to 2 weeks every 2-6 months to prevent acute exacerbations.
11/Infective endocarditis. Infective endocarditis results from infection of the heart valve cusps, although any part of the endocardium or any prosthetic material inserted into the heart may be involved. It is usually fatal if untreated. Most infections are nosocomial in origin, caused by pathogens increasingly resistant to available drugs. The main organisms responsible are Viridans streptococci, Enterococcus spp, S. aureus and CoNS.
The peptide alone or in combination with other antibiotics could be administered orally or systemically to treat endocarditis, although systemic administration would be preferred. Treatment is preferably for 2-6 weeks in duration and may be given as a continuous infusion or multiple administration during the day.
12/Osteomyelitis. In early acute disease the vascular supply to the bone is compromised by infection extending into surrounding tissue. Within this necrotic and ischemic tissue, the bacteria may be difficult to eradicate even after an intense host response, surgery, and/or antibiotic therapy. The main organisms responsible are S. aureus, E. coli, and P. aeruginosa.
The peptide antibiotic could be administered systemically alone or in combination with other antibiotics. Treatment would be 2-6 weeks in duration. The peptide antibiotic could be given as a continuous infusion or multiple administration during the day. Peptide antibiotic could be used as an antibiotic-impregnated cement or as antibiotic coated beads for joint replacement procedures.
13/Sepsis in immunocompromised host. Treatment of infections in patients who are immunocompromised by virtue of chemotherapy-induced granulocytopenia and immunosuppression related to organ or bone marrow transplantation is always a big challenge. The neutropenic patient is especially susceptible to bacterial infection, so antibiotic therapy should be initiated promptly to cover likely pathogens, if infection is suspected. Organisms likely to cause infections in granulocytopenic patients are: S. epidermidis, S. aureus, S. viridans, Enterococcus spp, E. coli, Klebsiella spp, P. aeruginosa and Candida spp.
The peptide alone or with an antibiotic is preferably administered orally or systemically for 2-6 weeks in duration. The peptide antibiotic could be given as a continuous infusion or multiple administration during the day.
Effective treatment of infection may be examined in several different ways. The patient may exhibit reduced fever, reduced number of organisms, lower level of inflammatory molecules (e.g., IFN-γ, IL-12, IL-1, TNF), and the like.
The in vivo therapeutic efficacy from administering a cationic peptide and antibiotic agent in combination is based on a successful clinical outcome and does not require 100% elimination of the organisms involved in the infection. Achieving a level of antimicrobial activity at the site of infection that allows the host to survive or eradicate the microorganism is sufficient. When host defenses are maximally effective, such as in an otherwise healthy individual, only a minimal antimicrobial effect may suffice. Thus, reducing the organism load by even one log (a factor of 10) may permit the defenses of the host to control the infection. In addition, clinical therapeutic success may depend more on augmenting an early bactericidal effect than on the long-term effect. These early events are a significant and critical part of therapeutic success, because they allow time for the host defense mechanisms to activate. This is especially true for life-threatening infections (e.g. meningitis) and other serious chronic infections (e.g. infective endocarditis).
Peptides and antibiotic agents of the present invention are preferably administered as a pharmaceutical composition. Briefly, pharmaceutical compositions of the present invention may comprise one or more of the peptide analogues described herein, in combination with one or more physiologically acceptable carriers, diluents, or excipients. As noted herein, the formulation buffer used may affect the efficacy or activity of the peptide analogue. A suitable formulation buffer contains buffer and solubilizer. The formulation buffer may comprise buffers such as sodium acetate, sodium citrate, neutral buffered saline, phosphate-buffered saline, and the like or salts, such as NaCl. Sodium acetate is preferred. In general, an acetate buffer from 5 to 500 mM is used, and preferably from 100 to 200 mM. The pH of the final formulation may range from 3 to 10, and is preferably approximately neutral (about pH 7-8). Solubilizers, such as polyoxyethylenesorbitans (e.g., Tween 80, Tween 20) and polyoxyethylene ethers (e.g., Brij 56) may also be added if the compound is not already polymer-modified.
Although the formulation buffer is exemplified herein with peptide analogues of the present invention, this buffer is generally useful and desirable for delivery of other peptides. Peptides that may be delivered in this formulation buffer include indolicidin, other indolicidin analogues (see, PCT WO 95/22338), bacteriocins, gramicidin, bactenecin, drosocin, polyphemusins, defensins, cecropins, melittins, cecropin/melittin hybrids, magainins, sapecins, apidaecins, protegrins, tachyplesins, thionins; IL-1 through 15; corticotropin-releasing hormone; human growth hormone; insulin; erythropoietin; thrombopoietin; myelin basic protein peptides; various colony stimulating factors such as M-CSF, GM-CSF, kit ligand; and peptides and analogues of these and similar proteins.
Additional compounds may be included in the compositions. These include, for example, carbohydrates such as glucose, mannose, sucrose or dextrose, mannitol, other proteins, polypeptides or amino acids, chelating agents such as EDTA or glutathione, adjuvants and preservatives. As noted herein, pharmaceutical compositions of the present invention may also contain one or more additional active ingredients, such as an antibiotic (see discussion herein on synergy) or cytokine.
The compositions may be administered in a delivery vehicle. For example, the composition can be encapsulated in a liposome (see, e.g., WO 96/10585; WO 95/35094), complexed with lipids, encapsulated in slow-release or sustained release vehicles, such as poly-galactide, and the like. Within other embodiments, compositions may be prepared as a lyophilizate, utilizing appropriate excipients to provide stability.
Pharmaceutical compositions of the present invention may be administered in various manners. For example, cationic peptides with or without antibiotic agents may be administered by intravenous injection, intraperitoneal injection or implantation, subcutaneous injection or implantation, intradermal injection, lavage, inhalation, implantation, intramuscular injection or implantation, intrathecal injection, bladder wash-out, suppositories, pessaries, topical (e.g., creams, ointments, skin patches, eye drops, ear drops, shampoos) application, enteric, oral, or nasal route. The combination is preferably administered intravenously. Systemic routes include intravenous, intramuscular or subcutaneous injection (including a depot for long-term release), intraocular or retrobulbar, intrathecal, intraperitoneal (e.g. by intraperitoneal lavage), transpulmonary using aerosolized or nebulized drug or transdermal. Topical routes include administration in the form of salves, ophthalmic drops, ear drops, or irrigation fluids (for, e.g. irrigation of wounds). The compositions may be applied locally as an injection, drops, spray, tablets, cream, ointment, gel, and the like. They may be administered as a bolus or as multiple doses over a period of time.
The level of peptide in serum and other tissues after administration can be monitored by various well-established techniques such as bacterial, chromatographic or antibody based, such as ELISA, assays.
Pharmaceutical compositions of the present invention are administered in a manner appropriate to the infection or disease to be treated. The amount and frequency of administration will be determined by factors such as the condition of the patient, the cause of the infection, and the severity of the infection. Appropriate dosages may be determined by clinical trials, but will generally range from about 0.1 to 50 mg/kg. The general range of dosages for the antibiotic agents are presented below.
In addition, the compositions of the present invention may be used in the manner of common disinfectants or in any situation in which microorganisms are undesirable. For example, these peptides may be used as surface disinfectants, coatings, including covalent bonding, for medical devices, coatings for clothing, such as to inhibit growth of bacteria or repel mosquitoes, in filters for air purification, such as on an airplane, in water purification, constituents of shampoos and soaps, food preservatives, cosmetic preservatives, media preservatives, herbicide or insecticides, constituents of building materials, such as in silicone sealant, and in animal product processing, such as curing of animal hides. As used herein, “medical device” refers to any device for use in a patient, such as an implant or prosthesis. Such devices include, stents, tubing, probes, cannulas, catheters, synthetic vascular grafts, blood monitoring devices, artificial heart valves, needles, and the like.
For these purposes, typically the peptides alone or in conjunction with an antibiotic are included in compositions commonly employed or in a suitable applicator, such as for applying to clothing. They may be incorporated or impregnated into the material during manufacture, such as for an air filter, or otherwise applied to devices. The peptides and antibiotics need only be suspended in a solution appropriate for the device or article. Polymers are one type of carrier that can be used.
The peptides, especially the labeled analogues, may be used in image analysis and diagnostic assays or for targeting sites in eukaryotic multicellular and single cell cellular organisms and in prokaryotes. As a targeting system, the analogues may be coupled with other peptides, proteins, nucleic acids, antibodies and the like.
The following examples are offered by way of illustration, and not by way of limitation.
EXAMPLES Example 1 Synthesis Purification and Characterization of Cationic Peptides and AnaloguesPeptide synthesis is based on the standard solid-phase Fmoc protection strategy. The instrument employed is a 9050 Plus PepSynthesiser (PerSeptive BioSystems Inc.). Polyethylene glycol polystyrene (PEG-PS) graft resins are employed as the solid phase, derivatized with an Fmoc-protected amino acid linker for C-terminal amide synthesis. HATU (4-(7-azabenzotriazole-1-yl)-1,1,3,3-tetramethyluronium hexafluorophosphate) is used as the coupling reagent. During synthesis, coupling steps are continuously monitored to ensure that each amino acid is incorporated in high yield. The peptide is cleaved from the solid-phase resin using trifluoroacetic acid and appropriate scavengers and the crude peptide is purified using preparative reversed-phase chromatography. Typically the peptide is prepared as the trifluoroacetate salt, but other salts, such as acetate, chloride and sulfate, can also be prepared by salt exchange.
All peptides are analyzed by mass spectrometry to ensure that the product has the expected molecular mass. The product should have a single peak accounting for >95% of the total peak area when subjected to analytical reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC), a separation method that depends on the hydrophobicity of the peptide. In addition, the peptide should show a single band accounting for >90% of the total band intensity when subjected to acid-urea gel electrophoresis, a separation method based on the charge to mass ration of the peptide.
Peptide content, the amount of the product that is peptide rather than retained water, salt or solvent, is measured by quantitative amino acid analysis, free amine derivatization or spectrophotometric quantitation. Amino acid analysis also provides information on the ratio of amino acids present in the peptide, which assists in confirming the authenticity of the peptide.
Peptide analogues and their names are listed below. In this list, and elsewhere, the amino acids are denoted by the one-letter amino acid code and lower case letters represent the D-form of the amino acid.
Cationic peptides, such as indolicidin analogues, are modified to alter the physical properties of the original peptide, either by use of modified amino acids in synthesis or by post-synthetic modification. Such modifications include: acetylation at the N-terminus, Fmoc-derivatized N-terminus, polymethylation, peracetylation, and branched derivatives.
α-N-terminal acetylation. Prior to cleaving the peptide from the resin and deprotecting it, the fully protected peptide is treated with N-acetylimidazole in DMF for 1 hour at room temperature, which results in selective reaction at the α-N-terminus. The peptide is then deprotected/cleaved and purified as for an unmodified peptide.
Fmoc-derivatized α-N-terminus. If the final Fmoc deprotection step is not carried out, the α-N-terminus Fmoc group remains on the peptide. The peptide is then side-chain deprotected/cleaved and purified as for an unmodified peptide.
Polymethylation. The purified peptide in a methanol solution is treated with excess sodium bicarbonate, followed by excess methyl iodide. The reaction mixture is stirred overnight at room temperature, extracted with organic solvent, neutralized and purified as for an unmodified peptide. Using this procedure, a peptide is not fully methylated; methylation of MBI 11CN yielded an average of 6 methyl groups. Thus, the modified peptide is a mixture of methylated products.
Peracetylation. A purified peptide in DMF solution is treated with N-acetylimidazole for 1 hour at room temperature. The crude product is concentrated, dissolved in water, lyophilized, re-dissolved in water and purified as for an unmodified peptide. Complete acetylation of primary amine groups is observed.
Four/eight branch derivatives. The branched peptides are synthesized on a four or eight branched core bound to the resin. Synthesis and deprotection/cleavage proceed as for an unmodified peptide. These peptides are purified by dialysis against 4 M guanidine hydrochloride then water, and analyzed by mass spectrometry.
Peptides modified using the above procedures are listed in Table 9.
Peptide analogues are alternatively produced by recombinant DNA technique in bacterial host cells. The peptide is produced as a fusion protein, chosen to assist in transporting the fusion peptide to inclusion bodies, periplasm, outer membrane or extracellular environment.
Construction of Plasmids Encoding MBI-11 Peptide Fusion ProteinAmplification by polymerase chain reaction is used to synthesize double-stranded DNA encoding the MBI peptide genes from single-stranded templates. For MBI-11, 100 μl of reaction mix is prepared containing 50 to 100 ng of template, 25 pmole of each primer, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 200 μM of each dNTP, 2U of Taq polymerase in buffer supplied by the manufacturer. Amplification conditions are 25 cycles of 94° C. for 30 sec., 55° C. for 30 sec., 74° C. for 30 sec., followed by 74° C. for 1 min. Amplified product is digested with BamHI and HindIII and cloned into a plasmid expression vector encoding the fusion partner and a suitable selection marker.
Production of MBI-11 Peptide Fusion in E. coli
The plasmid pR2h-11, employing a T7 promoter, high copy origin of replication, Apr marker and containing the gene of the fusion protein, is co-electroporated with pGP1-2 into E. coli strain XL1-Blue. Plasmid pGP1-2 contains a T7 RNA polymerase gene under control of a lambda promoter and cl857 repressor gene. Fusion protein expression is induced by a temperature shift from 30° C. to 42° C. Inclusion bodies are washed with solution containing solubilizer and extracted with organic extraction solvent. Profiles of the samples are analyzed by SDS-PAGE.
In addition, a low-copy-number vector, pPD100, which has a chloramphenicol resistance gene, is used to express MBI-11 in order to eliminate the need for using ampicillin, thereby reducing the appearance of β-lactamase in extracted material. This plasmid allows selective gene expression and high-level protein overproduction in E. coli using the bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase/T7 promoter system (Dersch et al., FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 123: 19-26, 1994). pPD100 contains a chloramphenicol resistance gene (CAT) as a selective marker, a multiple cloning site, and an on sequence derived from the low-copy-number vector pSC101. There are only about 4 to 6 copies of these plasmids per host cell. The resulting construct containing MBI-11 is called pPDR2h-11.
A cationic peptide may be tested for antimicrobial activity alone before assessing its enhancing activity with antibiotic agents. Preferably, the peptide has measurable antimicrobial activity.
Agarose Dilution AssayThe agarose dilution assay measures antimicrobial activity of peptides and peptide analogues, which is expressed as the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the peptides.
In order to mimic in vivo conditions, calcium and magnesium supplemented Mueller Hinton broth is used in combination with a low EEO agarose as the bacterial growth medium. Agarose, rather than agar, is used as the charged groups in agar prevent peptide diffusion through the media. The media is autoclaved and then cooled to 50-55° C. in a water bath before aseptic addition of antimicrobial solutions. The same volume of different concentrations of peptide solution are added to the cooled molten agarose that is then poured to a depth of 3-4 mm.
The bacterial inoculum is adjusted to a 0.5 McFarland turbidity standard (PML Microbiological) and then diluted 1:10 before application on to the agarose plate. The final inoculum applied to the agarose is approximately 104 CFU in a 5-8 mm diameter spot. The agarose plates are incubated at 35-37° C. for 16 to 20 hours.
The MIC is recorded as the lowest concentration of peptide that completely inhibits growth of the organism as determined by visual inspection. Representative MICs for various indolicidin analogues against bacteria are shown in Table 11 and representative MICs against Candida are shown in Table 12 below.
Typically 100 μl of calcium and magnesium supplemented Mueller Hinton broth is dispensed into each well of a 96-well microtitre plate and 100 μl volumes of two-fold serial dilutions of the peptide are prepared across the plate. One row of wells receives no peptide and is used as a growth control. Each well is inoculated with approximately 5×105 CFU of bacteria and the plate is incubated at 35-37° C. for 16-20 hours. The MIC is recorded at the lowest concentration of peptide that completely inhibits growth of the organism as determined by visual inspection.
For example, MIC values in μg/ml are established by broth dilution assay (Table 13) or by agarose dilution assay (Table 14) for a series of cationic peptides against various bacterial strains.
Time kill curves are used to determine the antimicrobial activity of cationic peptides over a time interval. Briefly, in this assay, a suspension of microorganisms equivalent to a 0.5 McFarland Standard is prepared in 0.9% saline. This suspension is then diluted such that when added to a total volume of 9 ml of cation-adjusted Mueller Hinton broth, the inoculum size is 1×106 CFU/ml. An aliquot of 0.1 ml is removed from each tube at pre-determined intervals up to 24 hours, diluted in 0.9% saline and plated in triplicate to determine viable colony counts. The number of bacteria remaining in each sample is plotted over time to determine the rate of cationic peptide killing. Generally a three or more log10 reduction in bacterial counts in the antimicrobial suspension compared to the growth controls indicate an adequate bactericidal response.
As shown in
Time kill curves resulting from combination of cationic peptide and antibiotic agent are compared to that resulting from agent alone.
The assay is performed as described above except that duplicate tubes are set up for each concentration of the antibiotic agent alone and of the combination of antibiotic agent and cationic peptide. Synergy is demonstrated by at least a 100-fold (2 log10) increase in killing at 24 hours by the antibiotic agent and cationic peptide combination compared to the antibiotic agent alone. A time kill assay is shown in
In this method, synergy is determined using the agarose dilution technique. An array of plates or tubes, each containing a combination of peptide and antibiotic in a unique concentration mix, is inoculated with bacterial isolates. When performing solid phase assays, calcium and magnesium supplemented Mueller Hinton broth is used in combination with a low EEO agarose as the bacterial growth medium. Broth dilution assays can also be used to determine synergy. Synergy is determined for cationic peptides in combination with a number of conventional antibiotic agents, for example, penicillins, cephalosporins, carbapenems, monobactams, aminoglycosides, macrolides, fluoroquinolones, nisin and lysozyme.
Synergy is expressed as a fractional inhibitory concentration (FIC), which is calculated according to the equation below. An FIC ≦0.5 is evidence of synergy. An additive response has an FIC value >0.5 and ≦1, while an indifferent response has an FIC value >1 and ≦2.
Tables 15, 16 and 17 present combinations of cationic peptides and antibiotic agents that display an FIC value of less than or equal to 1. Although FIC is measured in vitro and synergy defined as an FIC of less than or equal to 0.5, an additive effect may be therapeutically useful. As shown below, although all the microorganisms are susceptible (NCCLS breakpoint definitions) to the tested antibiotic agents, the addition of the cationic peptide improves the efficacy of the antibiotic agent.
Tolerance to an antibiotic agent is associated with a defect in bacterial cellular autolytic enzymes such that an antimicrobial agent is bacteriostatic rather than bactericidal. Tolerance is indicated when a ratio of minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC) to minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) (MBC:MIC) is ≧32.
The agarose dilution assay is adapted to provide both the MBC and MIC for an antimicrobial agent alone and an agent in combination with a peptide. Following determination of MIC, MBC is determined from the agarose dilution assay plates by swabbing the inocula on plates at and above the MIC and resuspending the swab in 1.0 ml of saline. A 0.01 ml aliquot is plated on agarose medium (subculture plates) and the resulting colonies are counted. If the number of colonies is less than 0.1% of the initial inoculum (as determined by a plate count immediately after inoculation of the MIC test plates), then ≧99.9% killing has occurred. The MBC end point is defined as the lowest concentration of the antimicrobial agent that kills 99.9% of the test bacteria.
Thus, tolerance of a microorganism to an antimicrobial agent occurs when the number of colonies growing on subculture plates exceeds the 0.1% cutoff for several successive concentrations above the observed MIC. A combination of antimicrobial agent and cationic peptide that breaks tolerance results in a decrease in the MBC:MIC ratio to <32. Table 18 shows that the combination of Vancomycin and MBI 26 overcomes the tolerance of the organisms listed.
Peptides are tested for their ability to overcome the inherent antimicrobial resistance of microorganisms, including those encountered in hospital settings, to specific antimicrobials. Overcoming resistance is demonstrated when the antibiotic agent alone exhibits minimal or no activity against the microorganism, but when used in combination with a cationic peptide, results in susceptibility of the microorganism.
The agarose dilution assay described above is used to determine the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of antimicrobial agents and cationic peptides, alone and in combination. Alternatively, the broth dilution assay or time kill curves can be used to determine MICs. Tables 19, 20, 21 and 22 present MIC values for antibiotic agents alone and in combination with peptide at the concentration shown. In all cases, the microorganism is inherently resistant to its mode of action, thus, the antibiotic agent is not effective against the test microorganism. In addition, the antibiotic agent is not clinically prescribed against the test microorganism.
In the data presented below, the MIC values for the antibiotic agents when administered in combination with peptide are decreased, from equal to or above the resistant breakpoint to below it.
An antibiotic agent can become ineffective against a previously susceptible microorganism if the microorganism acquires resistance to the agent. However, acquired resistance can be overcome when the agent is administered in combination with a cationic peptide. For example vancomycin resistant enterococci (VRE) become susceptible to vancomycin when it is used in combination with a cationic peptide such as MBI 26. This combination is likely to be effective against other organisms acquiring resistance to vancomycin including but not limited to strains of methicillin resistant S. aureus (MRSA).
Similarly teicoplanin resistant enterococci become susceptible to teicoplanin when teicoplanin is used in combination with cationic peptides such as MBI 26.
As described previously, the agarose dilution assay is used to determine the MIC for antibiotic agents administered alone and in combination with cationic peptide. Alternatively the broth dilution assay or time kill curves can be employed. Tables 23 and 25 presents results showing that administration of a cationic peptide in combination with an antibiotic agent overcomes acquired resistance. Table 24 presents results showing administration of MBI 26 in combination with teicoplanin against teicoplanin resistant enterococci.
These data show that acquired resistance can be overcome. For example, the acquired resistance of S. aureus, a Gram-positive organism, to piperacillin and ciprofloxacin is overcome when these antibiotic agents are combined with peptides MBI 27, MBI 21A1 or MBI 21A2 respectively. Similar results are obtained for peptides MBI 26 and MBI 31 in combination with methicillin, ampicillin and erythromycin, and for peptide MBI 26 in combination with vancomycin or teicoplanin against resistant enterococci.
Example 9 Synergy of Cationic Peptides and Lysozyme or NisinThe effectiveness of the antibiotic activity of lysozyme or nisin is improved when either agent is administered in combination with a cationic peptide. The improvement is demonstrated by measurement of the MICs of lysozyme or nisin alone and in combination with the peptide, whereby the lysozyme or nisin MIC is lower in combination than alone. The MICs can be measured by the agarose dilution assay, the broth dilution assay or by time kill curves.
Example 10 Biochemical Characterization of Peptide Analogues Solubility in Formulation BufferThe primary factor affecting solubility of a peptide is its amino acid sequence. Polycationic peptides are preferably freely soluble in aqueous solutions, especially under low pH conditions. However, in certain formulations, polycationic peptides may form an aggregate that is removed in a filtration step. As peptide solutions for in vivo assays are filtered prior to administration, the accuracy and reproducibility of dosing levels following filtration are examined.
Peptides dissolved in formulations are filtered through a hydrophilic 0.2 μm filter membrane and then analyzed for total peptide content using reversed-phase HPLC. A 100% soluble standard for each concentration is prepared by dissolving the peptide in MilliQ water. Total peak area for each condition is measured and compared with the peak area of the standard in order to provide a relative recovery value for each concentration/formulation combination.
MBI 11CN was prepared in four different buffer systems (A, B, C, and C1) (Table 26, below) at 50, 100, 200 and 400 μg/ml peptide concentrations. With formulations A or B, both commonly used for solvation of peptides and proteins, peptide was lost through filtration in a concentration dependent manner (
The solubility of peptide analogues is assessed in calcium and magnesium supplemented Mueller Hinton broth by visual inspection. The procedure employed is that used for the broth dilution assay except that bacteria are not added to the wells. The appearance of the solution in each well is evaluated according to the scale: (a) clear, no precipitate, (b) light diffuse precipitate and (c) cloudy, heavy precipitate. Results show that, for example, MBI 10CN is less soluble than MBI 11CN under these conditions and that MBI 11BCN analogues are less soluble than MBI 11ACN analogues.
Reversed Phase HPLC Analysis of Peptide Analogue FormulationsReversed-phase HPLC, which provides an analytical method for peptide quantification, is used to examine peptides in two different formulations. A 400 μg/mL solution of MBI 11CN prepared in formulations C1 and D is analyzed by using a stepwise gradient to resolve free peptide from other species. Standard chromatographic conditions are used as follows:
-
- Solvent A: 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) in water
- Solvent B: 0.1% TFA/95% acetonitrile in water
- Media: POROS® R2-20 (polystyrene divinylbenzene)
As shown in
Circular dichroism (CD) is a spectroscopic technique that measures secondary structures of peptides and proteins in solution, see for example, R. W. Woody, (Methods in Enzymology, 246: 34, 1995). The CD spectra of α-helical peptides is most readily interpretable due to the characteristic double minima at 208 and 222 nm. For peptides with other secondary structures however, interpretation of CD spectra is more complicated and less reliable. The CD data for peptides is used to relate solution structure to in vitro activity.
CD measurements of indolicidin analogues are performed in three different aqueous environments, (1) 10 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.2, (2) phosphate buffer and 40% (v/v) trifluoroethanol (TFE) and (3) phosphate buffer and large (100 nm diameter) unilamellar phospholipid vesicles (liposomes) (Table 27). The organic solvent TFE and the liposomes provide a hydrophobic environment intended to mimic the bacterial membrane where the peptides are presumed to adopt an active conformation.
The results indicate that the peptides are primarily unordered in phosphate buffer (a negative minima at around 200 nm) with the exception of MBI 11F4CN, which displays an additional minima at 220 nm (see below). The presence of TFE induces p-turn structure in MBI 11 and MBI 11G4CN, and increases α-helicity in MBI 11F4CN, although most of the peptides remain unordered. In the presence of liposomes, peptides MBI 11CN and MBI 11B7CN, which are unordered in TFE, display p-turn structure (a negative minima at around 230 nm) (
A β-turn is the predominant secondary structure that appears in a hydrophobic environment, suggesting that it is the primary conformation in the active, membrane-associated form. In contrast, MBI 11F4CN displays increased α-helical conformation in the presence of TFE. Peptide MBI 11F4CN is also the most insoluble and hemolytic of the peptides tested, suggesting that α-helical secondary structure may introduce unwanted properties in these analogues.
Additionally CD spectra are recorded for APO-modified peptides (Table 28). The results show that these compounds have significant p-turn secondary structure in phosphate buffer, which is only slightly altered in TFE.
Again, the CD results suggest that a β-turn structure (i.e. membrane-associated) is the preferred active conformation among the indolicidin analogues tested.
A method for measuring the ability of peptides to permeabilize phospholipid bilayers is described (Parente et al., Biochemistry, 29, 8720, 1990) Briefly, liposomes of a defined phospholipid composition are prepared in the presence of a fluorescent dye molecule. In this example, a dye pair consisting of the fluorescent molecule 8-aminonapthalene-1,3,6-trisulfonic acid (ANTS) and its quencher molecule p-xylene-bis-pyridinium bromide (DPX) are used. The mixture of free dye molecules, dye free liposomes, and liposomes containing encapsulated ANTS-DPX are separated by size exclusion chromatography. In the assay, the test peptide is incubated with the ANTS-DPX containing liposomes and the fluorescence due to ANTS release to the outside of the liposome is measured over time.
Using this assay, peptide activity, measured by dye release, is shown to be extremely sensitive to the composition of the liposomes at many liposome to peptide ratios (L/P) (
In addition, there is a size limitation to the membrane disruption induced by MBI 11CN. ANTS/DPX can be replaced with fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled dextran (FD-4), molecular weight 4,400, in the egg PC liposomes. No increase in FD-4 fluorescence is detected upon incubation with MBI 11CN. These results indicate that MBI 11CN-mediated membrane disruption allows the release of the relatively smaller ANTS/DPX molecules (˜400 Da), but not the bulkier FD-4 molecules.
E. coli ML-35 Inner Membrane Assay
An alternative method for measuring peptide-membrane interaction uses the E. coli strain ML-35 (Lehrer et al., J. Clin. Invest., 84: 553, 1989), which contains a chromosomal copy of the lacZ gene encoding β-galactosidase and is permease deficient. This strain is used to measure the effect of peptide on the inner membrane through release of β-galactosidase into the periplasm. Release of β-galactosidase is measured by spectrophotometrically monitoring the hydrolysis of its substrate o-nitrophenol β-D-galactopyranoside (ONPG). The maximum rate of hydrolysis (Vmax) is determined for aliquots of cells taken at various growth points.
A preliminary experiment to determine the concentration of peptide required for maximal activity against mid-log cells, diluted to 4×107 CFU/ml, yields a value of 50 μg/ml, which is used in all subsequent experiments. Cells are grown in two different growth media, Terrific broth (TB) and Luria broth (LB) and equivalent amounts of cells are assayed during their growth cycles. The resulting activity profile of MBI 11B7CN is shown in
To test whether membrane potential has an effect on peptide activity, the effect of disrupting the electrochemical gradient using the potassium ionophore valinomycin is examined. Cells pre-incubated with valinomycin are treated with peptide and for MBI 10CN and MBI 11CN ONPG hydrolysis diminished by approximately 50% compared to no pre-incubation with valinomycin (
Further delineation of the factors influencing membrane permeabilizing activity are tested. In an exemplary test, MBI 11B7CN is pre-incubated with isotonic HEPES/sucrose buffer containing either 150 mM sodium chloride (NaCl) or 5 mM magnesium ions (Mg2+) and assayed as described earlier. In
Cationic peptides are tested for toxicity towards eukaryotic cells by measuring the extent of lysis of mammalian red blood cells (RBC). Briefly, in this assay, red blood cells are separated from whole blood by centrifugation and washed free of plasma components. A 5% (v/v) washed red blood cell suspension is prepared in isotonic saline. An aliquot of peptide in formulation is then added and mixed in. After incubation at 37° C. for 1 hour with constant agitation, the solution is centrifuged and the supernatant measured for absorbance at 540 nm to detect released hemoglobin. When compared with the absorbance for a 100% lysed standard, a relative measure of the amount of hemoglobin that has been released from inside the red blood cells is determined and hence the ability of the peptide/formulation to cause red blood cell lysis.
Three peptide analogues, MBI 10CN, MBI 11 and MBI 11CN, in formulation C1 at 800 μg/ml cause substantial lysis, which is due primarily to the pH of the buffer. In contrast, formulation D has a more neutral pH and causes significantly less lysis. Under these conditions, MBI 10CN, MBI 11, and MBI 11CN are essentially non-lytic, resulting in 3.9, 2.3, and 3.2% lysis, respectively.
Various cationic peptides are tested for the extent of erythrocyte lysis. As shown in the following table, very little toxicity is observed.
A combination of cationic peptide and antibiotic agent is tested for toxicity towards eukaryotic cells by measuring the extent of lysis of mammalian red blood cells. Briefly, red blood cells are separated from whole blood by centrifugation, washed free of plasma components, and resuspended to a 5% (v/v) suspension in isotonic saline. The peptide and antibiotic agent are pre-mixed in isotonic saline, or other acceptable solution, and an aliquot of this solution is added to the red blood cell suspension. Following incubation with constant agitation at 37° C. for 1 hour, the solution is centrifuged, and the absorbance of the supernatant is measured at 540 nm, which detects released hemoglobin. Comparison to the A540 for a 100% lysed standard provides a relative measure of hemoglobin release from red blood cells, indicating the lytic ability of the cationic peptide and antibiotic agent combination.
A red blood cell (RBC) lysis assay is used to group peptides according to their ability to lyse RBC under standardized conditions compared with MBI 11CN and Gramicidin-S. Peptide samples and washed sheep RBC are prepared in isotonic saline with the final pH adjusted to between 6 and 7. Peptide samples and RBC suspension are mixed together to yield solutions that are 1% (v/v) RBC and 5, 50 or 500 μg/ml peptide. The assay is performed as described above. Each set of assays also includes MBI 11CN (500 μg/ml) and Gramicidin-S (5 μg/ml) as “low lysis” and “high lysis” controls, respectively.
MBI11B7CN, MBI11F3CN and MBI11F4CN are tested using this procedure and the results are presented in Table 30 below.
Peptides that at 5 μg/ml lyse RBC to an equal or greater extent than Gramicidin-S, the “high lysis” control, are considered to be highly lytic. Peptides that at 500 μg/ml lyse RBC to an equal to or lesser extent than MBI 11CN, the “low lysis” control, are considered to be non-lytic. The three analogues tested are all “moderately lytic” as they cause more lysis than MBI 11CN and less than Gramicidin S. In addition one of the analogues, MBI-11F3CN, is significantly less lytic than the other two variants at all three concentrations tested.
Example 14 Production of Antibodies to Peptide AnaloguesMultiple antigenic peptides (MAPs), which contain four or eight copies of the target peptide linked to a small non-immunogenic peptidyl core, are prepared as immunogens. Alternatively, the target peptide is conjugated to bovine serum albumin (BSA) or ovalbumin. For example, MBI 11B7 conjugated to ovalbumin is used as an immunogen. The immunogens are injected subcutaneously into rabbits to raise IgG antibodies using standard protocols (see, Harlow and Lane, Antibodies: A Laboratory Manual, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., 1988). After repeated boosters (usually monthly), serum from a blood sample is tested in an ELISA against the target peptide. A positive result indicates the presence of antibodies and further tests determine the specificity of the antibody binding to the target peptide. Purified antibodies can then be isolated from this serum and used in ELISAs to selectively identify and measure the amount of the target peptide in research and clinical samples.
Example 15 Pharmacology of Cationic Peptides in Plasma and BloodThe in vitro lifetime of free peptides in plasma and in blood is determined by measuring the amount of peptide present after set incubation times. Blood is collected from sheep, treated with an anticoagulant (not heparin) and, for plasma preparation, centrifuged to remove cells. Formulated peptide is added to either the plasma fraction or to whole blood and incubated. Following incubation, peptide is identified and quantified directly by reversed phase HPLC or an antibody-based assay. The antibiotic agent is quantified by a suitable assay, selected on the basis of its structure. Chromatographic conditions are as described above. Extraction is not required as the free peptide peak does not overlie any peaks from blood or plasma.
A 1 mg/mL solution of MBI 11CN in formulations C1 and D is added to freshly prepared sheep plasma at a final peptide concentration of 100 μg/mL and incubated at 37° C. At various times, aliquots of plasma are removed and analyzed for free peptide by reversed phase HPLC. From each chromatogram, the area of the peak corresponding to free peptide is integrated and plotted against time of incubation. As shown in
A 1 mg/mL solution of MBI 11B7CN in isotonic saline is added to freshly prepared heat-inactivated rabbit serum, to give a final peptide concentration of 100 μg/mL and is incubated at 32° C. The peptide levels detected are shown in
A series of peptide stability studies are performed to investigate the action of protease inhibitors on peptide degradation. Peptide is added to rabbit serum or plasma, either with or without protease inhibitors, then incubated at 22° C. for 3 hrs. Protease inhibitors tested include amastatin, bestatin, COMPLETE protease inhibitor cocktail, leupeptin, pepstatin A and EDTA. Amastatin and bestatin at 100 μM prevent the degradation of MBI 11B7CN in plasma over 3 hrs (
Peptide is extracted from plasma using C8 Sep Pak cartridges at peptide concentrations between 0 and 50 μg/mL. Each extraction also contains MBI 11CN at 10 μg/mL as an internal standard. Immediately after addition of the peptides to fresh rabbit plasma, the samples are mixed then diluted 1:10 with a 1% aqueous trifluoroacetic acid (TEA) solution, to give a final TFA concentration of 0.1%. Five hundred μL of this solution is immediately loaded onto a C8 Sep Pak cartridge and eluted with 0.1% TFA in 40% acetonitrile/60% H2O. Twenty μL of this eluant is loaded onto a 4.6×45 mm analytical C18 column and is eluted with an acetonitrile gradient of 25% to 65% over 8 column volumes. The peptides are detected at 280 nm. A chromatogram showing the extraction MBI 11B7CN with MBI 11CN as an internal standard is shown in
Peptide levels in plasma in vivo are measured after iv or ip administration of 80-100% of the maximum tolerated dose of peptide analogue in either formulation C1 or D. MBI 11CN in formulation C1 is injected intravenously into the tail vein of CD1 ICRBR strain mice. At various times post-injection, mice are anesthetized and blood is drawn by cardiac puncture. Blood from individual mice is centrifuged to separate plasma from cells. Plasma is then analyzed by reversed phase HPLC column. The resulting elution profiles are analyzed for free peptide content by UV absorbance at 280 nm, and these data are converted to concentrations in blood based upon a calibrated standard. Each data point represents the average blood level from two mice. In this assay, the detection limit is approximately 1 μg/ml, less than 3% of the dose administered.
The earliest time point at which peptide can be measured is three minutes following injection, thus, the maximum observed concentration (in μg/ml) is extrapolated back to time zero (
In addition, MBI 11CN is also administered to CD1 ICRBR strain mice by a single ip injection at an efficacious dose level of 40 mg/kg. Peptide is administered in both formulations C1 and D to determine if peptide complexation has any effect on blood levels. At various times post injection, mice are anesthetized and blood is drawn by cardiac puncture. Blood is collected and analyzed as for the iv injection.
MBI 11CN administered by this route demonstrated a quite different pharmacologic profile (
The in vivo lifetime of the cationic peptide and antibiotic agent combination is determined by administration, typically by intravenous or intraperitoneal injection, of 80-100% of the maximum tolerable dose of the combination in a suitable animal model, typically a mouse. At set times post-injection, each group of animals are anesthetized, blood is drawn, and plasma obtained by centrifugation. The amount of peptide or agent in the plasma supernatant is analyzed as for the in vitro determination.
Example 16 Toxicity of Cationic Peptides In VivoThe acute, single dose toxicity of various indolicidin analogues is tested in Swiss CD1 mice using various routes of administration. In order to determine the inherent toxicities of the peptide analogues in the absence of any formulation/delivery vehicle effects, the peptides are all administered in isotonic saline with the final pH between 6 and 7.
Intraperitoneal route. Groups of 6 mice are injected with peptide doses of between 80 and 5 mg/kg in 500 μl dose volumes. After peptide administration, the mice are observed for a period of 5 days, at which time the dose causing 50% mortality (LD50), the dose causing 90-100% mortality (LD90-100) and maximum tolerated dose (MTD) levels are determined. The LD50 values are calculated using the method of Reed and Muench (J. of Amer. Hyg. 27: 493-497, 1938). The results presented in Table 31 show that the LD50 values for MBI 11CN and analogues range from 21 to 52 mg/kg.
The single dose toxicity of a cationic peptide and antibiotic agent combination is examined in outbred ICR mice. Intraperitoneal injection of the combination in isotonic saline is carried out at increasing dose levels. The survival of the animals is monitored for 7 days. The number of animals surviving at each dose level is used to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD). In addition, the MTD can be determined after administration of the peptide and agent by different routes, at different time points, and in different formulations.
The single dose toxicity of MBI 10CN and MBI 11CN is examined in outbred ICR mice (Table 32). Intraperitoneal injection (groups of 2 mice) of MBI 10CN in formulation D showed no toxicity up to 29 mg/kg and under the same conditions MBI 11CN showed no toxicity up to 40 mg/kg.
Intravenous route. Groups of 6 mice are injected with peptide doses of 20, 16, 12, 8, 4 and 0 mg/kg in 100 μl volumes (4 ml/kg). After administration, the mice are observed for a period of 5 days, at which time the LD50, LD90-100 and MTD levels are determined. The results from the IV toxicity testing of MBI 11CN and three analogues are shown in Table 33. The LD50, LD90-100 and MTD values range from 5.8 to 15 mg/kg, 8 to 20 mg/kg and <4 to 12 mg/kg respectively.
Intravenous injection (groups of 10 mice) of MBI 10CN in formulation D showed an MTD of 5.6 mg/kg. Injection of 11 mg/kg gave 40% toxicity and 22 mg/kg gave 100% toxicity. Intravenous injection of MBI 11CN in formulation C (lyophilized) showed a MTD of 3.0 mg/kg. Injection at 6.1 mg/kg gave 10% toxicity and at 12 mg/kg 100% toxicity.
These results are obtained using peptide/buffer solutions that were lyophilized after preparation and reconstituted with water. If the peptide solution is not lyophilized before injection, but used immediately after preparation, an increase in toxicity is seen, and the maximum tolerated dose can decrease by up to four-fold. For example, an intravenous injection of MBI 11CN as a non-lyophilized solution, formulation C1, at 1.5 mg/kg gives 20% toxicity and at 3.0 mg/kg gives 100% toxicity. HPLC analyses of the non-lyophilized and lyophilized formulations indicate that the MBI 11CN forms a complex with Tween 80, and this complexation of the peptide reduces its toxicity in mice.
In addition, mice are multiply injected by an intravenous route with MBI 11CN (Table 35). In one representative experiment, peptide administered in 10 injections of 0.84 mg/kg at 5 minute intervals is not toxic. However, two injections of peptide at 4.1 mg/kg administered with a 10 minute interval results in 60% toxicity.
Subcutaneous route. The toxicity of MBI 11CN is also determined after subcutaneous (SC) administration. For SC toxicity testing, groups of 6 mice are injected with peptide doses of 128, 96, 64, 32 and 0 mg/kg in 300 μL dose volumes (12 mL/kg). After administration, the mice are observed for a period of 5 days. None of the animals died at any of the dose levels within the 5 day observation period. Therefore, the LD50, LD90-100 and MTD are all taken to be greater than 128 mg/kg. Mice receiving higher dose levels showed symptoms similar to those seen after IV injection suggesting that peptide entered the systemic circulation. These symptoms are reversible, disappearing in all mice by the second day of observations.
The single dose toxicity of MBI 10CN and MBI 11CN in different formulations is also examined in outbred ICR mice (Table 36). Intraperitoneal injection (groups of 2 mice) of MBI 10CN in formulation D show no toxicity up to 29 mg/kg and under the same conditions MBI 11CN show no toxicity up to 40 mg/kg.
Intravenous injection (groups of 10 mice) of MBI 10CN in formulation D show a maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of 5.6 mg/kg (Table 36). Injection of 11 mg/kg gave 40% toxicity and 22 mg/kg result in 100% toxicity. Intravenous injection of MBI 11CN in formulation C (lyophilized) show a MTD of 3.0 mg/kg. Injection at 6.1 mg/kg result in 10% toxicity and at 12 mg/kg 100% toxicity.
These results are obtained using peptide/buffer solutions that are lyophilized after preparation and reconstituted with water. If the peptide solution is not lyophilized before injection, but used immediately after preparation, an increase in toxicity is seen, and the maximum tolerated dose can decrease by up to four-fold. For example, an intravenous injection of MBI 11CN as a non-lyophilized solution, formulation C1, at 1.5 mg/kg results in 20% toxicity and at 3.0 mg/kg gave 100% toxicity. HPLC analyses of the non-lyophilized and lyophilized formulations indicate that the MBI 11CN forms a complex with polysorbate, and this complexation of the peptide reduces its toxicity in mice.
In addition, mice are multiply injected by an intravenous route with MBI 11CN (Table 37). In one representative experiment, peptide administered in 10 injections of 0.84 mg/kg at 5 minute intervals is not lethal. However, two injections of peptide at 4.1 mg/kg administered with a 10 minute interval results in 60% mortality.
To assess the impact of dosing mice with peptide analogue, a series of histopathology investigations can be carried out. Groups of mice are administered analogue at dose levels that are either at, or below the MTD, or above the MTD, a lethal dose. Multiple injections may be used to mimic possible treatment regimes. Groups of control mice are not injected or injected with buffer only.
Following injection, mice are sacrificed at specified times and their organs immediately placed in a 10% balanced formalin solution. Mice that die as a result of the toxic effects of the analogue also have their organs preserved immediately. Tissue samples are taken and prepared as stained micro-sections on slides which are then examined microscopically. Damage to tissues is assessed and this information can be used to develop improved analogues, improved methods of administration or improved dosing regimes.
To assess the impact of dosing mice with peptide analogue, a series of histopathology investigations are carried out. Groups of two mice are administered MBI 11CN in formulation D by ip and iv injection. The dose levels are either at or below the MTD or a lethal dose above MTD. Groups of control mice are uninjected or injected with buffer only. At 0, 70 and 150 minutes after injection, the major organs of moribund or sacrificed mice are examined histologically for evidence of toxicity.
Mice Given an IV Injection of MBI 11CN are Identified as Follows:
Control Mouse A: No dose
Control Mouse B: Buffer Dose Only (no peptide)
M70A,B: MBI 11CN, 4 mg/kg, 70 minute observation
M150A,B: MBI 11CN, 4 mg/kg, 150 minute observation
MXA,B: MBI 11CN, 12 mg/kg (lethal dose)
Mice Given an IP Injection of MBI 11CN are Identified as Follows:
Control Mouse A: No dose
Control Mouse B: Buffer Dose Only (no peptide)
M70A,B: MBI 11CN, 40 mg/kg, 70 minute observation
M150A,B: MBI 11CN, 40 mg/kg, 150 minute observation
MXA,B: MBI 11CN, 80 mg/kg (lethal dose)
Following injection, the mice are sacrificed at the times indicated above and their organs immediately placed in a 10% balanced formalin solution. The tissue samples are prepared as stained micro-sections on slides and then examined microscopically.
Mice given a non-lethal dose were always lethargic, with raised fur and evidence of edema and hypertension, but recovered to normal within two hours.
Tissues from these animals indicate that there was some damage to blood vessels, particularly within the liver and lung at both the observation times, but other initial abnormalities returned to normal within the 150 minute observation time. It is likely that blood vessel damage is a consequence of continuous exposure to high circulating peptide levels.
In contrast, mice given a lethal dose had completely normal tissues and organs, except for the liver and heart of the ip and iv dosed mice, respectively. In general, this damage is identified as disruption of the cells lining the blood vessels. It appears as though the rapid death of mice is due to this damage, and that the peptide did not penetrate beyond that point. Extensive damage to the hepatic portal veins in the liver and to the coronary arterioles in the heart was observed.
Further evidence points to a cumulative toxic effect, where the maximum dose iv is lethal when repeated after 10 minutes, but not when repeated after one hour.
Example 17 In Vivo Efficacy of Cationic PeptidesCationic peptides are tested for their ability to rescue mice from lethal bacterial infections. The animal model used is an intraperitoneal (ip) inoculation of mice with 106-108 Gram-positive organisms with subsequent administration of peptide. The three pathogens investigated, methicillin-sensitive S. aureus (MSSA), methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA), or S. epidermidis are injected ip into mice. For untreated mice, death occurs within 12-18 hours with MSSA and S. epidermis and within 6-10 hours with MRSA.
Peptide is administered by two routes, intraperitoneally, at one hour post-infection, or intravenously, with single or multiple doses given at various times pre- and post-infection.
MSSA infection. In a typical protocol, groups of 10 mice are infected intraperitoneally with a LD90-100 dose (5.2×106 CFU/mouse) of MSSA (Smith, ATCC #19640) injected in brain-heart infusion containing 5% mucin. This strain of S. aureus is not resistant to any common antibiotics. At 60 minutes post-infection, MBI 10CN or MBI 11CN, in formulation D, is injected intraperitoneally at the stated dose levels. An injection of formulation alone serves as a negative control and administration of ampicillin serves as a positive control. The survival of the mice is monitored at 1, 2, 3 and 4 hrs post-infection and twice daily thereafter for a total of 8 days.
As shown in
As shown above, blood levels of MBI 11CN can be sustained at a level of greater than 2 μg/ml for a two hour period inferring that this is higher than the minimum level.
Additionally, eight variants based on the sequence of MBI 11CN are tested against MSSA using the experimental system described above. Peptides prepared in formulation D are administered at dose levels ranging from 12 to 24 mg/kg and the survival of the infected mice is monitored for eight days (
S. epidermidis infection. Peptide analogues generally have lower MIC values against S. epidermidis in vitro, therefore, lower blood peptide levels might be more effective against infection.
In a typical protocol, groups of 10 mice are injected intraperitoneally with an LD90-100 dose (2.0×108 CFU/mouse) of S. epidermidis (ATCC #12228) in brain-heart infusion broth containing 5% mucin. This strain of S. epidermidis is 90% lethal after 5 days. At 15 mins and 60 mins post-infection, various doses of MBI 11CN in formulation D are injected intravenously via the tail vein. An injection of formulation only serves as the negative control and injection of gentamicin serves as the positive control; both are injected at 60 minutes post-infection. The survival of the mice is monitored at 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 and 8 hrs post-infection and twice daily thereafter for a total of 8 days.
As shown in
MRSA infection. MRSA infection, while lethal in a short period of time, requires a much higher bacterial load than MSSA. In a typical protocol, groups of 10 mice are injected intraperitoneally with a LD90-100 dose (4.2×107 CFU/mouse) of MRSA (ATCC #33591) in brain-heart infusion containing 5% mucin. The treatment protocols are as follows, with the treatment times relative to the time of infection:
MBI 11CN is injected intravenously in the tail vein in formulation D. Survival of mice is recorded at 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 20, 24 and 30 hrs post-infection and twice daily thereafter for a total of 8 days. There was no change in the number of surviving mice after 24 hrs (
The 1 mg/kg (20 min) treatment protocol, with injections 5 minutes apart centered on the infection time, delayed the death of the mice to a significant extent with one survivor remaining at the end of the study. The results presented in Table 39 suggest that a sufficiently high level of MBI 11CN maintained over a longer time period would increase the number of mice surviving. The 5 mg/kg and 1 mg/kg (2 hr) results, where there is no improvement in survivability over the negative control, indicates that injections 1 hour apart, even at a higher level, are not effective against MRSA.
A solution of 2% (w/w) polysorbate 80 is prepared in water and 200 ml are placed in a 250 mL crystallizing dish or over suitable container. Containers must have a clear light path. Cover the vessel with a piece of UV transparent plastic wrap or other UV transparent material. In addition, the material should allow the exchange of air but minimize evaporation.
The solution is irradiated with ultraviolet light using a lamp emitting at 254 nm. Irradiation can also be performed using a lamp emitting at 302 nm. The solution should be stirred continuously to maximize the rate of activation. The activation is complete within 72 hours using a lamp with a output of 1800 μW/cm2. The reaction is monitored by a reversed-phased HPLC assay, which measures the formation of APO-MBI 11CN-Tw80 when the light-activated polysorbate is reacted with MBI 11CN.
Some properties of activated polysorbate are determined. Because peroxides are a known by-product of exposing ethers to UV light, peroxide formation is examined through the effect of reducing agents on the activated polysorbate. As seen in
These data indicate that peroxides are not involved in the modification of peptides by activated polysorbate. Sodium borohydride should not affect epoxides or esters in aqueous media, suggesting that the reactive group is an aldehyde or ketone. The presence of aldehydes in the activated polysorbate is confirmed by using a formaldehyde test, which is specific for aldehydes including aldehydes other than formaldehyde.
Furthermore, activated polysorbate is treated with 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (DNPH) in an attempt to capture the reactive species. Three DNPH-tagged components are purified and analyzed by mass spectroscopy. These components are polysorbate-derived with molecular weights between 1000 and 1400. This indicates that low molecular weight aldehydes, such as formaldehyde or acetaldehyde, are involved.
Example 19 Activation of Polysorbate 80 by Ammonium PersulfateA 200 mL solution of 2% (w/w) polysorbate 80 is prepared in water. To this solution, 200 mg of ammonium persulfate is added while stirring. The reaction is stirred for 1-2 hours with protection from ambient light. If a solution of less than 0.1% (w/w) ammonium persulfate is used, then exposure to ultraviolet light at 254 nm during this period is used to help complete the reaction. The peroxide level in the reaction is determined using a test kit. Peroxides are reduced by titration with 2-mercaptoethanol.
Example 20 Formation of APO-Modified PeptidesAPO-modified peptides are prepared either in solid phase or liquid phase. For solid phase preparation, 0.25 ml of 4 mg/ml of MBI 11CN is added to 0.5 ml of 0.4 M Acetic acid-NaOH pH 4.6 followed by addition of 0.25 ml of UV-activated polysorbate. The reaction mix is frozen by placing it in a −80° C. freezer. After freezing, the reaction mix is lyophilized overnight.
For preparing the conjugates in an aqueous phase, a sample of UV activated polysorbate 80 is first adjusted to a pH of 7.5 by the addition of 0.1M NaOH. This pH adjusted solution (0.5 ml) is added to 1.0 ml of 100 mM sodium carbonate, pH 10.0, followed immediately by the addition of 0.5 ml of 4 mg/ml of MBI 11CN. The reaction mixture is incubated at ambient temperature for 22 hours. The progress of the reaction is monitored by analysis at various time points using RP-HPLC (
The table below summarizes data from several experiments. Unless otherwise noted in the table, the APO-modified peptides are prepared via the lyophilization method in 200 mM acetic acid-NaOH buffer, pH 4.6.
The modification of amino groups is further analyzed by determining the number of primary amino groups lost during attachment. The unmodified and modified peptides are treated with 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid (TNBS) (R. L. Lundblad in Techniques in Protein Modification and Analysis pp. 151-154, 1995).
Briefly, a stock solution of MBI 11CN at 4 mg/ml and an equimolar solution of APO-modified MBI 11CN are prepared. A 0.225 ml aliquot of MBI 11CN or APO-modified MBI 11CN is mixed with 0.225 ml of 200 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 8.8. A 0.450 ml aliquot of 1% TNBS is added to each sample, and the reaction is incubated at 37° C. for 30 minutes. The absorbance at 367 nm is measured, and the number of modified primary amino groups per molecule is calculated using an extinction coefficient of 10,500 M−1 cm−1 for the trinitrophenyl (TNP) derivatives.
The primary amino group content of the parent peptide is then compared to the corresponding APO-modified peptide. As shown below, the loss of a single primary amino group occurs during formation of modified peptide. Peptides possessing a 3,4 lysine pair consistently give results that are 1 residue lower than expected, which may reflect steric hindrance after titration of one member of the doublet.
APO-modified peptides demonstrate a high degree of stability under conditions that promote the dissociation of ionic or hydrophobic complexes. APO-modified peptide in formulation D is prepared as 800 μg/ml solutions in water, 0.9% saline, 8M urea, 8M guanidine-HCl, 67% 1-propanol, 1M HCl and 1M NaOH and incubated for 1 hour at room temperature. Samples are analyzed for the presence of free peptide using reversed phase HPLC and the following chromatographic conditions:
Solvent A: 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) in water
Solvent B: 0.1% TFA 195% acetonitrile in water
Media: POROS R2-20 (polystyrene divinylbenzene)
Elution: 0% B for 5 column volumes
-
- 0-25% B in 3 column volumes
- 25% B for 10 column volumes
- 25-95% B in 3 column volumes
- 95% B for 10 column volumes
Under these conditions, free peptide elutes exclusively during the 25% B step and formulation-peptide complex during the 95% B step. None of the dissociating conditions mentioned above, with the exception of 1M NaOH in which some degradation is observed, are successful in liberating free peptide from APO-modified peptide. Additional studies are carried out with incubation at 55° C. or 85° C. for one hour. APO-modified peptide is equally stable at 55° C. and is only slightly less stable at 85° C. Some acid hydrolysis, indicated by the presence of novel peaks in the HPLC chromatogram, is observed with the 1M HCl sample incubated at 85° C. for one hour.
Example 21 Purification of APO-Modified MBI 11CNA large scale preparation of APO-modified MBI 11CN is purified. Approximately 400 mg of MBI 11CN is APO-modified and dissolved in 20 ml of water. Unreacted MBI 11CN is removed by RP-HPLC. The solvent is then evaporated from the APO-modified MBI 11CN pool, and the residue is dissolved in 10 ml methylene chloride. The modified peptide is then precipitated with 10 ml diethyl ether. After 5 min at ambient temperature, the precipitate is collected by centrifugation at 5000×g for 10 minutes. The pellet is washed with 5 ml of diethyl ether and again collected by centrifugation at 5000×g for 10 minutes. The supernatants are pooled for analysis of unreacted polysorbate by-products. The precipitate is dissolved in 6 ml of water and then flushed with nitrogen by bubbling for 30 minutes to remove residual ether. The total yield from the starting MBI 11CN was 43%.
The crude APO-MBI29-Tw80 prepared from 200 mg of MBI 29 is suspended in 40 mL of methylene chloride and sonicated for 5 minutes to disperse large particles. The suspension is centrifuged in appropriate containers (Corning glass) at 3000-4000×g for 15 minutes at 10° C. to sediment insoluble material. The supernatant is decanted and saved.
The sediment is extracted twice more by adding 40 mL portions methylene chloride to the sediment and repeating the sonication/centrifugation step. The supernatants from the three extractions are pooled and concentrated 8-10 fold using a rotary evaporator. The solution is transferred to centrifuge tubes and 3 volumes of diethyl ether are added. The mixture is incubated for 15 minutes, then centrifuged at 3000-4000×g for 15 minutes at 10° C. to sediment the product. The supernatant is decanted and discarded. The residual ether may be removed with a stream of nitrogen.
Example 22 Biological Assays to Measure APO-Cationic Peptide ActivityAll biological assays that compare APO-modified peptides with unmodified peptides are performed on an equimolar ratio. The concentration of APO-modified peptides can be determined by spectrophotometric measurement, which is used to normalize concentrations for biological assays. For example, a 1 mg/ml APO-modified MBI 11CN solution contains the same amount of peptide as a 1 mg/ml MBI 11CN solution, thus allowing direct comparison of toxicity and efficacy data.
APO-modified peptides are at least as potent as the parent peptides in in vitro assays performed as described herein. MIC values against gram positive bacteria are presented for several APO-modified peptides and compared with the values obtained using the parent peptides (Table 5). The results indicate that the modified peptides are at least as potent in vitro as the parent peptides and may be more potent than the parent peptides against E. faecalis strains.
The agarose dilution assay measures antimicrobial activity of peptides and peptide analogues, which is expressed as the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the peptides. This assay is performed as described above. Representative MICs for various modified and unmodified cationic peptides are shown in the Table below.
Toxicities of APO-modified MBI 11CN and unmodified MBI 11CN are examined in Swiss CD-1 mice. Groups of 6 mice are injected iv with single doses of 0.1 ml peptide in 0.9% saline. The dose levels used are 0, 3, 5, 8, 10, and 13 mg/kg. Mice are monitored at 1, 3, and 6 hrs post-injection for the first day, then twice daily for 4 days. The survival data for MBI 11CN mice are presented in Table 43. For APO-modified MBI 11CN, 100% of the mice survived at all doses, including the maximal dose of 13 mg/kg.
As summarized below, the LD50 for MBI 11CN is 7 mg/kg (Table 7), with all subjects dying at a dose of 8 mg/ml. The highest dose of MBI 11CN giving 100% survival was 5 mg/kg. The data show that APO-modified peptides are significantly less toxic than the parent peptides.
In addition, APO-peptides and parent peptides are tested against a panel of cancer cell lines. Cell death is measured using the Cytotox (Promega) assay kit which measures the release of lactate dehydrogenase. As shown below the modified peptides had increased activity over the parent peptides.
It will be appreciated that, although specific embodiments of the invention have been described herein for purposes of illustration, various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is not limited except as by the appended claims.
Claims
1-3. (canceled)
4. A method of treating or preventing a microbial infection, comprising administering to a patient a therapeutically effective amount of a composition comprising at least one indolicidin analogue of up to 35 amino acids that comprises one of the following sequences: (SEQ ID NO: 25) Lys Arg Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Lys Lys Leu Ile; (SEQ ID NO: 23) Ile Leu Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys; (SEQ ID NO: 46) Lys Arg Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Leu Ile; (SEQ ID NO: 47) Ile Leu Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys Ile Met Ile Leu Lys Lys Ala Gly Ser; (SEQ ID NO: 24) Ile Leu Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys Met Ile Leu Lys Lys Ala Gly Ser; (SEQ ID NO: 48) Ile Leu Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys Asp Met Ile Leu Lys Lys Ala Gly Ser; (SEQ ID NO: 26) Trp Arg Ile Trp Lys Pro Lys Trp Arg Leu Pro Lys Trp; (SEQ ID NO: 59) Ile Leu Lys Lys Trp Val Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys; (SEQ ID NO: 27) Ile Leu Arg Trp Val Trp Trp Val Trp Arg Arg Lys; or (SEQ ID NO: 60) Lys Arg Arg Trp Val Trp Trp Val Trp Arg Leu Ile.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the indolicidin analogue comprises the sequence of Ile Leu Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys (SEQ ID NO:23).
6. The method of claim 4, wherein the amino acid sequence of the indolicidin analogue consists of Ile Leu Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys (SEQ ID NO:23).
7. The method of claim 4, wherein the microbial infection is due to a bacterium and wherein the composition is administered ex vivo.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the composition is administered to the skin of the patient.
9. The method of claim 4, wherein the microbial infection is associated with nasal colonization.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the composition is administered by aerosolization or spray.
11. The method of claim 4, wherein the microbial infection is a burn-related infection.
12. The method of claim 4, wherein the microbial infection is a surgical wound infection.
13. The method of claim 4, wherein the composition is a gel.
14. The method of claim 6, wherein the microbial infection is associated with nasal colonization.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein the composition is administered by aerosolization or spray.
16. The method of claim 6, wherein the microbial infection is a burn-related infection.
17. The method of claim 6, wherein the microbial infection is a surgical wound infection.
18. The method of claim 6, wherein the composition is a gel.
19. The method of claim 4, wherein the composition further comprises an antibiotic.
20. The method of claim 4, further comprising the step of administering an antibiotic.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein the antibiotic is minocycline, rifampin, cefazolin, vancomycin, teicoplanin, or a beta lactam.
22. The method of claim 4, wherein the microbial infection is due to a bacterium.
23. The method of claim 22, wherein the bacterium is antibiotic resistant.
24. The method of claim 23, wherein the antibiotic resistant bacteria is resistant to at least one of a penicillin, a cephalosporin, a fluoroquinolone, a macrolide, or an aminoglycoside.
25. The method of claim 23, wherein the antibiotic resistant bacteria is resistant to at least one of a tetracycline, a quinolone, a glycopeptide, a monobactam, a carbacephem, a carbapenem, or a cephamycin.
26. The method of claim 23, wherein the antibiotic resistant bacteria is resistant to at least one of methicillin, vancomycin, teicoplanin, ciprofloxacin, clindamycin, ampicillin, erythromycin, amikacin, ceftriaxone, gentamicin, mupirocin, piperacillin, or tobramycin.
27. A method of inhibiting or preventing growth of a bacterium on a surface of an object, comprising coating the surface with a therapeutically effective amount of a composition comprising at least one indolicidin analogue of up to 35 amino acids that comprises one of the following sequences: (SEQ ID NO: 25) Lys Arg Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Lys Lys Leu Ile; (SEQ ID NO: 23) Ile Leu Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys; (SEQ ID NO: 46) Lys Arg Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Leu Ile; (SEQ ID NO: 47) Ile Leu Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys Ile Met Ile Leu Lys Lys Ala Gly Ser; (SEQ ID NO: 24) Ile Leu Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys Met Ile Leu Lys Lys Ala Gly Ser; (SEQ ID NO: 48) Ile Leu Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys Asp Met Ile Leu Lys Lys Ala Gly Ser; (SEQ ID NO: 26) Trp Arg Ile Trp Lys Pro Lys Trp Arg Leu Pro Lys Trp; (SEQ ID NO: 59) Ile Leu Lys Lys Tip Val Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys; (SEQ ID NO: 27) Ile Leu Arg Trp Val Trp Trp Val Trp Arg Arg Lys; or (SEQ ID NO: 60) Lys Arg Arg Trp Val Trp Trp Val Trp Arg Leu Ile.
28. The method of claim 27, wherein the indolicidin analogue comprises the sequence of Ile Leu Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys (SEQ ID NO:23).
29. The method of claim 27, wherein the amino acid sequence of the indolicidin analogue consists of Ile Leu Arg Trp Pro Trp Trp Pro Trp Arg Arg Lys (SEQ ID NO:23).
30. The method of claim 27, further comprising the step of contacting the surface of the object with an antibiotic.
31. The method of claim 30, wherein the antibiotic is minocycline, rifampin, cefazolin, vancomycin, teicoplanin, or a beta lactam.
32. The method of claim 27, wherein the bacterium is antibiotic resistant.
33. The method of claim 32, wherein the antibiotic resistant bacteria is resistant to at least one of a penicillin, a cephalosporin, a fluoroquinolone, a macrolied, an aminoglycoside, a tetracycline, a quinolone, a glycopeptide, a monobactam, a carbacephem, a carbapenem, or a cephamycin.
34. The method of claim 27, wherein the object is a stent, tube, probe, cannula, catheter, synthetic vascular graft, blood monitoring device, artificial heart valve, or needle.
35. The method of claim 27, wherein the object is a tube.
36. The method of claim 27, wherein the object is a medical device.
37. The method of claim 36, wherein the medical device is a catheter.
38. The method of claim 36, wherein the medical device is an intravascular device.
39. The method of claim 27, wherein the bacteria is a Gram-negative bacteria selected from the group consisting of Enterobacter sp., E. coli, Klebsiella sp., and Acinetobacter sp.
40. The method of claim 27, wherein the bacteria is a Gram-positive bacteria selected from the group consisting of S. aureus, coagulase negative staphylococci, enterococci, S. epidermidis, S. pneumoniae, and Viridans Streptococci.
41. The method of claim 27, wherein the composition is a gel.
Type: Application
Filed: Nov 15, 2007
Publication Date: Jun 23, 2011
Applicant: Migenix Inc. (Vancouver)
Inventors: Timothy J. Krieger (Richmond), Robert Taylor (Surrey), Douglas Erfle (Vancouver), Janet R. Fraser (Vancouver), Michael H.P. West (Vancouver), Patricia J. McNichol (Coquitlam)
Application Number: 11/940,653
International Classification: A61K 38/04 (20060101); A61K 38/16 (20060101); A61K 38/10 (20060101); A61K 9/12 (20060101); A61P 31/04 (20060101); A01N 37/18 (20060101); A01P 1/00 (20060101);