CA3025063A1 - Proteoglycan degrading mutants for treatment of cns - Google Patents
Proteoglycan degrading mutants for treatment of cnsInfo
- Publication number
- CA3025063A1 CA3025063A1 CA3025063A CA3025063A CA3025063A1 CA 3025063 A1 CA3025063 A1 CA 3025063A1 CA 3025063 A CA3025063 A CA 3025063A CA 3025063 A CA3025063 A CA 3025063A CA 3025063 A1 CA3025063 A1 CA 3025063A1
- Authority
- CA
- Canada
- Prior art keywords
- seq
- chondroitinase
- composition
- polypeptide
- deletion
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Abandoned
Links
- 230000000593 degrading effect Effects 0.000 title description 120
- 238000012217 deletion Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 114
- 230000037430 deletion Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 113
- 239000000203 mixture Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 60
- 210000003169 central nervous system Anatomy 0.000 claims abstract description 32
- 208000014674 injury Diseases 0.000 claims abstract description 26
- 208000027418 Wounds and injury Diseases 0.000 claims abstract description 24
- 230000006378 damage Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 22
- 230000001225 therapeutic effect Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 17
- 238000002360 preparation method Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 4
- 108090000765 processed proteins & peptides Proteins 0.000 claims description 211
- 229920001184 polypeptide Polymers 0.000 claims description 210
- 102000004196 processed proteins & peptides Human genes 0.000 claims description 210
- 150000001413 amino acids Chemical group 0.000 claims description 53
- 101710106625 Chondroitinase-AC Proteins 0.000 claims description 41
- 108010048429 chondroitinase B Proteins 0.000 claims description 30
- -1 continuous infusion Substances 0.000 claims description 29
- 230000008929 regeneration Effects 0.000 claims description 20
- 238000011069 regeneration method Methods 0.000 claims description 20
- 230000014511 neuron projection development Effects 0.000 claims description 17
- 239000003814 drug Substances 0.000 claims description 15
- 238000002347 injection Methods 0.000 claims description 14
- 239000007924 injection Substances 0.000 claims description 14
- 238000013268 sustained release Methods 0.000 claims description 13
- 239000012730 sustained-release form Substances 0.000 claims description 13
- 208000020431 spinal cord injury Diseases 0.000 claims description 12
- 208000034656 Contusions Diseases 0.000 claims description 9
- 150000001875 compounds Chemical class 0.000 claims description 9
- 230000009519 contusion Effects 0.000 claims description 9
- 239000000546 pharmaceutical excipient Substances 0.000 claims description 9
- 239000003085 diluting agent Substances 0.000 claims description 7
- 206010006074 Brachial plexus injury Diseases 0.000 claims description 6
- 208000030886 Traumatic Brain injury Diseases 0.000 claims description 6
- 201000006417 multiple sclerosis Diseases 0.000 claims description 6
- 230000009529 traumatic brain injury Effects 0.000 claims description 6
- 230000012010 growth Effects 0.000 claims description 5
- 239000007943 implant Substances 0.000 claims description 5
- 238000001802 infusion Methods 0.000 claims description 5
- 230000000699 topical effect Effects 0.000 claims description 5
- 210000005036 nerve Anatomy 0.000 claims description 4
- 108010025020 Nerve Growth Factor Proteins 0.000 claims description 3
- 102000007072 Nerve Growth Factors Human genes 0.000 claims description 3
- 102000001068 Neural Cell Adhesion Molecules Human genes 0.000 claims description 3
- 108010069196 Neural Cell Adhesion Molecules Proteins 0.000 claims description 3
- 102000014413 Neuregulin Human genes 0.000 claims description 3
- 108050003475 Neuregulin Proteins 0.000 claims description 3
- 108010077641 Nogo Proteins Proteins 0.000 claims description 3
- 102100029831 Reticulon-4 Human genes 0.000 claims description 3
- 239000005557 antagonist Substances 0.000 claims description 3
- 229940082638 cardiac stimulant phosphodiesterase inhibitors Drugs 0.000 claims description 3
- 239000003102 growth factor Substances 0.000 claims description 3
- 239000003112 inhibitor Substances 0.000 claims description 3
- 230000005764 inhibitory process Effects 0.000 claims description 3
- 239000003900 neurotrophic factor Substances 0.000 claims description 3
- 239000002571 phosphodiesterase inhibitor Substances 0.000 claims description 3
- 208000001738 Nervous System Trauma Diseases 0.000 claims 8
- 208000012902 Nervous system disease Diseases 0.000 claims 8
- 208000028412 nervous system injury Diseases 0.000 claims 8
- 238000010255 intramuscular injection Methods 0.000 claims 4
- 239000007927 intramuscular injection Substances 0.000 claims 4
- 238000007913 intrathecal administration Methods 0.000 claims 4
- 238000010253 intravenous injection Methods 0.000 claims 4
- 238000010254 subcutaneous injection Methods 0.000 claims 4
- 239000007929 subcutaneous injection Substances 0.000 claims 4
- 108010023736 Chondroitinases and Chondroitin Lyases Proteins 0.000 abstract description 54
- 102000011413 Chondroitinases and Chondroitin Lyases Human genes 0.000 abstract description 53
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 abstract description 16
- 238000009792 diffusion process Methods 0.000 abstract description 14
- 238000011084 recovery Methods 0.000 abstract description 9
- 208000037265 diseases, disorders, signs and symptoms Diseases 0.000 abstract description 8
- 201000010099 disease Diseases 0.000 abstract description 6
- 230000001737 promoting effect Effects 0.000 abstract description 4
- 230000000926 neurological effect Effects 0.000 abstract description 3
- 102000016611 Proteoglycans Human genes 0.000 description 126
- 108010067787 Proteoglycans Proteins 0.000 description 126
- 238000006467 substitution reaction Methods 0.000 description 53
- 230000000694 effects Effects 0.000 description 46
- 150000007523 nucleic acids Chemical class 0.000 description 39
- 108090000623 proteins and genes Proteins 0.000 description 36
- 108020004707 nucleic acids Proteins 0.000 description 33
- 102000039446 nucleic acids Human genes 0.000 description 33
- 102000004190 Enzymes Human genes 0.000 description 32
- 108090000790 Enzymes Proteins 0.000 description 32
- 229940088598 enzyme Drugs 0.000 description 32
- 101000910471 Proteus vulgaris Chondroitin sulfate ABC endolyase Proteins 0.000 description 31
- 210000001519 tissue Anatomy 0.000 description 28
- 102000004169 proteins and genes Human genes 0.000 description 27
- 235000018102 proteins Nutrition 0.000 description 24
- 108090000819 Chondroitin-sulfate-ABC endolyases Proteins 0.000 description 19
- 102000037716 Chondroitin-sulfate-ABC endolyases Human genes 0.000 description 19
- 102100036601 Aggrecan core protein Human genes 0.000 description 18
- 239000000758 substrate Substances 0.000 description 18
- 108010067219 Aggrecans Proteins 0.000 description 17
- 230000014509 gene expression Effects 0.000 description 16
- 210000002241 neurite Anatomy 0.000 description 15
- 210000004027 cell Anatomy 0.000 description 14
- 239000002773 nucleotide Substances 0.000 description 14
- 125000003729 nucleotide group Chemical group 0.000 description 14
- 238000003556 assay Methods 0.000 description 13
- 230000004927 fusion Effects 0.000 description 12
- 230000015556 catabolic process Effects 0.000 description 11
- 238000006731 degradation reaction Methods 0.000 description 11
- 102000037865 fusion proteins Human genes 0.000 description 11
- 108020001507 fusion proteins Proteins 0.000 description 11
- 239000000499 gel Substances 0.000 description 11
- 210000002569 neuron Anatomy 0.000 description 11
- 229920002567 Chondroitin Polymers 0.000 description 10
- DLGJWSVWTWEWBJ-HGGSSLSASA-N chondroitin Chemical compound CC(O)=N[C@@H]1[C@H](O)O[C@H](CO)[C@H](O)[C@@H]1OC1[C@H](O)[C@H](O)C=C(C(O)=O)O1 DLGJWSVWTWEWBJ-HGGSSLSASA-N 0.000 description 10
- 230000006872 improvement Effects 0.000 description 10
- 102000005598 Chondroitin Sulfate Proteoglycans Human genes 0.000 description 9
- 108010059480 Chondroitin Sulfate Proteoglycans Proteins 0.000 description 9
- 210000003050 axon Anatomy 0.000 description 9
- 150000001720 carbohydrates Chemical class 0.000 description 9
- 235000014633 carbohydrates Nutrition 0.000 description 9
- 230000029087 digestion Effects 0.000 description 9
- 230000035515 penetration Effects 0.000 description 8
- 238000001262 western blot Methods 0.000 description 8
- 241000700159 Rattus Species 0.000 description 7
- 230000003197 catalytic effect Effects 0.000 description 7
- 230000006870 function Effects 0.000 description 7
- 238000000338 in vitro Methods 0.000 description 7
- 238000000746 purification Methods 0.000 description 7
- 238000007805 zymography Methods 0.000 description 7
- 101710199046 Chondroitin sulfate ABC exolyase Proteins 0.000 description 6
- LFQSCWFLJHTTHZ-UHFFFAOYSA-N Ethanol Chemical compound CCO LFQSCWFLJHTTHZ-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 6
- 239000008186 active pharmaceutical agent Substances 0.000 description 6
- 239000003795 chemical substances by application Substances 0.000 description 6
- 239000013604 expression vector Substances 0.000 description 6
- 230000000670 limiting effect Effects 0.000 description 6
- 239000000047 product Substances 0.000 description 6
- 108091028043 Nucleic acid sequence Proteins 0.000 description 5
- 244000110797 Polygonum persicaria Species 0.000 description 5
- 230000028600 axonogenesis Effects 0.000 description 5
- 239000007795 chemical reaction product Substances 0.000 description 5
- 230000002401 inhibitory effect Effects 0.000 description 5
- 239000011159 matrix material Substances 0.000 description 5
- 230000008569 process Effects 0.000 description 5
- 239000013598 vector Substances 0.000 description 5
- 229920001287 Chondroitin sulfate Polymers 0.000 description 4
- 102100039283 Hyaluronidase-1 Human genes 0.000 description 4
- 101710199679 Hyaluronidase-1 Proteins 0.000 description 4
- 102100039285 Hyaluronidase-2 Human genes 0.000 description 4
- 101710199674 Hyaluronidase-2 Proteins 0.000 description 4
- 102000015860 Hyaluronidase-3 Human genes 0.000 description 4
- 108050004076 Hyaluronidase-3 Proteins 0.000 description 4
- 102100021081 Hyaluronidase-4 Human genes 0.000 description 4
- 101710199677 Hyaluronidase-4 Proteins 0.000 description 4
- 241000124008 Mammalia Species 0.000 description 4
- 238000002835 absorbance Methods 0.000 description 4
- 238000007792 addition Methods 0.000 description 4
- 230000001580 bacterial effect Effects 0.000 description 4
- 230000008901 benefit Effects 0.000 description 4
- 230000004071 biological effect Effects 0.000 description 4
- 210000004899 c-terminal region Anatomy 0.000 description 4
- 125000003178 carboxy group Chemical group [H]OC(*)=O 0.000 description 4
- 238000003776 cleavage reaction Methods 0.000 description 4
- 238000012790 confirmation Methods 0.000 description 4
- 239000013078 crystal Substances 0.000 description 4
- 239000007857 degradation product Substances 0.000 description 4
- 238000011161 development Methods 0.000 description 4
- 230000018109 developmental process Effects 0.000 description 4
- 235000014113 dietary fatty acids Nutrition 0.000 description 4
- 150000002016 disaccharides Chemical class 0.000 description 4
- 239000003937 drug carrier Substances 0.000 description 4
- 239000000194 fatty acid Substances 0.000 description 4
- 229930195729 fatty acid Natural products 0.000 description 4
- 239000000463 material Substances 0.000 description 4
- 239000008194 pharmaceutical composition Substances 0.000 description 4
- 125000002924 primary amino group Chemical group [H]N([H])* 0.000 description 4
- 239000011541 reaction mixture Substances 0.000 description 4
- 230000007017 scission Effects 0.000 description 4
- 239000003381 stabilizer Substances 0.000 description 4
- 239000004094 surface-active agent Substances 0.000 description 4
- 108020004635 Complementary DNA Proteins 0.000 description 3
- 108020004414 DNA Proteins 0.000 description 3
- 102000010834 Extracellular Matrix Proteins Human genes 0.000 description 3
- 108010037362 Extracellular Matrix Proteins Proteins 0.000 description 3
- 241001465754 Metazoa Species 0.000 description 3
- 241000605114 Pedobacter heparinus Species 0.000 description 3
- QAOWNCQODCNURD-UHFFFAOYSA-L Sulfate Chemical compound [O-]S([O-])(=O)=O QAOWNCQODCNURD-UHFFFAOYSA-L 0.000 description 3
- BFNBIHQBYMNNAN-UHFFFAOYSA-N ammonium sulfate Chemical compound N.N.OS(O)(=O)=O BFNBIHQBYMNNAN-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 3
- 229910052921 ammonium sulfate Inorganic materials 0.000 description 3
- 235000011130 ammonium sulphate Nutrition 0.000 description 3
- 238000004458 analytical method Methods 0.000 description 3
- 210000005013 brain tissue Anatomy 0.000 description 3
- 239000000872 buffer Substances 0.000 description 3
- 230000001419 dependent effect Effects 0.000 description 3
- 239000000975 dye Substances 0.000 description 3
- 230000002255 enzymatic effect Effects 0.000 description 3
- 210000002744 extracellular matrix Anatomy 0.000 description 3
- 238000009472 formulation Methods 0.000 description 3
- 238000002825 functional assay Methods 0.000 description 3
- 150000004676 glycans Polymers 0.000 description 3
- 230000005847 immunogenicity Effects 0.000 description 3
- 230000001771 impaired effect Effects 0.000 description 3
- 238000004519 manufacturing process Methods 0.000 description 3
- 230000007659 motor function Effects 0.000 description 3
- 210000000944 nerve tissue Anatomy 0.000 description 3
- 150000004804 polysaccharides Polymers 0.000 description 3
- 150000003839 salts Chemical class 0.000 description 3
- 230000037152 sensory function Effects 0.000 description 3
- 238000002415 sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis Methods 0.000 description 3
- 210000000225 synapse Anatomy 0.000 description 3
- 210000004127 vitreous body Anatomy 0.000 description 3
- SQDAZGGFXASXDW-UHFFFAOYSA-N 5-bromo-2-(trifluoromethoxy)pyridine Chemical compound FC(F)(F)OC1=CC=C(Br)C=N1 SQDAZGGFXASXDW-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
- 101710132601 Capsid protein Proteins 0.000 description 2
- 108091026890 Coding region Proteins 0.000 description 2
- 229920000045 Dermatan sulfate Polymers 0.000 description 2
- 229920002307 Dextran Polymers 0.000 description 2
- IAJILQKETJEXLJ-UHFFFAOYSA-N Galacturonsaeure Natural products O=CC(O)C(O)C(O)C(O)C(O)=O IAJILQKETJEXLJ-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
- DHMQDGOQFOQNFH-UHFFFAOYSA-N Glycine Chemical compound NCC(O)=O DHMQDGOQFOQNFH-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
- 229920002683 Glycosaminoglycan Polymers 0.000 description 2
- 102000004317 Lyases Human genes 0.000 description 2
- 108090000856 Lyases Proteins 0.000 description 2
- 208000006011 Stroke Diseases 0.000 description 2
- 229930006000 Sucrose Natural products 0.000 description 2
- 238000010521 absorption reaction Methods 0.000 description 2
- QTBSBXVTEAMEQO-UHFFFAOYSA-N acetic acid Substances CC(O)=O QTBSBXVTEAMEQO-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
- 230000009471 action Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000004075 alteration Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000037424 autonomic function Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000004888 barrier function Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000007068 beta-elimination reaction Methods 0.000 description 2
- 238000004166 bioassay Methods 0.000 description 2
- 230000015572 biosynthetic process Effects 0.000 description 2
- 210000004556 brain Anatomy 0.000 description 2
- 239000002775 capsule Substances 0.000 description 2
- 239000005018 casein Substances 0.000 description 2
- BECPQYXYKAMYBN-UHFFFAOYSA-N casein, tech. Chemical compound NCCCCC(C(O)=O)N=C(O)C(CC(O)=O)N=C(O)C(CCC(O)=N)N=C(O)C(CC(C)C)N=C(O)C(CCC(O)=O)N=C(O)C(CC(O)=O)N=C(O)C(CCC(O)=O)N=C(O)C(C(C)O)N=C(O)C(CCC(O)=N)N=C(O)C(CCC(O)=N)N=C(O)C(CCC(O)=N)N=C(O)C(CCC(O)=O)N=C(O)C(CCC(O)=O)N=C(O)C(COP(O)(O)=O)N=C(O)C(CCC(O)=N)N=C(O)C(N)CC1=CC=CC=C1 BECPQYXYKAMYBN-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
- 235000021240 caseins Nutrition 0.000 description 2
- 239000013592 cell lysate Substances 0.000 description 2
- 230000008859 change Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000006243 chemical reaction Methods 0.000 description 2
- 229940059329 chondroitin sulfate Drugs 0.000 description 2
- 230000000295 complement effect Effects 0.000 description 2
- 210000003618 cortical neuron Anatomy 0.000 description 2
- DDRJAANPRJIHGJ-UHFFFAOYSA-N creatinine Chemical compound CN1CC(=O)NC1=N DDRJAANPRJIHGJ-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
- 210000001787 dendrite Anatomy 0.000 description 2
- AVJBPWGFOQAPRH-FWMKGIEWSA-L dermatan sulfate Chemical compound CC(=O)N[C@H]1[C@H](O)O[C@H](CO)[C@H](OS([O-])(=O)=O)[C@@H]1O[C@H]1[C@H](O)[C@@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@H](C([O-])=O)O1 AVJBPWGFOQAPRH-FWMKGIEWSA-L 0.000 description 2
- 229940051593 dermatan sulfate Drugs 0.000 description 2
- 208000035475 disorder Diseases 0.000 description 2
- 150000004665 fatty acids Chemical class 0.000 description 2
- 239000012634 fragment Substances 0.000 description 2
- 239000000017 hydrogel Substances 0.000 description 2
- 230000028993 immune response Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000001727 in vivo Methods 0.000 description 2
- 230000003902 lesion Effects 0.000 description 2
- 150000002632 lipids Chemical class 0.000 description 2
- 238000005259 measurement Methods 0.000 description 2
- 239000012528 membrane Substances 0.000 description 2
- 238000002703 mutagenesis Methods 0.000 description 2
- 231100000350 mutagenesis Toxicity 0.000 description 2
- 230000035772 mutation Effects 0.000 description 2
- 239000013642 negative control Substances 0.000 description 2
- 230000007903 penetration ability Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000008521 reorganization Effects 0.000 description 2
- 210000000273 spinal nerve root Anatomy 0.000 description 2
- 238000010186 staining Methods 0.000 description 2
- 239000005720 sucrose Substances 0.000 description 2
- 150000004044 tetrasaccharides Chemical class 0.000 description 2
- 230000008733 trauma Effects 0.000 description 2
- KIUKXJAPPMFGSW-DNGZLQJQSA-N (2S,3S,4S,5R,6R)-6-[(2S,3R,4R,5S,6R)-3-Acetamido-2-[(2S,3S,4R,5R,6R)-6-[(2R,3R,4R,5S,6R)-3-acetamido-2,5-dihydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl)oxan-4-yl]oxy-2-carboxy-4,5-dihydroxyoxan-3-yl]oxy-5-hydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl)oxan-4-yl]oxy-3,4,5-trihydroxyoxane-2-carboxylic acid Chemical compound CC(=O)N[C@H]1[C@H](O)O[C@H](CO)[C@@H](O)[C@@H]1O[C@H]1[C@H](O)[C@@H](O)[C@H](O[C@H]2[C@@H]([C@@H](O[C@H]3[C@@H]([C@@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@H](O3)C(O)=O)O)[C@H](O)[C@@H](CO)O2)NC(C)=O)[C@@H](C(O)=O)O1 KIUKXJAPPMFGSW-DNGZLQJQSA-N 0.000 description 1
- MSWZFWKMSRAUBD-GASJEMHNSA-N 2-amino-2-deoxy-D-galactopyranose Chemical compound N[C@H]1C(O)O[C@H](CO)[C@H](O)[C@@H]1O MSWZFWKMSRAUBD-GASJEMHNSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 101710192389 Aggrecan core protein Proteins 0.000 description 1
- 102000009027 Albumins Human genes 0.000 description 1
- 108010088751 Albumins Proteins 0.000 description 1
- GUBGYTABKSRVRQ-XLOQQCSPSA-N Alpha-Lactose Chemical compound O[C@@H]1[C@@H](O)[C@@H](O)[C@@H](CO)O[C@H]1O[C@@H]1[C@@H](CO)O[C@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@H]1O GUBGYTABKSRVRQ-XLOQQCSPSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 239000004475 Arginine Substances 0.000 description 1
- 241000894006 Bacteria Species 0.000 description 1
- 108010077805 Bacterial Proteins Proteins 0.000 description 1
- 125000001433 C-terminal amino-acid group Chemical group 0.000 description 1
- UXVMQQNJUSDDNG-UHFFFAOYSA-L Calcium chloride Chemical compound [Cl-].[Cl-].[Ca+2] UXVMQQNJUSDDNG-UHFFFAOYSA-L 0.000 description 1
- OKTJSMMVPCPJKN-UHFFFAOYSA-N Carbon Chemical compound [C] OKTJSMMVPCPJKN-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 108020004705 Codon Proteins 0.000 description 1
- FBPFZTCFMRRESA-KVTDHHQDSA-N D-Mannitol Chemical compound OC[C@@H](O)[C@@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@H](O)CO FBPFZTCFMRRESA-KVTDHHQDSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 241000588724 Escherichia coli Species 0.000 description 1
- 108010010803 Gelatin Proteins 0.000 description 1
- 206010061431 Glial scar Diseases 0.000 description 1
- 206010018341 Gliosis Diseases 0.000 description 1
- 239000004471 Glycine Substances 0.000 description 1
- HTTJABKRGRZYRN-UHFFFAOYSA-N Heparin Chemical compound OC1C(NC(=O)C)C(O)OC(COS(O)(=O)=O)C1OC1C(OS(O)(=O)=O)C(O)C(OC2C(C(OS(O)(=O)=O)C(OC3C(C(O)C(O)C(O3)C(O)=O)OS(O)(=O)=O)C(CO)O2)NS(O)(=O)=O)C(C(O)=O)O1 HTTJABKRGRZYRN-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 108010022901 Heparin Lyase Proteins 0.000 description 1
- 108010070875 Human Immunodeficiency Virus tat Gene Products Proteins 0.000 description 1
- 102000001974 Hyaluronidases Human genes 0.000 description 1
- 108050009363 Hyaluronidases Proteins 0.000 description 1
- ODKSFYDXXFIFQN-BYPYZUCNSA-P L-argininium(2+) Chemical compound NC(=[NH2+])NCCC[C@H]([NH3+])C(O)=O ODKSFYDXXFIFQN-BYPYZUCNSA-P 0.000 description 1
- AYFVYJQAPQTCCC-GBXIJSLDSA-N L-threonine Chemical compound C[C@@H](O)[C@H](N)C(O)=O AYFVYJQAPQTCCC-GBXIJSLDSA-N 0.000 description 1
- GUBGYTABKSRVRQ-QKKXKWKRSA-N Lactose Natural products OC[C@H]1O[C@@H](O[C@H]2[C@H](O)[C@@H](O)C(O)O[C@@H]2CO)[C@H](O)[C@@H](O)[C@H]1O GUBGYTABKSRVRQ-QKKXKWKRSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 229930195725 Mannitol Natural products 0.000 description 1
- 101100114968 Mus musculus Csf3 gene Proteins 0.000 description 1
- OVRNDRQMDRJTHS-CBQIKETKSA-N N-Acetyl-D-Galactosamine Chemical compound CC(=O)N[C@H]1[C@@H](O)O[C@H](CO)[C@H](O)[C@@H]1O OVRNDRQMDRJTHS-CBQIKETKSA-N 0.000 description 1
- MBLBDJOUHNCFQT-UHFFFAOYSA-N N-acetyl-D-galactosamine Natural products CC(=O)NC(C=O)C(O)C(O)C(O)CO MBLBDJOUHNCFQT-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 125000001429 N-terminal alpha-amino-acid group Chemical group 0.000 description 1
- 206010033799 Paralysis Diseases 0.000 description 1
- 229920003171 Poly (ethylene oxide) Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 239000002202 Polyethylene glycol Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229920001214 Polysorbate 60 Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 102000007327 Protamines Human genes 0.000 description 1
- 108010007568 Protamines Proteins 0.000 description 1
- 108010076504 Protein Sorting Signals Proteins 0.000 description 1
- 241000588767 Proteus vulgaris Species 0.000 description 1
- 241000700157 Rattus norvegicus Species 0.000 description 1
- 102000007562 Serum Albumin Human genes 0.000 description 1
- 108010071390 Serum Albumin Proteins 0.000 description 1
- PMZURENOXWZQFD-UHFFFAOYSA-L Sodium Sulfate Chemical compound [Na+].[Na+].[O-]S([O-])(=O)=O PMZURENOXWZQFD-UHFFFAOYSA-L 0.000 description 1
- VMHLLURERBWHNL-UHFFFAOYSA-M Sodium acetate Chemical compound [Na+].CC([O-])=O VMHLLURERBWHNL-UHFFFAOYSA-M 0.000 description 1
- CZMRCDWAGMRECN-UGDNZRGBSA-N Sucrose Chemical compound O[C@H]1[C@H](O)[C@@H](CO)O[C@@]1(CO)O[C@@H]1[C@H](O)[C@@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@@H](CO)O1 CZMRCDWAGMRECN-UGDNZRGBSA-N 0.000 description 1
- AYFVYJQAPQTCCC-UHFFFAOYSA-N Threonine Natural products CC(O)C(N)C(O)=O AYFVYJQAPQTCCC-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 239000004473 Threonine Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000007983 Tris buffer Substances 0.000 description 1
- 206010052428 Wound Diseases 0.000 description 1
- 239000002253 acid Substances 0.000 description 1
- 150000007513 acids Chemical class 0.000 description 1
- 239000013543 active substance Substances 0.000 description 1
- IAJILQKETJEXLJ-QTBDOELSSA-N aldehydo-D-glucuronic acid Chemical compound O=C[C@H](O)[C@@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@H](O)C(O)=O IAJILQKETJEXLJ-QTBDOELSSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 235000001014 amino acid Nutrition 0.000 description 1
- 229940035674 anesthetics Drugs 0.000 description 1
- 238000005571 anion exchange chromatography Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000003011 anion exchange membrane Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000000890 antigenic effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- ODKSFYDXXFIFQN-UHFFFAOYSA-N arginine Natural products OC(=O)C(N)CCCNC(N)=N ODKSFYDXXFIFQN-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 238000013096 assay test Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000009286 beneficial effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- MSWZFWKMSRAUBD-UHFFFAOYSA-N beta-D-galactosamine Natural products NC1C(O)OC(CO)C(O)C1O MSWZFWKMSRAUBD-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 239000003833 bile salt Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229940093761 bile salts Drugs 0.000 description 1
- 239000011230 binding agent Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229920002988 biodegradable polymer Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 239000004621 biodegradable polymer Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000009835 boiling Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000001110 calcium chloride Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229910001628 calcium chloride Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- MPBRYMWMMKKRGC-UHFFFAOYSA-M carbocyanin DBTC Chemical compound [Br-].C1=CC=CC2=C([N+](=C(C=C(C)C=C3N(C4=C5C=CC=CC5=CC=C4S3)CC)S3)CC)C3=CC=C21 MPBRYMWMMKKRGC-UHFFFAOYSA-M 0.000 description 1
- 229910052799 carbon Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 239000004359 castor oil Substances 0.000 description 1
- 235000019438 castor oil Nutrition 0.000 description 1
- 238000005277 cation exchange chromatography Methods 0.000 description 1
- 208000015114 central nervous system disease Diseases 0.000 description 1
- NEUSVAOJNUQRTM-UHFFFAOYSA-N cetylpyridinium Chemical compound CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC[N+]1=CC=CC=C1 NEUSVAOJNUQRTM-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 229960004830 cetylpyridinium Drugs 0.000 description 1
- 238000012512 characterization method Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229940094517 chondroitin 4-sulfate Drugs 0.000 description 1
- KXKPYJOVDUMHGS-OSRGNVMNSA-N chondroitin sulfate Chemical compound CC(=O)N[C@H]1[C@H](O)O[C@H](OS(O)(=O)=O)[C@H](O)[C@@H]1O[C@H]1[C@H](O)[C@@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@@H](C(O)=O)O1 KXKPYJOVDUMHGS-OSRGNVMNSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 229940107200 chondroitin sulfates Drugs 0.000 description 1
- 239000003086 colorant Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000000052 comparative effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- IQFVPQOLBLOTPF-HKXUKFGYSA-L congo red Chemical compound [Na+].[Na+].C1=CC=CC2=C(N)C(/N=N/C3=CC=C(C=C3)C3=CC=C(C=C3)/N=N/C3=C(C4=CC=CC=C4C(=C3)S([O-])(=O)=O)N)=CC(S([O-])(=O)=O)=C21 IQFVPQOLBLOTPF-HKXUKFGYSA-L 0.000 description 1
- 238000010276 construction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000002872 contrast media Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229940109239 creatinine Drugs 0.000 description 1
- 238000004132 cross linking Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000000287 crude extract Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000001086 cytosolic effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000007423 decrease Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000006735 deficit Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000001514 detection method Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229940079593 drug Drugs 0.000 description 1
- 238000001962 electrophoresis Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000002330 electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000002367 endolytic effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000002158 endotoxin Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000007247 enzymatic mechanism Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000001952 enzyme assay Methods 0.000 description 1
- SEACYXSIPDVVMV-UHFFFAOYSA-L eosin Y Chemical compound [Na+].[Na+].[O-]C(=O)C1=CC=CC=C1C1=C2C=C(Br)C(=O)C(Br)=C2OC2=C(Br)C([O-])=C(Br)C=C21 SEACYXSIPDVVMV-UHFFFAOYSA-L 0.000 description 1
- 239000000284 extract Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000000605 extraction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000001914 filtration Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000012467 final product Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000007850 fluorescent dye Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000004108 freeze drying Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000008273 gelatin Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229920000159 gelatin Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 235000019322 gelatine Nutrition 0.000 description 1
- 235000011852 gelatine desserts Nutrition 0.000 description 1
- 238000002523 gelfiltration Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000003193 general anesthetic agent Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000002068 genetic effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000002518 glial effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 229940097043 glucuronic acid Drugs 0.000 description 1
- ZEMPKEQAKRGZGQ-XOQCFJPHSA-N glycerol triricinoleate Natural products CCCCCC[C@@H](O)CC=CCCCCCCCC(=O)OC[C@@H](COC(=O)CCCCCCCC=CC[C@@H](O)CCCCCC)OC(=O)CCCCCCCC=CC[C@H](O)CCCCCC ZEMPKEQAKRGZGQ-XOQCFJPHSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 239000003966 growth inhibitor Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229920000669 heparin Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 229960002897 heparin Drugs 0.000 description 1
- 238000004128 high performance liquid chromatography Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229920002674 hyaluronan Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 229960003160 hyaluronic acid Drugs 0.000 description 1
- 230000036571 hydration Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000006703 hydration reaction Methods 0.000 description 1
- IAJILQKETJEXLJ-LECHCGJUSA-N iduronic acid Chemical compound O=C[C@@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@@H](O)[C@H](O)C(O)=O IAJILQKETJEXLJ-LECHCGJUSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 230000002779 inactivation Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000000411 inducer Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000006698 induction Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000001939 inductive effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000003993 interaction Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000001990 intravenous administration Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000002093 isoelectric focusing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis Methods 0.000 description 1
- FZWBNHMXJMCXLU-BLAUPYHCSA-N isomaltotriose Chemical compound O[C@@H]1[C@@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@@H](CO)O[C@@H]1OC[C@@H]1[C@@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@@H](O)[C@@H](OC[C@@H](O)[C@@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@@H](O)C=O)O1 FZWBNHMXJMCXLU-BLAUPYHCSA-N 0.000 description 1
- BPHPUYQFMNQIOC-NXRLNHOXSA-N isopropyl beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside Chemical compound CC(C)S[C@@H]1O[C@H](CO)[C@H](O)[C@H](O)[C@H]1O BPHPUYQFMNQIOC-NXRLNHOXSA-N 0.000 description 1
- KXCLCNHUUKTANI-RBIYJLQWSA-N keratan Chemical compound CC(=O)N[C@@H]1[C@@H](O)C[C@@H](COS(O)(=O)=O)O[C@H]1O[C@@H]1[C@@H](O)[C@H](O[C@@H]2[C@H](O[C@@H](O[C@H]3[C@H]([C@@H](COS(O)(=O)=O)O[C@@H](O)[C@@H]3O)O)[C@H](NC(C)=O)[C@H]2O)COS(O)(=O)=O)O[C@H](COS(O)(=O)=O)[C@@H]1O KXCLCNHUUKTANI-RBIYJLQWSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 239000008101 lactose Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000004989 laser desorption mass spectroscopy Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000007774 longterm Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000000314 lubricant Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000000594 mannitol Substances 0.000 description 1
- 235000010355 mannitol Nutrition 0.000 description 1
- 238000005374 membrane filtration Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000004048 modification Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000012986 modification Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000004973 motor coordination Effects 0.000 description 1
- 210000000653 nervous system Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- 230000003988 neural development Effects 0.000 description 1
- 210000005157 neural retina Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- 230000007658 neurological function Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000002736 nonionic surfactant Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000003921 oil Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229920001542 oligosaccharide Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 150000002482 oligosaccharides Chemical class 0.000 description 1
- 230000002093 peripheral effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 210000001428 peripheral nervous system Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- 150000003904 phospholipids Chemical class 0.000 description 1
- 238000005498 polishing Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229920001983 poloxamer Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 229920002401 polyacrylamide Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 238000002264 polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229920001223 polyethylene glycol Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 238000003752 polymerase chain reaction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 108091033319 polynucleotide Proteins 0.000 description 1
- 102000040430 polynucleotide Human genes 0.000 description 1
- 239000002157 polynucleotide Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229920002503 polyoxyethylene-polyoxypropylene Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 229920001282 polysaccharide Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 239000005017 polysaccharide Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229920000136 polysorbate Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 230000002035 prolonged effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 229940048914 protamine Drugs 0.000 description 1
- 229940124272 protein stabilizer Drugs 0.000 description 1
- 210000002804 pyramidal tract Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- 230000009467 reduction Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000002829 reductive effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000004153 renaturation Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000008439 repair process Effects 0.000 description 1
- 231100000812 repeated exposure Toxicity 0.000 description 1
- 230000000717 retained effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 210000001525 retina Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- 239000012047 saturated solution Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000037390 scarring Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000007423 screening assay Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000021317 sensory perception Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000000926 separation method Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000036299 sexual function Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000001542 size-exclusion chromatography Methods 0.000 description 1
- 210000003625 skull Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- 239000001632 sodium acetate Substances 0.000 description 1
- 235000017281 sodium acetate Nutrition 0.000 description 1
- 229910001467 sodium calcium phosphate Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 239000001488 sodium phosphate Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229910052938 sodium sulfate Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 235000011152 sodium sulphate Nutrition 0.000 description 1
- 239000000243 solution Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000000527 sonication Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000002798 spectrophotometry method Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000003860 storage Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000005728 strengthening Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000003826 tablet Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000012360 testing method Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000008467 tissue growth Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000017423 tissue regeneration Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000026683 transduction Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000010361 transduction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000008736 traumatic injury Effects 0.000 description 1
- LENZDBCJOHFCAS-UHFFFAOYSA-N tris Chemical compound OCC(N)(CO)CO LENZDBCJOHFCAS-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- RYFMWSXOAZQYPI-UHFFFAOYSA-K trisodium phosphate Chemical compound [Na+].[Na+].[Na+].[O-]P([O-])([O-])=O RYFMWSXOAZQYPI-UHFFFAOYSA-K 0.000 description 1
- 230000003313 weakening effect Effects 0.000 description 1
Landscapes
- Medicines That Contain Protein Lipid Enzymes And Other Medicines (AREA)
- Enzymes And Modification Thereof (AREA)
Abstract
The present disclosure relates to the preparation and deletion mutants of chondroitinase proteins and their use in methods for promoting the diffusion of therapeutic composition into tissues and their use for neurological functional recovery after central nervous system ('CNS') injury or disease.
Description
PROTEOGLYCAN DEGRADING MUTANTS FOR TREATMENT OF CNS
This application is a divisional application of co-pending application Serial No. 2,525,784, filed May 17, 2004.
BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY
100021 Chondroitinases are enzymes of bacterial origin that act on chondroitin sulfate, a component of the proteoglycans that are components of the extracellular matrix of a wide variety of tissues such as the central nervous system and for example they can mediate the attachment between the retina and the vitreous body of the human eye. Examples of chondroitinase enzymes are chondroitinase ABC I, SEQ ID NO: 37, which is produced by the bacterium Proteus vulgaris (P.
vulgaris), and chondroitinase AC, SEQ ID NO: 5, which is produced by Flavobacterium heparinum.
Chondroitinases ABC I SEQ ID NO: 37, and chondroitinase AC SEQ ID NO: 5, function by degrading polysaccharide side chains in protein-polysaccharide complexes, without degrading the protein core.
[0003] Yamagata et al. (I. Biol. Chem. 243:1523-1535, 1968) describe the purification of the chondroitinases like ABC I SEQ ID NO: 37 from extracts oil'. vulgaris.
This enzyme selectively degrades the glycosaminoglycans chondroitin-4-sulfate, dermatan sulfate, and chondroitin-6-sulfate (also referred to respectively as chondroitin sulfates A, B, and C which are side chains of proteoglycans) at pH 8 at higher rates than it degrades chondroitin or hyaluronic acid. The products of the degradation are high molecular weight unsaturated oligosaccharides and an unsaturated disaccharide. However, chondroitinase ABC I, SEQ ID NO: 37, does not act on keratosulfate, heparin or heparitin sulfate.
[0004] Uses of chondroitinases include rapid, specific and non-surgical disruption of the attachment of the vitreous body to the neural retina of the eye, thereby facilitating removal of the vitreous body.
[0005] P. vulgaris chondroitinase, for example ABC I SEQ NO: 37 migrates with an apparent molecular mass of about 110 kDa when resolved by SDS-PAGE.
The appearance of a doublet in SDS-PAGE resolution of chondroitinase ABC has been reported (Sato et al., Agri . Biol. Chem. 50:4,1057-1059, 1986). However, this doublet represents intact chondroitinase ABC and a 90 kDa degradation product. Commercial chondroitinase ABC protein preparations contain variable amounts of this 90 kDa degradation product and an additional 18 kDa degradation product also derived from chondroitinase ABC
I, SEQ ID
NO: 37.
[0006] Chondroitinase ABC H, SEQ ID NO: 27, has also been isolated and purified from P. vulgaris, Chondroitinase ABC H, SEQ ID NO: 27, is a polypeptide of 990 amino acids with an apParent molecular mass by SDS-PAGE of about 112 kDa. Its molecular mass as determined by electrospray and laser desorption mass spectrometry is about 111,772 daltons. Chondroitinase ABC II, SEQ ID NO: 27, has an isoelectric point of 8.4-8.45. Its enzymatic activity is distinct from, but complementary to, that of chondroitinase ABC I SEQ
This application is a divisional application of co-pending application Serial No. 2,525,784, filed May 17, 2004.
BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY
100021 Chondroitinases are enzymes of bacterial origin that act on chondroitin sulfate, a component of the proteoglycans that are components of the extracellular matrix of a wide variety of tissues such as the central nervous system and for example they can mediate the attachment between the retina and the vitreous body of the human eye. Examples of chondroitinase enzymes are chondroitinase ABC I, SEQ ID NO: 37, which is produced by the bacterium Proteus vulgaris (P.
vulgaris), and chondroitinase AC, SEQ ID NO: 5, which is produced by Flavobacterium heparinum.
Chondroitinases ABC I SEQ ID NO: 37, and chondroitinase AC SEQ ID NO: 5, function by degrading polysaccharide side chains in protein-polysaccharide complexes, without degrading the protein core.
[0003] Yamagata et al. (I. Biol. Chem. 243:1523-1535, 1968) describe the purification of the chondroitinases like ABC I SEQ ID NO: 37 from extracts oil'. vulgaris.
This enzyme selectively degrades the glycosaminoglycans chondroitin-4-sulfate, dermatan sulfate, and chondroitin-6-sulfate (also referred to respectively as chondroitin sulfates A, B, and C which are side chains of proteoglycans) at pH 8 at higher rates than it degrades chondroitin or hyaluronic acid. The products of the degradation are high molecular weight unsaturated oligosaccharides and an unsaturated disaccharide. However, chondroitinase ABC I, SEQ ID NO: 37, does not act on keratosulfate, heparin or heparitin sulfate.
[0004] Uses of chondroitinases include rapid, specific and non-surgical disruption of the attachment of the vitreous body to the neural retina of the eye, thereby facilitating removal of the vitreous body.
[0005] P. vulgaris chondroitinase, for example ABC I SEQ NO: 37 migrates with an apparent molecular mass of about 110 kDa when resolved by SDS-PAGE.
The appearance of a doublet in SDS-PAGE resolution of chondroitinase ABC has been reported (Sato et al., Agri . Biol. Chem. 50:4,1057-1059, 1986). However, this doublet represents intact chondroitinase ABC and a 90 kDa degradation product. Commercial chondroitinase ABC protein preparations contain variable amounts of this 90 kDa degradation product and an additional 18 kDa degradation product also derived from chondroitinase ABC
I, SEQ ID
NO: 37.
[0006] Chondroitinase ABC H, SEQ ID NO: 27, has also been isolated and purified from P. vulgaris, Chondroitinase ABC H, SEQ ID NO: 27, is a polypeptide of 990 amino acids with an apParent molecular mass by SDS-PAGE of about 112 kDa. Its molecular mass as determined by electrospray and laser desorption mass spectrometry is about 111,772 daltons. Chondroitinase ABC II, SEQ ID NO: 27, has an isoelectric point of 8.4-8.45. Its enzymatic activity is distinct from, but complementary to, that of chondroitinase ABC I SEQ
2 ID NO: 37. Chondroitinase ABC I, SEQ ID NO: 37, endolytically cleaves proteoglycans to produce end-product disacchaxides, as well as at least two other products which are thought to be tetrasaccharides, Chondroitinase ABC II, SEQ ID NO: 27, digests at least one of these tetrasaccharide products from the chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO: 37) digestion of proteoglycan.
[0007j After a injury in the adult mammalian central nervous system (CNS), the inability of axons to regenerate may lead to permanent paralysis. An injury-caused lesion will develop glial scarring, which contains extracellular matrix molecules including chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs). CSPGs inhibit nerve tissue growth in vitro, and nerve tissue regeneration fails at CSPGs rich regions in vivo.
[00081 A number of molecules, and specified regions of them, have been implicated in the ability to support the sprouting of neurites from a neuronal cell, a process also referred to as neurite outgrowth. The term neurite refers to both axon and dendrite structures. This process of spouting neurites is essential in neural development and regeneration, especially after physical injury or disease has damaged neuronal cells. Neurites elongate profusely during development both in the central and peripheral nervous systems of all animal species.
This phenomenon pertains to both axons and dendrites. However, neurite regrowth in the CNS decreases as the animal's age increases.
[00091 Chondroitinase enzymes have shown efficacy in improving functional outcomes in several in vivo models of spinal cord injury. Recombinantly produced chondroitinases AC (SEQ ID NO: 5) and chondroitinase B (SEQ ID NO: 12) poIypeptides have shown efficacy in vitro by overcoming the barrier of an inhibitory substrate border, such as aggrecan, resulting in neurite extension for rat cortical neurons.
[00101 The inventors have discovered through a deletion analysis based on the available crystal structures, mutant polypeptides capable of degrading chondroitin sulfate
[0007j After a injury in the adult mammalian central nervous system (CNS), the inability of axons to regenerate may lead to permanent paralysis. An injury-caused lesion will develop glial scarring, which contains extracellular matrix molecules including chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs). CSPGs inhibit nerve tissue growth in vitro, and nerve tissue regeneration fails at CSPGs rich regions in vivo.
[00081 A number of molecules, and specified regions of them, have been implicated in the ability to support the sprouting of neurites from a neuronal cell, a process also referred to as neurite outgrowth. The term neurite refers to both axon and dendrite structures. This process of spouting neurites is essential in neural development and regeneration, especially after physical injury or disease has damaged neuronal cells. Neurites elongate profusely during development both in the central and peripheral nervous systems of all animal species.
This phenomenon pertains to both axons and dendrites. However, neurite regrowth in the CNS decreases as the animal's age increases.
[00091 Chondroitinase enzymes have shown efficacy in improving functional outcomes in several in vivo models of spinal cord injury. Recombinantly produced chondroitinases AC (SEQ ID NO: 5) and chondroitinase B (SEQ ID NO: 12) poIypeptides have shown efficacy in vitro by overcoming the barrier of an inhibitory substrate border, such as aggrecan, resulting in neurite extension for rat cortical neurons.
[00101 The inventors have discovered through a deletion analysis based on the available crystal structures, mutant polypeptides capable of degrading chondroitin sulfate
3 proteoglycans (CSPOs). The cleavage activity of all these mutants have been screened in vitro by zymographic assay using aggrecan as a substrate. A truncated polypeptide of chondroitinase AC (nA50-c275), (SEQ ID NO: 11), lacking 50 and 275 amino acids from the amino and carboxy termini respectively and having a molecular weight of 38 kDa compared to 75kDa of the full length protein, was found to be the minimal size that retained activity as tested by a zymographic assay. The deletion mutant of chondroitinase B (nA120-c A120), (SEQ ID NO: 17), lacking 120 amino acids from each of the amino and carboxy termini and having a molecular weight of 26 kDa compared to 52kDa of the full length protein, was shown to retain activity as well in a zymographic assay.
Reduction in the size and complexity of the molecule may facilitate diffusion to the site of action and potentially reduce immunogenicity for prolonged therapeutic use. These smaller chondroitinases could be potential therapeutics for spinal cord injury.
[0011] The present disclosure relates to mutants of chondroitinase genes, polypeptides and proteins derived therefrom, and their use in methods for promoting neurological functional recovery after central nervous system ("CNS") injury or disease. The mutant genes, polypeptides and proteins derived from them preferably include deletion, substitution, or a combination of these from the structural units the mature gene or polypeptide; more preferably the mutant genes or polypeptides are deletion mutants of the mature gene or polypeptide. These mutant genes or polypeptides, preferably biologically active, may be used in various pharmaceutical compositions.
[0012] Polypeptide mutants of chondroitinases, for example chondroitinase ABC
Type I, SEQ ID NO: 1 or 37, Chondroitinase ABC Type II, SEQ ID NO: 27, Chondroitinase AC, SEQ ID NO: 5, and Chondroitinase B, SEQ ID NO: 12, are provided.
Other mammalian enzymes mutants with chondroitinase-like activity may independently include such enzymes as hyaluronidase 1, SEQ ID NO: 30, hyaluronidase 2, SEQ
ID NO:
Reduction in the size and complexity of the molecule may facilitate diffusion to the site of action and potentially reduce immunogenicity for prolonged therapeutic use. These smaller chondroitinases could be potential therapeutics for spinal cord injury.
[0011] The present disclosure relates to mutants of chondroitinase genes, polypeptides and proteins derived therefrom, and their use in methods for promoting neurological functional recovery after central nervous system ("CNS") injury or disease. The mutant genes, polypeptides and proteins derived from them preferably include deletion, substitution, or a combination of these from the structural units the mature gene or polypeptide; more preferably the mutant genes or polypeptides are deletion mutants of the mature gene or polypeptide. These mutant genes or polypeptides, preferably biologically active, may be used in various pharmaceutical compositions.
[0012] Polypeptide mutants of chondroitinases, for example chondroitinase ABC
Type I, SEQ ID NO: 1 or 37, Chondroitinase ABC Type II, SEQ ID NO: 27, Chondroitinase AC, SEQ ID NO: 5, and Chondroitinase B, SEQ ID NO: 12, are provided.
Other mammalian enzymes mutants with chondroitinase-like activity may independently include such enzymes as hyaluronidase 1, SEQ ID NO: 30, hyaluronidase 2, SEQ
ID NO:
4 31, hyaluronidase 3, SEQ ID NO: 32, hyaluronidase 4, SEQ ID NO: 33, and optionally PH-20, SEQ ID NO: 34. These deletion or substitution mutant may be used alone or in combination with chondroitinases or their deletion or substitution mutants as therapeutic compositions and mixtures. Further provided is the use of these mutants, and preferably the chondroitinase deletion or substitution mutants to promote neurological functional recovery in mammals following injury to the CNS, including but not limited to contusion injury.
[00131 One embodiment of the present invention are isolated nucleic acid molecules consisting of, and preferably comprising, a nucleotide sequence encoding the amino acid sequence of polypeptides that are deletion and or substitution mutants of proteoglyean degrading molecules. independently, nucleic acid molecules of the present invention may encode for mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides of chondroitinase, for example chondroitinase ABC Type I, SEQ ID NO: 1 or 37, Chondroitinase ABC Type It SEQ
ID
NO: 27, Chondroitinase AC, SEQ ID NO: 5, and Chondroitinase B, SEQ ID NO: 12, hyaluronidase 1, SEQ ID NO: 30, hyaluronidase 2, SEQ ID NO: 31, hyaluronidase 3, SEQ
ID NO: 32, hyaluronidase 4, SEQ ID NO: 33, or optionally PH-20, SEQ ID NO: 34 and combinations of these. Preferably the nucleic acids encode for chondroitinase deletion and or substitution mutants, most preferably the nucleic acids encode for chondroitinasc ABC type I
or II polypeptides. The invention is also directed to nucleic acid molecules consisting of, and preferably comprising, a nucleotide sequence complementary to the above-described nucleic acid sequences. Also provided for are nucleic acid molecules at least 80%, preferably 85% or 90%, still more preferably 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, or 99% identical to any of the above-described nucleic acid molecules. Also provided for are nucleic acid molecules which hybridize under stringent conditions to any of the above-described nucleic acid molecules.
The present invention also provides for recombinant vectors comprising these nucleic acid molecules, and host cells transformed with such vectors.
[0014] Also provided are isolated polypeptides consisting of, and preferably comprising, the amino acid sequence of deletion and or substitution mutants of proteoglycan degrading polypeptides. Independently, proteoglycan degrading polypeptides can include chondroitinases, for example ABC Type I, SEQ ID NO: 1 or 37, Chondroitinase ABC Type SEQ ID NO: 27, Chondroitinase AC, SEQ ID NO: 5, and Chondroitinase B, SEQ ID
NO: 12, hyaluronidase 1, SEQ ID NO: 30, hyaluronidase 2, SEQ ID NO: 31, hyaluronidase 3, SEQ ID NO: 32, hyaluronidase 4, SEQ ID NO: 33, optionally PH-20, SEQ ID NO:
34.
Preferably the polypeptides are deletion mutants of chondroitinases.
Pharmaceutical compositions may be prepared from the mutant proteoglycan degrading molecules such as these chondroitinases and or hyaluronidases; the composition may include one or more of the deletion and substitution mutants from different proteoglycan degrading polypeptides.
[0015] In one aspect of the invention, biologically active proteoglycan degrading polypeptide are provided having a deletion or substitution of at least one amino acid. The mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides include those having the minimal size yet retain a degree of activity as determined by the enzyme assays described in the specification.
.Preferred deletion or substitution mutants of the proteoglycan degrading molecule are those which degrade chondroitin and have one or more amino acid deletions from the N-terminus, about 1 to at least about120 amino acids and/or the C-terminus, about 1 to at least about 275 amino acids, more preferably the deletions are from a chondroitinase or a substituted chondroitinase, and even more preferably chondroitinase ABC I or II or a substituted chondriotinase ABC I or IL
[0016] One aspect of this invention are deletion and or substitution mutants of proteoglycan degrading polypeptides, preferably deletion mutants of chondroitinase polypeptides, that promote neurite regeneration and or plasticity in the CNS
and or promote or inhibit the diffusion of therapeutic molecules into tissues by degradation of proteoglyeans.
[0017] The mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides, preferably deletion and or substitution mutants of chondroitinases, may promote neurite regeneration in the CNS and or promote or inhibit the diffusion of therapeutic molecules into tissues by degradation of proteoglycans and can be obtained through expression of suitably modified DNA
sequences.
Thus, the present invention also provides suitable expression vectors and host cells compatible with them.
[0018] In yet other aspects, the invention comprises pharmaceutical compositions that include biologically active polypeptide of deletion and or substitution mutants of proteoglycan degrading molecules, and preferably deletion or substitution mutants of ehondroitn degrading polypeptides as described above, in combination with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
[0019] The deletion mutants and or substitution mutants of the proteoglycan degrading polypeptides of the present invention may be used to promote the regeneration of neurites in nerve tissue. These mutants might also be useful in the treatment of other CNS
disorders in which plasticity, regeneration, or both might be beneficial. For example CNS
injuries and disorders may include but not limited to contusion injury, traumatic brain injury, stroke, multiple sclerosis, brachial plexus injury, amblioplia. Because of their proteoglycan degrading properties, they may be used to promote the delivery of theraprutic compositions and diagnostics to tissues and cells that are normally impermeable to them.
Alternatively, they may be used to inhibit penetration of therapeutic compositions, diagnosifics or cells to tissues that use part of the extracellular matrix to enter tissues. Because of their smaller size compared to the full length enzyme, the deletion and or substitution mutants are easier to make and easier to deliver to target cells and tissues. These and other even smaller deletion or substitution mutants of proteoglycan degrading molecules could be used as potential therapeutics with lesser immunogenicity and similar or higher tissue penetration ability for the treatment of cl\IS injury.
[0020] The deletion mutants may offer significant advantages over the full length proteins in the therapeutic development process. The tissue penetration of the enzymes may be significantly effected by the protein size. The effect of protein size on tissue penetration is difficult to predict, but dependent on size and charge. The rate of penetration depends on tissue composition, charge interactions and hydration effects. Having active enzymes of widely ranging size may allow selection of an enzyme based on optimal tissue penetration properties, perhaps maximizing effective concentrations or limiting peripheral exposure to the enzyme.
100211 The immune response of a mammal to a bacterial protein may or may not limit the ability to use the protein or polypeptide as a therapeutic. The generation of antibodies to the protein can restrict repeated exposures, as well as potentially inactivate the protein therapeutic making it ineffective. The smaller mutant proteoglyean degrading enzymes, preferably mutant chondroitinase enzymes, may limit the antigenic sites, limit an immune response or at least simplify the process of engineering an enzyme with reduced imrnuriogenicity, 00221 The release rate of proteins from matrices often used in sustained release formulations can be dependent upon size and cross-linking. The effective release rate of deletion mutants of proteoglycan degrading polyp eptide from the matrix can be engineered through the manipulation of the size of the enzyme. Having a repertoire of chondroitinase enzymes of various size and charge will give an significant advantage for the development of a sustained release formulations.
A BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0023] FIG. 1(A) shows Anti-His-tag Western Blot (top) and zymogram (bottom) demonstrating chondroitinase B deletion N120 CA120 mutant (SEQ ID NO: 17) expression activity; FIG. 1(B) shows Anti-His-tag Western Blot (top) and zymogram (bottom) demonstrating chondroitinase AC deletion NA50 CA275 mutant (SEQ ID NO: 11) expression activity;
[0024] FIG. 2 shows illustrates the relative substrate degrading activity of various detetion mutant polypeptides of Chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 6-11) relative to the full length Chondroitinase AC SEQ ID NO: 5;
[0025] FIG. 3(A)shows a schematic of deletion mutant polypeptides of chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 6-11); FIG. 3(B) shows confirmation of chondroitinase AC
deletion mutants by Western blotting;
[0026] FIG. 4. shows confirmation of protein expression and catalytic activity of Chondroitinase AC deletion mutants (SEQ ID NO: 6-11)by (A) Western Blotting and (B) zymography;
[0027] FIG. 5 shows a schematic of deletion mutant polypeptides (SEQ ID NO: 13-17) of chondroitinase B (SEQ ID NO: 12);
[0028] FIG. 6 shows confirmation of protein expression and catalytic activity of Chondroitinase B and deletion mutants (SEQ ID NO: 12-17) by (A) Western Blotting and (B) zymography;
[0029] FIG. 7 shows a schematic of Chondroitinase ABC I deletion mutant polypeptides (SEQ ID NO: 2-4) of Chondroitinase ABC I SEQ ID NO: 1;
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0030] Before the present compositions and methods are described, it is to be understood that this invention is not limited to the particular molecules, compositions, methodologies or protocols described, as these may vary, It is also to be understood that the terminology used in the description is for the purpose of describing the particular versions or embodiments only, and is not intended to limit the scope of the present invention which will be limited only by the appended claims.
[0031] It must also be noted that as used herein and in the appended claims, the singular forms "a", "an", and "the" include plural references unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Thus, for example, reference to a "cell" is a reference to one or more cells and equivalents thereof known to those skilled in the art, and so forth.
Unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meanings as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art. Although any methods and materials similar or equivalent to those described herein can be used in the practice or testing of embodiments of the present invention, the preferred methods, devices, and materials are now described. All publications mentioned herein are incorporated by reference. Nothing herein is to be construed as an admission that the invention is not entitled to antedate such disclosure by virtue of prior invention.
[0032] "Optional" or "optionally" means that the subsequently described event or circumstance may or may not occur, and that the description includes instances where the event occurs or material is present and instances where the event does not occur or where the material is not present.
10033] One aspect of the present disclosure relates to a series of deletion and or substitution mutants of chonchoitinase genes that can be used to generate deletion mutant enzymes with substantially lower molecular weight, but modified, and preferably equivalent or superior proteoglycan degrading catalytic activity compared to the wild type enzymes.
The deletion and or substitution mutants can be generated by polymerase chain reaction. The resulting mutants are expressed and then enzymatic activity of the mutant polypeptide can be confirmed by using zymography.
[0034] The mutants of the proteoglycan degrading molecules can be used to treat mammalian CNS injuries, typically caused by trauma or disease. In particular, a deletion mutant of a proteoglycan degrading polyp eptide molecule like chondroitinase, for example ABC Type I, (SEQ ID NO: 1 or 37), Chondroitinase ABC Type II, (SEQ ID NO: 27), Chondroitinase AC, (SEQ ID NO: 5), and Chondroitinase B, (SEQ ID NO: 12), or mammalian enzymes with chondroitinase-like activity such as hyaluronidase 1, (SEQ ID
NO: 30), hyaluronidase 2, (SEQ ID NO: 31), hyaluronidase 3, (SEQ ID NO: 32), hyaluronidase 4, (SEQ ID NO: 33), and optionally PH-20, (SEQ ID NO: 34), or mixtures of any of these may be used to provide a therapeutic treatment for CNS injuries and disorders which may include but not limited to contusion injury, traumatic brain injury, stroke, multiple sclerosis, brachial plexus injury, amblioplia, spinal cord injuries. Spinal cord injuries includes disease and traumatic injuries, such as the crushing of neurons brought about by an auto accident, fall, contusion, or bullet wound, as well as other injuries.
Practice of the present methods can confer clinical benefits to the treated mammal, providing clinically relevant improvements in at least one of the subject's motor coordination functions and sensory perception. Clinically relevant improvements can range from a detectable improvement to a complete restoration of an impaired or lost function of the CNS.
[0035] Mutants of proteoglycan degrading molecules, for example the deletion mutants of Chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 5), may have their enzyme activity stabilized by the addition of excipients or by lyophilization. Stabilizers may include carbohydrates, amino acids, fatty acids, and surfactants and are known to those skilled in the art. Examples include carbohydrates such as sucrose, lactose, mannitol, and dextran, proteins such as albumin and protamine, amino acids such as arginine, glycine, and threonine, surfactants such as TWEEN and PLURONIC , salts such as calcium chloride and sodium phosphate, and lipids such as fatty acids, phospholipids, and bile salts. The stabilizers may be added to the proteoglycan degrading polypeptide deletion mutants in a ratio of 1:10 to 4:1, carbohydrate to polypeptide, amino acids polypeptide, protein stabilizer to polypeptide, and salts to polypeptide 1:1000 to 1:20; surfactant to polypeptide; and 1:20 to 4:1, lipids to polypeptide.
Other stabilizers include high concentrations of ammonium sulfate, sodium acetate or sodium sulfate, based on comparative studies with heparinase activity. The stabilizing agents, preferably the ammonium sulfate or other similar salt, are added to the enzyme in a ratio of 0.1 to 4.0 mg ammonium sulfate/IU enzyme.
[00361 The proteoglycan degrading mutant polypeptides may be formulated as compositions and can be administered topically, locally or systemically to a subject or patient. Preferably the subject is a mammal and even more preferably a human in need of a protcoglycan degrading composition such as one of the chondroitinases. Topical or local administration is can be used for greater control of application. One or more proteoglycan degrading mutant polypeptides, singularly or in combination, can be mixed with an appropriate pharmaceutical carrier prior to administration. Examples of generally used pharmaceutical carriers and additives are conventional diluents, binders, lubricants, coloring agents, disintegrating agents, buffer agents, isotonizing agents, preservants, anesthetics and the like. Specifically pharmaceutical carriers that may be used are dextran, serum albumin, gelatin, creatinine, polyethylene glycol, non-ionic surfactants (e.g.
polyoxyethylene sorbitan fatty acid esters, polyoxyethylene hardened castor oil, sucrose fatty acid esters, polyoxyethylene polyoxypropylene glycot) and similar compounds.
100371 Compositions of the present invention having a proteoglycan degrading polypeptide or a nucleic acid for expressing it may also include theraptutic molecules, diagnostics, and agents for promoting neurite growth and regeneration.
Examples of diagnostic molecules may include but are not limited to fluorescent probes, radioisotopes, dyes, or magnetic contrast agents. Compounds that facilitate plasticity, neurite growth, and regeneration can include but are not limited to molecules that over come neurite out growth inhibition, or promote nerve growth such as soluble NOGO antagonists like NgR27..311, neural cell adhesion molecules like Li, neurotrophic factors, growth factors, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, and inhibitors of 1VIAG or MOG. Additionally, deletion mutants may be combined with other compounds that promote rernyelination such as neuregulins (GGF2) and antibodies that promote remyelination.
[0038] Plasticity of the nervous system refers to any type of functional reorganization. This reorganization occurs with development, learning and memory and brain repair. The structural changes that occur with plasticity may include synapse formation, synapse removal, neurite sprouting and may even include strengthening or weakening existing synapses. Regeneration is generally differentiated from plasticity by the long range growth of axons in disrupted tracts that is characteristic of regeneration.
[0039] The biological activity of the proteoglycan degrading molecules of the present invention may be used to control the degradation rate of proteoglycans in a tissue, and for example be chosen to have a slower degradation activity for sensitive tissues and a higher degradation rate for degrading potions of tissue which arc thicker. The activity may be contolled by one of more amino acid substitutions or deletions in the polypeptide or vectors used to express them; the activity may be controlled by the concentration or combination of proteoglycan degrading polypeptides in a composition. The proteoglycan degrading activity may be made to be greater or less than that of the full length polypeptide.
For example, it can be made to be less than that of the full length Chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO:
[00131 One embodiment of the present invention are isolated nucleic acid molecules consisting of, and preferably comprising, a nucleotide sequence encoding the amino acid sequence of polypeptides that are deletion and or substitution mutants of proteoglyean degrading molecules. independently, nucleic acid molecules of the present invention may encode for mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides of chondroitinase, for example chondroitinase ABC Type I, SEQ ID NO: 1 or 37, Chondroitinase ABC Type It SEQ
ID
NO: 27, Chondroitinase AC, SEQ ID NO: 5, and Chondroitinase B, SEQ ID NO: 12, hyaluronidase 1, SEQ ID NO: 30, hyaluronidase 2, SEQ ID NO: 31, hyaluronidase 3, SEQ
ID NO: 32, hyaluronidase 4, SEQ ID NO: 33, or optionally PH-20, SEQ ID NO: 34 and combinations of these. Preferably the nucleic acids encode for chondroitinase deletion and or substitution mutants, most preferably the nucleic acids encode for chondroitinasc ABC type I
or II polypeptides. The invention is also directed to nucleic acid molecules consisting of, and preferably comprising, a nucleotide sequence complementary to the above-described nucleic acid sequences. Also provided for are nucleic acid molecules at least 80%, preferably 85% or 90%, still more preferably 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, or 99% identical to any of the above-described nucleic acid molecules. Also provided for are nucleic acid molecules which hybridize under stringent conditions to any of the above-described nucleic acid molecules.
The present invention also provides for recombinant vectors comprising these nucleic acid molecules, and host cells transformed with such vectors.
[0014] Also provided are isolated polypeptides consisting of, and preferably comprising, the amino acid sequence of deletion and or substitution mutants of proteoglycan degrading polypeptides. Independently, proteoglycan degrading polypeptides can include chondroitinases, for example ABC Type I, SEQ ID NO: 1 or 37, Chondroitinase ABC Type SEQ ID NO: 27, Chondroitinase AC, SEQ ID NO: 5, and Chondroitinase B, SEQ ID
NO: 12, hyaluronidase 1, SEQ ID NO: 30, hyaluronidase 2, SEQ ID NO: 31, hyaluronidase 3, SEQ ID NO: 32, hyaluronidase 4, SEQ ID NO: 33, optionally PH-20, SEQ ID NO:
34.
Preferably the polypeptides are deletion mutants of chondroitinases.
Pharmaceutical compositions may be prepared from the mutant proteoglycan degrading molecules such as these chondroitinases and or hyaluronidases; the composition may include one or more of the deletion and substitution mutants from different proteoglycan degrading polypeptides.
[0015] In one aspect of the invention, biologically active proteoglycan degrading polypeptide are provided having a deletion or substitution of at least one amino acid. The mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides include those having the minimal size yet retain a degree of activity as determined by the enzyme assays described in the specification.
.Preferred deletion or substitution mutants of the proteoglycan degrading molecule are those which degrade chondroitin and have one or more amino acid deletions from the N-terminus, about 1 to at least about120 amino acids and/or the C-terminus, about 1 to at least about 275 amino acids, more preferably the deletions are from a chondroitinase or a substituted chondroitinase, and even more preferably chondroitinase ABC I or II or a substituted chondriotinase ABC I or IL
[0016] One aspect of this invention are deletion and or substitution mutants of proteoglycan degrading polypeptides, preferably deletion mutants of chondroitinase polypeptides, that promote neurite regeneration and or plasticity in the CNS
and or promote or inhibit the diffusion of therapeutic molecules into tissues by degradation of proteoglyeans.
[0017] The mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides, preferably deletion and or substitution mutants of chondroitinases, may promote neurite regeneration in the CNS and or promote or inhibit the diffusion of therapeutic molecules into tissues by degradation of proteoglycans and can be obtained through expression of suitably modified DNA
sequences.
Thus, the present invention also provides suitable expression vectors and host cells compatible with them.
[0018] In yet other aspects, the invention comprises pharmaceutical compositions that include biologically active polypeptide of deletion and or substitution mutants of proteoglycan degrading molecules, and preferably deletion or substitution mutants of ehondroitn degrading polypeptides as described above, in combination with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
[0019] The deletion mutants and or substitution mutants of the proteoglycan degrading polypeptides of the present invention may be used to promote the regeneration of neurites in nerve tissue. These mutants might also be useful in the treatment of other CNS
disorders in which plasticity, regeneration, or both might be beneficial. For example CNS
injuries and disorders may include but not limited to contusion injury, traumatic brain injury, stroke, multiple sclerosis, brachial plexus injury, amblioplia. Because of their proteoglycan degrading properties, they may be used to promote the delivery of theraprutic compositions and diagnostics to tissues and cells that are normally impermeable to them.
Alternatively, they may be used to inhibit penetration of therapeutic compositions, diagnosifics or cells to tissues that use part of the extracellular matrix to enter tissues. Because of their smaller size compared to the full length enzyme, the deletion and or substitution mutants are easier to make and easier to deliver to target cells and tissues. These and other even smaller deletion or substitution mutants of proteoglycan degrading molecules could be used as potential therapeutics with lesser immunogenicity and similar or higher tissue penetration ability for the treatment of cl\IS injury.
[0020] The deletion mutants may offer significant advantages over the full length proteins in the therapeutic development process. The tissue penetration of the enzymes may be significantly effected by the protein size. The effect of protein size on tissue penetration is difficult to predict, but dependent on size and charge. The rate of penetration depends on tissue composition, charge interactions and hydration effects. Having active enzymes of widely ranging size may allow selection of an enzyme based on optimal tissue penetration properties, perhaps maximizing effective concentrations or limiting peripheral exposure to the enzyme.
100211 The immune response of a mammal to a bacterial protein may or may not limit the ability to use the protein or polypeptide as a therapeutic. The generation of antibodies to the protein can restrict repeated exposures, as well as potentially inactivate the protein therapeutic making it ineffective. The smaller mutant proteoglyean degrading enzymes, preferably mutant chondroitinase enzymes, may limit the antigenic sites, limit an immune response or at least simplify the process of engineering an enzyme with reduced imrnuriogenicity, 00221 The release rate of proteins from matrices often used in sustained release formulations can be dependent upon size and cross-linking. The effective release rate of deletion mutants of proteoglycan degrading polyp eptide from the matrix can be engineered through the manipulation of the size of the enzyme. Having a repertoire of chondroitinase enzymes of various size and charge will give an significant advantage for the development of a sustained release formulations.
A BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0023] FIG. 1(A) shows Anti-His-tag Western Blot (top) and zymogram (bottom) demonstrating chondroitinase B deletion N120 CA120 mutant (SEQ ID NO: 17) expression activity; FIG. 1(B) shows Anti-His-tag Western Blot (top) and zymogram (bottom) demonstrating chondroitinase AC deletion NA50 CA275 mutant (SEQ ID NO: 11) expression activity;
[0024] FIG. 2 shows illustrates the relative substrate degrading activity of various detetion mutant polypeptides of Chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 6-11) relative to the full length Chondroitinase AC SEQ ID NO: 5;
[0025] FIG. 3(A)shows a schematic of deletion mutant polypeptides of chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 6-11); FIG. 3(B) shows confirmation of chondroitinase AC
deletion mutants by Western blotting;
[0026] FIG. 4. shows confirmation of protein expression and catalytic activity of Chondroitinase AC deletion mutants (SEQ ID NO: 6-11)by (A) Western Blotting and (B) zymography;
[0027] FIG. 5 shows a schematic of deletion mutant polypeptides (SEQ ID NO: 13-17) of chondroitinase B (SEQ ID NO: 12);
[0028] FIG. 6 shows confirmation of protein expression and catalytic activity of Chondroitinase B and deletion mutants (SEQ ID NO: 12-17) by (A) Western Blotting and (B) zymography;
[0029] FIG. 7 shows a schematic of Chondroitinase ABC I deletion mutant polypeptides (SEQ ID NO: 2-4) of Chondroitinase ABC I SEQ ID NO: 1;
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0030] Before the present compositions and methods are described, it is to be understood that this invention is not limited to the particular molecules, compositions, methodologies or protocols described, as these may vary, It is also to be understood that the terminology used in the description is for the purpose of describing the particular versions or embodiments only, and is not intended to limit the scope of the present invention which will be limited only by the appended claims.
[0031] It must also be noted that as used herein and in the appended claims, the singular forms "a", "an", and "the" include plural references unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Thus, for example, reference to a "cell" is a reference to one or more cells and equivalents thereof known to those skilled in the art, and so forth.
Unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meanings as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art. Although any methods and materials similar or equivalent to those described herein can be used in the practice or testing of embodiments of the present invention, the preferred methods, devices, and materials are now described. All publications mentioned herein are incorporated by reference. Nothing herein is to be construed as an admission that the invention is not entitled to antedate such disclosure by virtue of prior invention.
[0032] "Optional" or "optionally" means that the subsequently described event or circumstance may or may not occur, and that the description includes instances where the event occurs or material is present and instances where the event does not occur or where the material is not present.
10033] One aspect of the present disclosure relates to a series of deletion and or substitution mutants of chonchoitinase genes that can be used to generate deletion mutant enzymes with substantially lower molecular weight, but modified, and preferably equivalent or superior proteoglycan degrading catalytic activity compared to the wild type enzymes.
The deletion and or substitution mutants can be generated by polymerase chain reaction. The resulting mutants are expressed and then enzymatic activity of the mutant polypeptide can be confirmed by using zymography.
[0034] The mutants of the proteoglycan degrading molecules can be used to treat mammalian CNS injuries, typically caused by trauma or disease. In particular, a deletion mutant of a proteoglycan degrading polyp eptide molecule like chondroitinase, for example ABC Type I, (SEQ ID NO: 1 or 37), Chondroitinase ABC Type II, (SEQ ID NO: 27), Chondroitinase AC, (SEQ ID NO: 5), and Chondroitinase B, (SEQ ID NO: 12), or mammalian enzymes with chondroitinase-like activity such as hyaluronidase 1, (SEQ ID
NO: 30), hyaluronidase 2, (SEQ ID NO: 31), hyaluronidase 3, (SEQ ID NO: 32), hyaluronidase 4, (SEQ ID NO: 33), and optionally PH-20, (SEQ ID NO: 34), or mixtures of any of these may be used to provide a therapeutic treatment for CNS injuries and disorders which may include but not limited to contusion injury, traumatic brain injury, stroke, multiple sclerosis, brachial plexus injury, amblioplia, spinal cord injuries. Spinal cord injuries includes disease and traumatic injuries, such as the crushing of neurons brought about by an auto accident, fall, contusion, or bullet wound, as well as other injuries.
Practice of the present methods can confer clinical benefits to the treated mammal, providing clinically relevant improvements in at least one of the subject's motor coordination functions and sensory perception. Clinically relevant improvements can range from a detectable improvement to a complete restoration of an impaired or lost function of the CNS.
[0035] Mutants of proteoglycan degrading molecules, for example the deletion mutants of Chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 5), may have their enzyme activity stabilized by the addition of excipients or by lyophilization. Stabilizers may include carbohydrates, amino acids, fatty acids, and surfactants and are known to those skilled in the art. Examples include carbohydrates such as sucrose, lactose, mannitol, and dextran, proteins such as albumin and protamine, amino acids such as arginine, glycine, and threonine, surfactants such as TWEEN and PLURONIC , salts such as calcium chloride and sodium phosphate, and lipids such as fatty acids, phospholipids, and bile salts. The stabilizers may be added to the proteoglycan degrading polypeptide deletion mutants in a ratio of 1:10 to 4:1, carbohydrate to polypeptide, amino acids polypeptide, protein stabilizer to polypeptide, and salts to polypeptide 1:1000 to 1:20; surfactant to polypeptide; and 1:20 to 4:1, lipids to polypeptide.
Other stabilizers include high concentrations of ammonium sulfate, sodium acetate or sodium sulfate, based on comparative studies with heparinase activity. The stabilizing agents, preferably the ammonium sulfate or other similar salt, are added to the enzyme in a ratio of 0.1 to 4.0 mg ammonium sulfate/IU enzyme.
[00361 The proteoglycan degrading mutant polypeptides may be formulated as compositions and can be administered topically, locally or systemically to a subject or patient. Preferably the subject is a mammal and even more preferably a human in need of a protcoglycan degrading composition such as one of the chondroitinases. Topical or local administration is can be used for greater control of application. One or more proteoglycan degrading mutant polypeptides, singularly or in combination, can be mixed with an appropriate pharmaceutical carrier prior to administration. Examples of generally used pharmaceutical carriers and additives are conventional diluents, binders, lubricants, coloring agents, disintegrating agents, buffer agents, isotonizing agents, preservants, anesthetics and the like. Specifically pharmaceutical carriers that may be used are dextran, serum albumin, gelatin, creatinine, polyethylene glycol, non-ionic surfactants (e.g.
polyoxyethylene sorbitan fatty acid esters, polyoxyethylene hardened castor oil, sucrose fatty acid esters, polyoxyethylene polyoxypropylene glycot) and similar compounds.
100371 Compositions of the present invention having a proteoglycan degrading polypeptide or a nucleic acid for expressing it may also include theraptutic molecules, diagnostics, and agents for promoting neurite growth and regeneration.
Examples of diagnostic molecules may include but are not limited to fluorescent probes, radioisotopes, dyes, or magnetic contrast agents. Compounds that facilitate plasticity, neurite growth, and regeneration can include but are not limited to molecules that over come neurite out growth inhibition, or promote nerve growth such as soluble NOGO antagonists like NgR27..311, neural cell adhesion molecules like Li, neurotrophic factors, growth factors, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, and inhibitors of 1VIAG or MOG. Additionally, deletion mutants may be combined with other compounds that promote rernyelination such as neuregulins (GGF2) and antibodies that promote remyelination.
[0038] Plasticity of the nervous system refers to any type of functional reorganization. This reorganization occurs with development, learning and memory and brain repair. The structural changes that occur with plasticity may include synapse formation, synapse removal, neurite sprouting and may even include strengthening or weakening existing synapses. Regeneration is generally differentiated from plasticity by the long range growth of axons in disrupted tracts that is characteristic of regeneration.
[0039] The biological activity of the proteoglycan degrading molecules of the present invention may be used to control the degradation rate of proteoglycans in a tissue, and for example be chosen to have a slower degradation activity for sensitive tissues and a higher degradation rate for degrading potions of tissue which arc thicker. The activity may be contolled by one of more amino acid substitutions or deletions in the polypeptide or vectors used to express them; the activity may be controlled by the concentration or combination of proteoglycan degrading polypeptides in a composition. The proteoglycan degrading activity may be made to be greater or less than that of the full length polypeptide.
For example, it can be made to be less than that of the full length Chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO:
5), and can be made to be less than half as active as the full length polypeptide as shown in FIG. 2. Also, as further illustrated in FIG. 2, the proteoglycan degrading activity can he made to be greater than the full length Chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 5), it can be made more active than the full length polypeptide by a factor of 1.5 or more; it can be more active than the full length polypeptide by a factor of 2.5 or more.
100401 Native or wild-type P. vulgaris bacterial strains typically can be used to produce chondroitinases ABC I, (SEQ ID NO: 1 or 37), and chondroitinase ABC
II, (SEQ
ID NO: 27), and mutants of these full length polypeptide under ordinary growth conditions.
Wild-type strains of P. vulgaris can be induced to produce detectable levels of chondroitinase ABCI and its mutants by providing an inducing substrate, such as chandroitin sulfate, as the sole carbon source, 100411 Mutant nucleic acids can be used for expressing mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides. The expressed polypeptides or the mutant nucleic acids can be used to treat mammalian CNS injuries, typically caused by trauma or disease, In particular, a deletion mutant nucleic acid for expressing proteoglycan degrading polypeptide molecule like chondroitinase ABC Type I, may include but are not limited to cloned chondroitinase ABC I, (SEQ ID NO: 22 or 28), chondroitinase ABC 11, (SEQ ID NO: 26), nucleic acids for expressing fusion proteins of deletion mutants TAT-chondroitinase ABC I N,\60 (SEQ ID
NO: 43) and mutants of these genes in E. coili can be expressed using a heterologous expression system with an artificial inducer. Nucleic acids coding for Chondroitmase AC
(SEQ ID NO: 22 or 28), and chondroitinase B (SEQ ID NO: 26), and their mutants may be cloned from F. heparinum and expressed in E. coll.
[00421 The full length proteoglycan degrading molecules like Chondroitinase AC
(SEQ ID NO: 5), as well as the deletion and or substitution mutants of the proteoglycan degrading polypeptides may be cloned in a number of bacterial as well as mammalian expression vectors. Non-limiting of these vectors include pET15b, pET14b, pGEX
6P1, pDNA4HisMax, or pSECTag2b. The deletion mutants and substituted polypeptides of the present invention exhibit the ability to degrade proteoglycans such as chondroitin CS and DS, and have a smaller size and molecular weight than the mature enzyme polypeptides which is expected to facilitate their diffusion into cells, tissues and across membranes. Expression vectors can include the nucleic acid sequence that expresses a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide operably linked to an expression control sequence. Operably linked can refer to a linkage between an expression control sequence and coding sequence, where the linkage permits the exprdssion control sequence to control the expression of the coding sequence.
[0043] The properties of the naturally occurring, substituted and or deletion mutants of the proteoglycan degrading molecules may be altered by introducing a variety of mutations in the protein. Such alterations are suitably introduced using the mutagenesis techniques, for example but not limited to PRC mutagenesis, and the mutated polypeptides molecules suitably synthesized using the expression vectors.
[0044) Mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides of the present invention include deletions and or substitutions of amino acids from mature proteoglycan degrading polypeptides. Pre. ferably the deletions Or substitutions include any two consecutive or separated amino acids, N or C terminal amino acid deletions or substitutions, and internal amino acid deletions or substitutions in the polypeptide. The deletions and or substitutions can start with any amino acid in the molecule and it is possible to have two separated deletions in the molecule. The deletion or substitution results in mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide that are smaller than the mature enzyme and retain proteoglycan degrading ability. Mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides can be fused or linked to another polypeptide. Polypeptide is used to unambigously encompases amino acid sequences for mutants of any length which have proteoglycan degrading activity and improve plasticity including those minus the signal sequence that is initially part of polypeptide when it is translated and that is cleaved off by a host-translational modification.
[0045] Mutant nucleic acids of the present invention include deletions and or substitutions of nucleotides from genes which express the mature proteoglycan degrading polypeptides. The deletion and substitution mutations at the DNA level are used to introduce amino acid substitutions and or deletions into the encoded protein. These nucleotide deletions and substitutions can be used to introduce deletions and or substitutions into important conforinational or active regions of the polypeptide. A nucleic acid fragment is a nucleic acid having fewer nucleotides than the nucleotide sequence encoding the entire amino acid sequence of a mature proteoglycan degrading polypeptide, yet which preferably encodes a mutant polypeptide which retains some biological activity of the full length protein, e.g., the expressed polypeptide fragment retains the ability to induce degradation of proteoglycans, promote diffusion of therapeutics into cells and tissue, or promote regeneration of neurites.
Genes encoding either N or C terminal mutants of proteoglycan degrading polypeptide domains linked to other polypeptides can also be used in constructs for expression of fusion proteins linked to mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides.
[0046] The deletion and or substitution mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides of the present invention may also include derivatives of these polypeptides which have been been chemically or enzymatically modified, but which retain their biological activity to degrade proteoglycans. The proteoglycan degrading activity of these mutants may be controlled depending upon the deletion and or substitution made to the polypeptide or the nucleic acid used to express the polypeptide. Variants, fragments, or analogs of the mature proteoglycan degrading polypeptides or nucleic acids and vectors used to express them include mutant p6lypeptides and nucleic acids having a sequence which differs from the mature polypeptide or nucleic acid sequence by one or more deletions, substitutions, or a combination of both such that the mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides retain their biological activity and can degrade proteoglycans, and preferably degrade ehondroitin sulfate proteoglycans.
[0047] Due to the degeneracy of the genetic code, one of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that a large number of the nucleic acid molecules having a sequence at at least 80%, preferably 85% or 90%, still more preferably 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, or 99%
identical to a nucleic acid sequence encoding for a mutant proteoglycan degrading molecule will encode a mutant polypeptide having proteoglycan degrading activity and preferably chondroitin degrading ability. It will be further recognized that, for such nucleic acid molecules that are not degenerate variants, a reasonable number will also encode a mutant polypeptide having proteoglycan degrading activity. This is because amino acid substitutions that are either less likely or not likely to significantly effect polypeptide activity (e.g., replacing one aliphatic amino acid with a second aliphatic amino acid) to degrade proteoglycans and preferably to degrade chondroitin.
[0048] Variants included in the invention may contain individual substitutions, deletions or additions to the nucleic acid or polypeptide sequences. Such changes will alter, add or delete a single amino acid or a small percentage of amino acids in the encoded sequence. Variants are referred to as "conservatively modified variants" where the alteration results in the substitution of an amino acid with a chemically similar amino acid.
[0049] The discovery that the proteoglycan degrading activity of the deletion and substitution mutant polypeptides of the present invention can be controlled to be less, about the same, or greater than the full length proteoglycan degrading molecule has another potential advantage. A pharmaceutical composition containing the proteoglycan degrading molecules may be administered parenterally, intravenously or subcutaneously.
The use of a hydrogel composed of biodegradable polymer enclosing the polypeptide and continuously releasing the polypeptide is limited by the amount of polypeptide that can be enclosed in the hydrogel. Using a deletion mutant of the polypeptide with higher specific activity implies that, on a molar basis, more of the active substance can be enclosed in the same volume, thereby increasing the time between successive administrations or possibly avoiding repeated administrations.
[00501 Purification of the polypeptide obtained after expression is dependent on the host cell and the expression construct used, Generally, the purification of proteoglycan deletion or substitution mutants can be performed in the same way as the purification of native full length polypeptides including the use of histidine-tags.
[0051] The deletion or substitution mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides and proteins are administered in an amount effective to degrade CSPGs. The polypeptides may be used to aid the diffusion of therapeutic and diagnostic compositions to tissues and and can be used to promote the recovery of neurological function and neurite outgrowth. Once the mutant proteoglycan degrading proteins or polypeptides in the compositions have been purified to the extent desired, they may be suspended or diluted in an appropriate physiological carrier or excipient for SCI treatment or for screening assays of compositions promoting neurite growth in vitro on suitable substrates like aggrecan. In models of SCI, effective intrathe6a1 doses of chondroitinases in rats have been about 0.06 units on alternate days for 14 days. A dose for a 70 kilogram human may be about 17 Units. At about 100 Units / milligram, this would equal about 170 micrograms. Doses of up to 20 Units appear safe in mammalian subjects like rats. Compositions may include a proteoglycan degrading mutant polypeptide, preferably mutant chondroitinase polypeptides, and more preferably still deletion mutant chondroitinase polypeptides, These compositions may also include other proteoglycan degrading molecules and deletion and or substitution mutants of them, molecules which block the action of neurite growth inhibitors, molecules which promote neurite or axon adhesion, diagnostic, therapeutic, or the proteoglycan degrading molecule mutant as part of a fusion protein. The mixture or fusion protein may be added to a carrier or pharmaceutically acceptable exciiiient can be injected, generally at concentrations in the range of l ug to 500 mg/kg of subject. Administering the agent can be by bolus injection, intravenous delivery, continuous infusion, sustained release from implants, or sustained release pharmaceuticals. Administration by injection, can be intramuscularly, peritoneally, subcutaneously, intravenously, intrathec ally. Oral administration may include tablets or capsules, preferably the oral dosage is a sustained release formulation for once or twice daily administration. Per-canteens administration can be once per day, and is preferably less than once per day administration, Administration to the human patient or other mammalian subject may be continued until a measurable improvement in autonomic or motor function in the patient is achieved.
[00521 The mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides or fusion polypeptides that include them may also be expressed or secreted by genetically modified cells.
The expressed deletion or substitution proteoglycan degrading polypeptide or fusion polypeptides may be harvested and purified for a therapeutic compositon, or the genetically modified cells can be implanted, either free or in a capsule, at or near the site of CNS injury or a tissue into which the controlled diffusion of therapeutic or diagnostic molecule is desired.
Mutant nucleic acids for expressing mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides are illustrated by non-limiting examples of chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO: 22 and 28) which encode for substituted chondroitinase ABC I polypeptides and those without leader amino acid sequences; chondroitinase B nucleic acid mutant (SEQ ID NO: 21) which encodes for mutant polypeptide N6.120 CA120 of chondroitinase B (SEQ ID NO:17); and chondroitinase AC nucleic acid mutant (SEQ ID NO: 19) which encodes for mutant polypeptide NA50 CA275 of chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 11). A non-limiting example of a fusion nucleic acid includes a TAT-deletion mutant chondroitinase ABCI
fusion DNA
construct (SEQ ID NO: 41). Another example would be a nucleic acid for TAT-chondroitinase ABCI-NA60 (SEQ ID NO: 43) for the expressed polypeptide (SEQ ID
NO:
44), 100531 Once the mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide are administered to cells or a tissue with CSPGs, degradation of CSPGs removes the inhibitory molecules that block neurite outgrowth, and allow the regeneration of neurites into the affected area. The removal of CSPG also promotes plasticity in the CNS. For example, the full length polypeptides of chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 5), and chondroitinase 13, (SEQ
ID NO:
12), degrade CS and DS, respectively, resulting in unsaturated sulfated disaecharides.
Chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 5), cleaves CS at 1, 4 glycosidic linkages between N-acetylgalactosamine and glucuronic acid in the polysaccharide backbone of CS.
Cleavage OMITS through beta-elimination in a random endolytic action pattern.
Chondroitinase B
(SEQ ID NO: 12) cleaves the 1, 4 galactosamine iduronic acid linkage in the polysaccharide backbone of DS. The cleavage of both CS and DS occurs through a beta-elimination process which differentiates these enzymatic mechanisms from mammalian GAG degrading enzymes. Chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO: 1), chondroitinase ABC II (SEQ ID
NO:
27), are exo and endo lyases that cleave both CS and DS, The removal of CS and DS from a glial scar permits the regeneration of neurite outgrowths into the injured area and promotes plasticity. For example, the proteoglycan degrading molecules illustrated in FIG. 2, Chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 5) and various mutant Chondroitinase AC (SEQ 11) NO:
100401 Native or wild-type P. vulgaris bacterial strains typically can be used to produce chondroitinases ABC I, (SEQ ID NO: 1 or 37), and chondroitinase ABC
II, (SEQ
ID NO: 27), and mutants of these full length polypeptide under ordinary growth conditions.
Wild-type strains of P. vulgaris can be induced to produce detectable levels of chondroitinase ABCI and its mutants by providing an inducing substrate, such as chandroitin sulfate, as the sole carbon source, 100411 Mutant nucleic acids can be used for expressing mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides. The expressed polypeptides or the mutant nucleic acids can be used to treat mammalian CNS injuries, typically caused by trauma or disease, In particular, a deletion mutant nucleic acid for expressing proteoglycan degrading polypeptide molecule like chondroitinase ABC Type I, may include but are not limited to cloned chondroitinase ABC I, (SEQ ID NO: 22 or 28), chondroitinase ABC 11, (SEQ ID NO: 26), nucleic acids for expressing fusion proteins of deletion mutants TAT-chondroitinase ABC I N,\60 (SEQ ID
NO: 43) and mutants of these genes in E. coili can be expressed using a heterologous expression system with an artificial inducer. Nucleic acids coding for Chondroitmase AC
(SEQ ID NO: 22 or 28), and chondroitinase B (SEQ ID NO: 26), and their mutants may be cloned from F. heparinum and expressed in E. coll.
[00421 The full length proteoglycan degrading molecules like Chondroitinase AC
(SEQ ID NO: 5), as well as the deletion and or substitution mutants of the proteoglycan degrading polypeptides may be cloned in a number of bacterial as well as mammalian expression vectors. Non-limiting of these vectors include pET15b, pET14b, pGEX
6P1, pDNA4HisMax, or pSECTag2b. The deletion mutants and substituted polypeptides of the present invention exhibit the ability to degrade proteoglycans such as chondroitin CS and DS, and have a smaller size and molecular weight than the mature enzyme polypeptides which is expected to facilitate their diffusion into cells, tissues and across membranes. Expression vectors can include the nucleic acid sequence that expresses a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide operably linked to an expression control sequence. Operably linked can refer to a linkage between an expression control sequence and coding sequence, where the linkage permits the exprdssion control sequence to control the expression of the coding sequence.
[0043] The properties of the naturally occurring, substituted and or deletion mutants of the proteoglycan degrading molecules may be altered by introducing a variety of mutations in the protein. Such alterations are suitably introduced using the mutagenesis techniques, for example but not limited to PRC mutagenesis, and the mutated polypeptides molecules suitably synthesized using the expression vectors.
[0044) Mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides of the present invention include deletions and or substitutions of amino acids from mature proteoglycan degrading polypeptides. Pre. ferably the deletions Or substitutions include any two consecutive or separated amino acids, N or C terminal amino acid deletions or substitutions, and internal amino acid deletions or substitutions in the polypeptide. The deletions and or substitutions can start with any amino acid in the molecule and it is possible to have two separated deletions in the molecule. The deletion or substitution results in mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide that are smaller than the mature enzyme and retain proteoglycan degrading ability. Mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides can be fused or linked to another polypeptide. Polypeptide is used to unambigously encompases amino acid sequences for mutants of any length which have proteoglycan degrading activity and improve plasticity including those minus the signal sequence that is initially part of polypeptide when it is translated and that is cleaved off by a host-translational modification.
[0045] Mutant nucleic acids of the present invention include deletions and or substitutions of nucleotides from genes which express the mature proteoglycan degrading polypeptides. The deletion and substitution mutations at the DNA level are used to introduce amino acid substitutions and or deletions into the encoded protein. These nucleotide deletions and substitutions can be used to introduce deletions and or substitutions into important conforinational or active regions of the polypeptide. A nucleic acid fragment is a nucleic acid having fewer nucleotides than the nucleotide sequence encoding the entire amino acid sequence of a mature proteoglycan degrading polypeptide, yet which preferably encodes a mutant polypeptide which retains some biological activity of the full length protein, e.g., the expressed polypeptide fragment retains the ability to induce degradation of proteoglycans, promote diffusion of therapeutics into cells and tissue, or promote regeneration of neurites.
Genes encoding either N or C terminal mutants of proteoglycan degrading polypeptide domains linked to other polypeptides can also be used in constructs for expression of fusion proteins linked to mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides.
[0046] The deletion and or substitution mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides of the present invention may also include derivatives of these polypeptides which have been been chemically or enzymatically modified, but which retain their biological activity to degrade proteoglycans. The proteoglycan degrading activity of these mutants may be controlled depending upon the deletion and or substitution made to the polypeptide or the nucleic acid used to express the polypeptide. Variants, fragments, or analogs of the mature proteoglycan degrading polypeptides or nucleic acids and vectors used to express them include mutant p6lypeptides and nucleic acids having a sequence which differs from the mature polypeptide or nucleic acid sequence by one or more deletions, substitutions, or a combination of both such that the mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides retain their biological activity and can degrade proteoglycans, and preferably degrade ehondroitin sulfate proteoglycans.
[0047] Due to the degeneracy of the genetic code, one of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that a large number of the nucleic acid molecules having a sequence at at least 80%, preferably 85% or 90%, still more preferably 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, or 99%
identical to a nucleic acid sequence encoding for a mutant proteoglycan degrading molecule will encode a mutant polypeptide having proteoglycan degrading activity and preferably chondroitin degrading ability. It will be further recognized that, for such nucleic acid molecules that are not degenerate variants, a reasonable number will also encode a mutant polypeptide having proteoglycan degrading activity. This is because amino acid substitutions that are either less likely or not likely to significantly effect polypeptide activity (e.g., replacing one aliphatic amino acid with a second aliphatic amino acid) to degrade proteoglycans and preferably to degrade chondroitin.
[0048] Variants included in the invention may contain individual substitutions, deletions or additions to the nucleic acid or polypeptide sequences. Such changes will alter, add or delete a single amino acid or a small percentage of amino acids in the encoded sequence. Variants are referred to as "conservatively modified variants" where the alteration results in the substitution of an amino acid with a chemically similar amino acid.
[0049] The discovery that the proteoglycan degrading activity of the deletion and substitution mutant polypeptides of the present invention can be controlled to be less, about the same, or greater than the full length proteoglycan degrading molecule has another potential advantage. A pharmaceutical composition containing the proteoglycan degrading molecules may be administered parenterally, intravenously or subcutaneously.
The use of a hydrogel composed of biodegradable polymer enclosing the polypeptide and continuously releasing the polypeptide is limited by the amount of polypeptide that can be enclosed in the hydrogel. Using a deletion mutant of the polypeptide with higher specific activity implies that, on a molar basis, more of the active substance can be enclosed in the same volume, thereby increasing the time between successive administrations or possibly avoiding repeated administrations.
[00501 Purification of the polypeptide obtained after expression is dependent on the host cell and the expression construct used, Generally, the purification of proteoglycan deletion or substitution mutants can be performed in the same way as the purification of native full length polypeptides including the use of histidine-tags.
[0051] The deletion or substitution mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides and proteins are administered in an amount effective to degrade CSPGs. The polypeptides may be used to aid the diffusion of therapeutic and diagnostic compositions to tissues and and can be used to promote the recovery of neurological function and neurite outgrowth. Once the mutant proteoglycan degrading proteins or polypeptides in the compositions have been purified to the extent desired, they may be suspended or diluted in an appropriate physiological carrier or excipient for SCI treatment or for screening assays of compositions promoting neurite growth in vitro on suitable substrates like aggrecan. In models of SCI, effective intrathe6a1 doses of chondroitinases in rats have been about 0.06 units on alternate days for 14 days. A dose for a 70 kilogram human may be about 17 Units. At about 100 Units / milligram, this would equal about 170 micrograms. Doses of up to 20 Units appear safe in mammalian subjects like rats. Compositions may include a proteoglycan degrading mutant polypeptide, preferably mutant chondroitinase polypeptides, and more preferably still deletion mutant chondroitinase polypeptides, These compositions may also include other proteoglycan degrading molecules and deletion and or substitution mutants of them, molecules which block the action of neurite growth inhibitors, molecules which promote neurite or axon adhesion, diagnostic, therapeutic, or the proteoglycan degrading molecule mutant as part of a fusion protein. The mixture or fusion protein may be added to a carrier or pharmaceutically acceptable exciiiient can be injected, generally at concentrations in the range of l ug to 500 mg/kg of subject. Administering the agent can be by bolus injection, intravenous delivery, continuous infusion, sustained release from implants, or sustained release pharmaceuticals. Administration by injection, can be intramuscularly, peritoneally, subcutaneously, intravenously, intrathec ally. Oral administration may include tablets or capsules, preferably the oral dosage is a sustained release formulation for once or twice daily administration. Per-canteens administration can be once per day, and is preferably less than once per day administration, Administration to the human patient or other mammalian subject may be continued until a measurable improvement in autonomic or motor function in the patient is achieved.
[00521 The mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides or fusion polypeptides that include them may also be expressed or secreted by genetically modified cells.
The expressed deletion or substitution proteoglycan degrading polypeptide or fusion polypeptides may be harvested and purified for a therapeutic compositon, or the genetically modified cells can be implanted, either free or in a capsule, at or near the site of CNS injury or a tissue into which the controlled diffusion of therapeutic or diagnostic molecule is desired.
Mutant nucleic acids for expressing mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides are illustrated by non-limiting examples of chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO: 22 and 28) which encode for substituted chondroitinase ABC I polypeptides and those without leader amino acid sequences; chondroitinase B nucleic acid mutant (SEQ ID NO: 21) which encodes for mutant polypeptide N6.120 CA120 of chondroitinase B (SEQ ID NO:17); and chondroitinase AC nucleic acid mutant (SEQ ID NO: 19) which encodes for mutant polypeptide NA50 CA275 of chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 11). A non-limiting example of a fusion nucleic acid includes a TAT-deletion mutant chondroitinase ABCI
fusion DNA
construct (SEQ ID NO: 41). Another example would be a nucleic acid for TAT-chondroitinase ABCI-NA60 (SEQ ID NO: 43) for the expressed polypeptide (SEQ ID
NO:
44), 100531 Once the mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide are administered to cells or a tissue with CSPGs, degradation of CSPGs removes the inhibitory molecules that block neurite outgrowth, and allow the regeneration of neurites into the affected area. The removal of CSPG also promotes plasticity in the CNS. For example, the full length polypeptides of chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 5), and chondroitinase 13, (SEQ
ID NO:
12), degrade CS and DS, respectively, resulting in unsaturated sulfated disaecharides.
Chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 5), cleaves CS at 1, 4 glycosidic linkages between N-acetylgalactosamine and glucuronic acid in the polysaccharide backbone of CS.
Cleavage OMITS through beta-elimination in a random endolytic action pattern.
Chondroitinase B
(SEQ ID NO: 12) cleaves the 1, 4 galactosamine iduronic acid linkage in the polysaccharide backbone of DS. The cleavage of both CS and DS occurs through a beta-elimination process which differentiates these enzymatic mechanisms from mammalian GAG degrading enzymes. Chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO: 1), chondroitinase ABC II (SEQ ID
NO:
27), are exo and endo lyases that cleave both CS and DS, The removal of CS and DS from a glial scar permits the regeneration of neurite outgrowths into the injured area and promotes plasticity. For example, the proteoglycan degrading molecules illustrated in FIG. 2, Chondroitinase AC (SEQ ID NO: 5) and various mutant Chondroitinase AC (SEQ 11) NO:
6-11) degrade a model proteoglycan substrate at by various amounts. Similar results are shown by in vitro zymograph for chondroitinase B (SEQ ID NO: 12) and illustrative mutants (SEQ ID NO: 13-17) in FIG. 6, It is reasonable to expect that since a proteoglycan degrading molecule like Chonthoitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO: 1) improves functional recovery in rats with contusive spinal cord injury and also facilitates the diffusion of model compounds into brain tissue, that mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides and compositions containing them can also improve functional recovery in mammalian subjects like rats with contusive spinal cord injury and may also facilitates the diffusion of model compounds into brain tissue.
[00541j The regeneration of the nerve cells and restoration of plasticity in the affected CNS area allows the return of motor and sensory function. Clinically relevant improvement will range from a detectable improvement to a complete restoration of an impaired or lost nervous function, varying with the individual patients and injuries. The degree of functional recovery can be demonstrated by improved corticospinal tract conduction, improved tape removal, beam walking, grid walking and paw placement following chondroitinase treatment of a dorsal column lesion. Motor skill improvement as well as autonomic function: bowel, bladder, sensory and sexual function may also be used as measures of function improvement and related to molecular structure and components in the compositions of the present invention.
[0055] A series of polynucleotides that include coding for deletion or substition mutants of protedglycan degrading polyp eptides may be generated by PCR using the full length cDNAs for the proteoglycans as templates and cloned into an expression vector such as pET15b at the NdeI and Barcilli sites for expression in E. Coli. After induction of gene expression with isopropyl-13-D-thiogalactopyranoside (TTG), the bacteria can lysed by sonication with the concomitant extraction of the mutant polypeptide with a surfactant such as Trito;X-I14/PBS. The majority of recombinant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide may be found in the cytosolic fraction of the bacterial cell lysate and chondroitinase purification protocols can be used to obtain the mutant proteoglycan degrading enzyme with high activity *Trade-mark at high yields. This protocol may include purification by a column having anti-His antibody to selectively bind His-tagged mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides and may also includes cation-exchange chromatography as a capture step and gel filtration as a polishing step. After these steps, anion exchange membrane filtration, for example Intercept Q, Millipore, can be used for endotoxin and host DNA removal. Following filtration, the proteoglycan degrading mutant polypeptides can be dialyzed into volatile buffer, pH 8.0 and lyophilized to dryness. The final product is expected to be stable at -70 C
for long term storage. The pI of the purified basic proteoglycan degrading mutant polypeptide may be determined by IEF-PAGE analysis of the samples from the crude cell lysate.
[00561 A variety of analytical methods can be used to compare the enzymatic activity of the recombinant version the deletion or substitution mutants of proteoglycan degrading polypeptides with those of full length proteoglycan degrading molecules like chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO: 37) or a commercially available form of the enzyme.
The methods may also be adapted to evaluate the activity of fusion proteins including a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide portion. Specific activity measurements may be obtained using an accepted spectrophotometric assay that measures the change in absorbance due to the production of reaction products from the degradation of proteoglycans. Size exclusion chromatography can be used to compare the hydrodynamic properties of the mutant enzymes.
[0057] A form of zymography can used to characterize the mature proteoglycan degrading enzyme and may be adapted for characterization of the mutants proteoglycan degrading polypeptides. Polyacrylamidc gels can be polymerized in the presence of aggrecan, a substrate for proteoglycan degrading molecules like chondroitinase ABC!. The mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides, enzyme samples, may be resolved on the aggrecan-impregnated gels by electrophoresis in the presence of SDS. The gels can then be *Trade mark subjected to a renaturation step wherein the SDS can be extracted and the enzymes allowed to refold. The refolded enzyme regains activity then digests aggrecan within the gel and the resulting loss of carbohydrate in that region of the gel that can be visualized by a carbohydrate-specific stain. A similar loss of carbohydrate in the gel would be expected for equally active forms and concentration of the mutant proteoglycan degrading molecules. In the case of recombinant Chondroitinase ABC', its activity can be visualized as a clear spot in the zymogram. The zymography results are consistent with the spectrophotometric analysis.
[00581 HPLC methods may be used for detecting the four and six sulphated disaccharides (A4DS and A6DS, respectively) liberated as a result of mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide digestion of CSPG. The two disaccharides can be effectively resolved by anion exchange chromatography. The HpLc assay for the quantitation of A4DS
and A6DS from chromatograms is expected to yield a linear relationship proportional to the amounts injected into the 1-IPLC. Production of A4DS and A6DS from CSPG
digestion is directly related to the amount of chondroitinase specific activity as determined by the spectrophotometric assay. This assay may be used as a sensitive and accurate method to independently quantitate A4DS and A6DS released by mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide digestion of a variety of substrates and may also be used to determine the activity of mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides and fusion proteins including them.
[00591 Another functional assay that can be performed to characterize mutant proteoglycan polypeptide activity is where dorsal root ganglian (DRG) neurons are plated on aggrecan or aggrecan treated with a deletion or substitution mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide It is expected that neurons plated on aggrecan will fail to adhere to the plate and extend axons. In contrast, neurons plated on aggrecan treated with a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide in a composition or as part of a fusion polypeptide would be expected to adhere to the surface and extend axons. The extensive axon growth, which is observed for chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO:37) is believed to be due to the digestion of the carbohydrates on the aggrecart core protein which creates a more permissive substrate for axon growth.
[0060] Various aspects of the invention may be understood with reference to the following non-limiting examples.
[00611 This prophetic example illustrates the diffusion of molecules into cells and tissue using a deletion or substitution mutant of a proteoglycan degrading polypeptide in a composition.
100621 A brain from an adult Sprague Dawley rat may be removed from the skull and hemispheres may be soaked in buffer alone or containing about 33U/ml of a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide such as (SEQ ID NO: 9) NA50 CA200 AC (T74-T50o) protein for 2 hours at 37 'C. Hemispheres can be rinsed and immediately placed in dye such as Eosin Y (Sigma) or a saturated solution of Congo Red (Sigma) in 70%
ethanol. Slabs of tissue may be cut and images acquired on a scanner. The penetration of the dyes into the brain tissue may be used as an indication of the proteoglycan degrading activity of a mutant proteoglycan degrading molecule and expectant penetration or diffusion of therapeutic and diagnostic molecules into the same type of tissue.
[0063] This prophetic example illustrates a Chondroitinase ABC I Assay Protocol which may be modified to measure the activity of a mutant proteoglycan degrading molecule, *Trade-rnark for example a Chondroitinase ABCI deletion mutant or a fusion proteins including a deletion and or substitution mutant of a proteoglycan degrading polypeptide.
[0064] The production of reaction products from the catalytic activity of a proteoglycan degrading molecule or fusion protein can be determined by a measurement of the absorbance of the proteoglycan degradation product at a wavelength of 232 nm, A typical reaction mixture consisted of 120 p.1 of reaction mixture (40mM Tris, pH 8.0, 40rnlVI
NaAcetate, 0.002% casein) combined with a substrate (5 pl of 50 mM chondroitin C (MW
521), chondroitin 6 SO4, or dermatan sulfate) and 1.5 RI of chondroitinase .ABCI (SEQ ID
NO:1) or a mutant of chondroitinase like (SEQ ID NO:2). Reaction mixture aliquots of about 120 l can be prepared at 30-37 C for 3 min or longer. The product formation is monitored as an increase in absorbance at 232 am as a function of time at a wavelength of 232 tun using a spectrometer, The reaction may be stopped by addition of 0.1%
SDS
followed by boiling for 5 minutes. The observed activity may be converted to units (pmoles of product formed per minute) using the molar absorption coefficient for the C4-05 double bond formed in the reaction (3800 ertilmin-1).
100651 Knowing the molar absorption coefficient for the reaction product, measuring the change in the absorbance of the reaction product at 232 nrn reading over time upon addition of a known amount of the Chondroitinase ABCI (SEQ ID NO:1) or other other mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide to the 120 pi reaction mixture with 0002%
casein and a chondroitin substrate added, the specific activity in umolimin/mg of the mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide can be determined. Seikagaku Chondroitinase ABC I
has a specific activity under these assay conditions of about 450 mole/min/mg.
[00661 A proteoglycan degrading molecule like Chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID
NO:37), digests axon growth inhibiting chondroitin present in CNS tissue and improves functional recovery in rats having contusion spinal cord injuries. It is reasonable to expect that mutants of proteoglycan degrading molecules, such as .(SEQ ID NO: 11) AC (T74-T426) polypeptide that show proteoglycan degrading activity may also show some regeneration of nerves, stimulate plasticity and be useful for diffusion of agents into tissues.
The mode of administration, the timing of administration and the dosage are carried out such that the functional recovery from impairment of the CNS is enhanced by the promotion of neurite outgrowth and plasticity. It is reasonable to expect that once the deletion or substitution mutants of proteoglycan degrading molecules such as (SEQ ID NO:
11) NASD
CA275 AC (T74-T426) protein are administered, the degradation of CSPGs can remove the inhibitory molecules in tissue that block drug diffusion, block neurite outgrowth, and promote the regeneration of neurites or other therapeutics into the affected area. The regeneration and plasticity of the nerve cells into the affected CNS area may allow the return of motor and sensory function. Clinically relevant improvements will range from a detectable improvement to a complete restoration of an impaired or lost nervous function, varying with the individual patients and injuries.
[0067] This example shows that deletion mutants of chondroitinase are biologically active.
[0068] Recombinantly produced chondroitinases AC and B have shown efficacy in vitro by overcoming the barrier of an inhibitory substrate border, such as aggrecan and result in neurite extension for rat cortical neurons. To facilitate effective transport of the above enzymes to the injury site, deletion mutants of these chondroitinase,s were prepared to determine the minimally-sized polypeptides capable of degrading CSPGs. The cleavage activity of all these mutants have been screened in vitro by zyrnographic assay using aggrecan as substrate. A truncated polypeptide of chondroitinase AC (nA50-c275) (SEQ
ID NO:11) lacking 50 and 275 arnino acids from the amino and carboxy terinini respectively having a molecular weight of 38 kDa compared to 75kDa of the full length protein was found to be about the minimal size mutant chondroitinase AC that retains activity as tested by zymography assay FIG. 4(B). However, an even smaller mutant, the deletion mutant of ehondroitinase B (nA 120-cA 120) (SEQ ID NO:1.7) lacking 120 amino acids from each of the amino and carboxy termini, having a molecular weight of 26 kDa compared to 52 kDa of the full length protein has also shown to retain activity as well in zyrnography assay FIG.
6(B), These and other even smaller deletion mutants could be used as potential therapeutics with lesser immunogenicity and similar or higher tissue penetration ability compared to the mature enzyme and may be used for treatment of spinal cord injury.
[00691 :/1. series of chondroitinase AC and B deletion mutants were generated by PCR using the full-length cDNAs for chondroitinases AC and 13 as templates and cloned in the pET15b expression vector at the NdeI and BamHI sites. Full length and deletion mutants were constructed with Histidine-tags for ease of detection and purification.
Each of these cDNAs was induced by Isopropyl-p-D-Thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG,) and the expression was confirmed by Western blotting using anti-His antibody (Novagen). FIG. 3(A) show various non-limiting deletion mutants schematically, and FIG 3(B) shows confirmation of expression of these chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptides by anti-histidine tag Western blotting. Figures 5 and 6 show the same information for chondroitinase B
deletions. Western blots demonstrate proteins of predicted size. Zymog;raphic PAGE of deletion mutants show intense bands of substrate digestion (light) and negative carbohydrate staining.
(00701 Zymography assay. SDS-polyacrylamide gels were poured with aggrecan (85 ,g/m1) polymerized into it. Crude extracts of deletion mutants of chondroitinases AC
and B were run and renatured at 37 C overnight. After separation the gel is incubated in 0.2% Cetylpyridinium for 90 minutes at room temperature. The digestion of the proteoglycans by the chondroitinases is visualized by staining the gel with 0.2% Toludene Blue in ethanol-H2O-acetic acid (50:49:1 v/v/v) for 30 minutes and destained with ethanol-H20-acetic acid (50:49:1 v/v/v). Following destaining the gel is incubated overnight in a 50 ug/m1 solution of Stains-all in 50% ethanol in the dark and destained with H20. Appearance of clear bands on the gel shows the digestion of carboyhydratcs by the chondroitinases of the CSFG leaving the core protein which remains unstained (FIG 4.and FIG. 6), [0071] This example describes the linking of a His tag to a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide.
[0072] Deletion mutants of the chondroitinase ABC I enzyme where the mutant is missing a certain number of amino acids from the N-terminal and maintains proteoglycan degrading activity can be generated (SEQ ID NO:2-4). These N-terminal deletion maintain a histidine-tag that is attached to the N-terminus; however similarly tagged full length chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO:1) did not maintain the histidine-tag after experession.
[0073] Catalytically active deletion mutants of chondroitinase ABC I can be prepared for example but not limited to deleting 20, and 60 amino acids respectively from the N-terminus of the mature ABC I protein as shown in FIG. 7, A mutant polypeptide with both N and C terminal deletions such as chondroitinase ABC I-NA60-C180 (SEQ ID
NO:4) can also be made, [0074] These chondroitinase deletion mutants and mutants of other proteoglycan degrading molecules may used for construction of N-terminal fusion chimeric protein. Assay tests with these fusion polypeptides for chondroitin degradation and may be used to determine the efficacy of mature ABC' versus various deletion mutant in compositions and fusion proteins with respect to the substrate specificity, substrate binding and tissue penetration. Functional assay that can be performed to characterize the activity of mutant proteoglycan polypeptide or fusion polypeptides including them. In this functional assay, dorsal root ganglian (DRG) neurons can be plated on aggrecan or aggrecan treated with a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide or a fusion polypeptide including the mutant. It is expected that neurons plated on aggrecan will failed to adhere to the plate and extend axons. In contrast, neurons plated on aggrecan treated with a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide or a fusion polypeptide including the mutant in a composition or as part of a fusion polypeptide would be expected to adhere to the surface and. extend axons. The extensive axon growth, which is observed for a chondroitinase like chondroitinase ABC I
(SEQ ID NO: 1 or 37) treated aggrecan substrate is believed to be due to the digestion of the carbohydrates on the aggrecan core protein which creates a more permissive substrate for axon growth.
[00751 This prophetic example describes a mutant of chondroitinase ABC I that has native protein structure, but lacks proteoglycan degrading catalytic activity.
[00761 This mutant may be prepared as a null or a negative control for bioassays and SCI studies. Based on the crystal structure of chondroitinase ABC I a site-specific mutant designated H5Ola and Y508a (SEQ ID NO: 36) to knock out catalytic activity in the putative active site can be prepared. Such mutants can be tested for inactivation of catalytic activity and SEC to compare to the wild-type enzyme. The null activity mutant can also be used to provide a negative control for the various proteoglycan degrading fusion proteins for use in bioassays and ultimately in SCI animal studies.
[0077] This example illustrates examples of mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides that include both substitution and deletions from polypeptides of the present invention.
[0078] The chondroitinase ABC I sequence (SEQ ID NO: 37) is a published sequence for a mature chondroitinase ABC I peptide and includes the leader sequence.
Chondroitinase ABC I sequence (SEQ ID NO: 37) is similar to (SEQ ID NO: I or 29), however (SEQ ID NO: 1) does not have the first 25 amino acids of (SEQ ID NO:
37), and amino acids at positions 154 and 195 of (SEQ ID NO: 37) differ from those (substitutions) found in similar positions when (SEQ ID NO: 1) and (SEQ ID NO: 37) are aligned.
[0079] (SEQ ID NO: 38-40) illustrate deletions from either the N or C terminal of the (SEQ ID NO: 37) polypeptide and substitutions relative to (SEQ ID NO: 1).
These mutant polypeptides are NA20 (SEQ ID NO: 38), NA60 (SEQ ID NO: 39) and NA60 (SEQ ID NO: 40).
[0080] This example illustrates non-limiting illustrations of mutant polypeptides of the present invention fused with a membrane transduction polypeptide such as but not limited to a polypeptide portion of a HIV TAT protein. Full sequence listings for the mutants fusion polypeptides are provided in the Sequence listing included in the specification.
[0081) A nucleotide sequence for TAT-chondroitinase ABCI-nzi.20 (SEQ ID NO.
41), a portion of which is illustrated below, shows the TAT sequence nucleotides highlighted by underlining linked to chondroitinase nucleotides.
1 gete gtaaaaagcg tcgtcaacgt cgtcgtcetc, ctcaatgcgc acaaaataac 61 ccattagcag acttctcatc agataaaaac tcaatactaa cgttatctga taaacgtagc [00821 The underlined nucleotides in this portion of the nucleic acid sequence denote a TAT sequence attached to the 5' of chondroitinase ABC I-N620 nucleic acid (SEQ
II) NO. 47).
[00831 An amino acid sequence for TAT-chondroitinase ABC1-n6,20 (SEQ II) NO.
42), a portion of which is shown below, illustrates the TAT sequence amino acids highlighted by underlining at the N-terminus of chondroitinase ABCI-NA20 (SEQ II) NO, 2), grkktrqrnppqcaqnnpladfssdknsiltlsdkrsimgnqsllwlcwkggssftlhlddivptdkeaskawgrsstp vfsfwly nekpidgyltidfgeklistseticiagfkvkldftgwrtvgvslnndlenremtlnatntssdgtqdsigrslgalcv dsirilcapsnvsq geiy 100841 A nucleotide sequence for TAT-A13CI-NtS60 (SEQ ID NO. 43), a portion of which is illustrated below, shows the N-terminal TAT (SEQ ID NO. 49) nucleotides highlighted by underlining.
gatcgtanaaagotcgtcaacatcgtcgtcetcctcaatgctitactttacataaaaaactgattgtccccaccgataa agaageatcta aagcatggggacgcteatccacccecgMtetcattttggattacaatgaaaaaccgattgatggttatettactatcga tttcgg [0085] Amino acid sequence for TAT-ABCI-nA60 (SEQ ID NO. 44) a portion of which is shown below, illustrates the TAT sequence (SEQ ID NO. 50) highlighted by underlining at the N-terminus of chondroitinase ABC I -NA60 (SEQ ID NO. 3).
grkkrrqrrrppneftlhIcklivptdkeaskawgrsstpvfsfwlynekpidgyltidfgeklistscaqagfkvkld ftgwrtvgvsl nndlenremtinatritssdgtqdsigrslgalcvdsirfkapsnvsqgeiyidrirnfsvdciaryqwsdyqvktrls epeiqf....
[0086] Nucleotide sequence for ABCI-TAT-C (SEQ ID NO. 45), a portion of which is illustrated below, shows the C-terminal TAT sequence nucleotides highlighted by underlining. The stop codon from chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO. 28) was replaced by the TAT sequence and was placed at the 3' end of the TAT sequence.
...gattaatggcaaatggcaatctgctgataaaaatagtgaagtgaaatatcaggtttctggtgataacactgaactg acgtttacgagtt actttggtattccacaagaaateaaactctcgecacte cct ggl eel ti a ',1:1; ty,cgtezte gtcetegte etecte c:tag [00871 Amino acid sequence for ABCI-TAT-C (SEQ ID NO. 46), a portion of which is shown below, illustrates the TAT sequence, highlighted by underlining, linked to the chondroitinase polypeptide at the C-tenninus of the mature chondroitinase ABC
I (SEQ ID
NO. 1).
...aekvnvsrqhqvsaenkrirqptegnfssawidhstipkdasyeynivfldatpekingemaqkfrermglyqvir kcilcdvhi ildldsnvtgyafyqpasiedkwildoinkpaivmthrqkdtlivsavtpdlnmtrqkaatpvtinvtinglcwqsadk nsevkyq vsgdnteltftsyfgipqeiklsplpgrkkrrqrappqc [00881 This example illustrates the sequence of chondroitinase nucleic acid and polypeptides which may be used for deletions or substitutions in mutants of the present invention. In these sequence, discrepancies from published sequences are highlighted in bold text at both the nucleotide level and at the amino acid level. These are illustrative of substitutions in the present invention.
SEQ ID NO: 26 Present invention Chondroitinase ABC II Nucleic acid >_ ABC II mature 2973 nt ye.
>_ ABC II (preeent invention) 2974 nt scoring matrix: gap penalties: -12/-2 99.0% identity; ' Global alignment ecore: 11684 ..................................................... E = ..
TTACCCACTCTGTCTCATGAAGCTTTCGGCOATATTTATCTTTTTGAAGGCGAATTACCC
AATATCCTTACCACTTCAAATAATAATCAATTATCGCTAAGCAAACAGCATGCTAAAGAT
.............................................................. z GGTGAACAATCACTCAMTGGCARTATCAACCACAAGCAACATTAACACTAAATAATATT
..
GTTAATTACCAAGATCATAAAAATACAGCCACACCACTCACTTTTATGATGTGGATTTAT
_ , AATGAAAAACCTCAATCTTC CC CATTAACGTTAGCATTTAAACAAAATAATAAAATTGCA
_ ........................................... : ...............
CTAAGTTTTAATGCTGAACTTPATTTTACtIGGGTGGCGAGGTATTGCTGTTCCTTTTCGT
_ 806559 GATATGCAAGGCTCTGTGACAGGTCAACTTGATCAATTAGTGATCACCGCTCCAAACCAtk ¨
GATATGCAAGGCTCTGCGACAGGTCAACTTGATCAATTAGTGATCACCGCTCCAAACCAA
............................................ t ..............
_ GCCGGAACACTCYTTTTTGATCAAATCATCATGAGTGTACCGTTAGACAATCGTTGOGCA
806559 GTACCTGACTATCAAACACCTTACGTAAAMACGCAGTAAACACGATGaTTAGTAAAAAC
GTACCTGACTATCAAACACCTTACGTAAATAACGCAGTAAACACGATGGTTAGTAAAAAC
¨
806559 TaGAGTGCATTATTGATC4TACGATCAGATGTTTCAAGCCCATT1CCCTACTTTAAACTTC
................................................ t ........... I
TGGAGTGCATTATTGATGTACGATCAGATGTTTCAAGCCCATTACCCTACTTTAAACTTC
_ ..................................................... s I s s _ GATACTGAATTTCGCGATGACCAAACAGAAATGGCTTCGATTTATCAGCGCTTTGAATAT
806559 TATCAAGGAATTCGTAGTQATAAAAAAATTACTCCAC3ATATGCTAOAT2V.ACATTTAGCA
......................... 1 .................. I
TATCAAGGAATTCGTAGTGATAAAAAAATTACTCCAGA.TATOCTAGATAAACATTTAGCG
_ CA 3025063 2018 ¨11 ¨23 TTATGGGAAAAATTGGGGIVAACACAACACGCTGATGGCTCAATCACAGGARAAGCCCTT
...
GATCACCCTAACCGGCAACATTTTATGAAAGTCGAAGGTGTATTTAGTGAGGGGACTCAA
_ _ 806559 ATTTACTTGCGTAGCGATTC.ATTATCAGCAACTGATAGAAAAAAATTA.GAAGAQCGCTAT
ATTTACTTGCGTAGCGATTCATTATCACICAACTSGTAGAAAAAAATTAGAAGAGCOCTAT
_ 806559 TTATTAGGTACTCGTTATOTCCTTGAA.CAAGGTMCACCGAGGAAGTGGTTATCAAATT
_ . . . .
_ ATTACTCATGTTGGTTACCAAACCAGAGAACTTITTGATGCATGGTTTATTGGCCGTCAT
......................................... I .................
GTTCTTGCATAA(.:CTITTAGCCCCCACTCA.ACAAGCTATGATGTGGTACAACGCC
_ 806559 ACAGGACGTATTTTTGWAAAATAATGAAATTGTTGATGCAAATGTCGA.TATTCTCAAT
................................... I ........................
_ ACAGGACGTATTTTTGAAAAACATAATGAAATTOTTGATGCAAATQTCGATATTCTCAAT
I : ........................... :
_ ACTCAATTGCAATGGATGATAAAAAGCTTATTGATGCTACCGGATTATCANCAACGTCAA
............................ g ..............................
CAAGCCTTAGCGCAACTGCAAAOTTGGCTAAhTAAAACCATTCTAAGCTCAAAAGGTGTT
., GC TO0C3GTTTCAIWrCTGATGGTTCTAT TTTTCACCATTCACAACATTACCCCGCTTAT
806559 GCTAAAGAT0CATTTGGTGOTTTAGCACCCAGT0TTTAT0CATTAAGTGArrCACCTTTT
GCTAAAGATGCATTTGOTGGTTTAGCACCCAGTGTTTATOCATTAAGTGATTCACCITIT
COCTTATCTACTTCAGCACATGAGCATTTAAAAGATCTTTTGTTAAAAATGCGGATCTAC
ACCAAAGAGACACAPIATTCCTGTGOTATTAAGTGOITCGTCATCCAACTGGGTTGCATAAA.
806559 ATAGG'GATCGCGCCATTTAAATGGATGOCATTAGCAGGAACCCCAGATGGCAAACAAAAG
ATAGGGATCGCGCCATTTAAATOGATGGCATTAGCAGGAACCCCAGATOGCAAACPAAAG
TTACATACCACATTATCCOCCGCTTATOCAAACTTAGACAACAAAACGCMITTMAGGC
ATTAACGCTGAAAGTGAGCCAZTCGGCGCATGGGCAATGAATTATGCATCAATCGMATA
g : g ...................................................
CAACGAAGAGCATCGACCCAATCACCACAACAAAGCMGCTC0CCATACCGC0C0G7rrr = ............ g t .. I
1870 1880 1890 1.900 1910 1920 GGATOGGATTGRAATAGATATCCAGGTACAACAACTATTCATCTTCCCTATAACGAACTT
....
GARGCRAAACTTAATCAATTACCTOCTGCAGOTATTGAAGAAATOTTGCTTTCAACAGAA
_ ................................. 2 ................... t , AGTTACTCTGGTaCAAATACCCTTAATAATAACAGTATGTTTGCCATGAAATTACACGGT
_ ................................... 2 .......................
CACAGTAAATATCAACAACAAAGCTTAAGGGCAAATAAATCCTATTTCTTATTTGAMAT _ AGAGTTATTOCTTTAGGCTCAGGTATTGAAAATGATGATAAACAACATACOACCGAFACA
_ _ AATCAATTAGATACTCAATTAACTTTAAATAATGCAGA.TACATTAATTGATCCIVCCGGC
_ 1 ........................ 1 .................... 1 I : :
AATTTATATAACCTCACTAAAGGACAAACTGTAAAATTTAMTATCAAAAACAACATTCA
.......................................... t ................
CTTGATGATAGAAATTCAMACCAACAGINACAATTATTTGCAACAGCTGTTATTTCTCAT
806559 GGTAAGGCACCGAGTAATGAAAATTATGAATATGC.AATAGCTATCGAAGCACAAAATAAT
. = . . , . .............. , . , . . . . . . . ¨ . . . .................. . õ
. . .
GGTAAGGCACCGAGTAATOArIAATLATCAATATOCAATAGCTATCCIAACICACAAAATAAY
, : . . = t . t .................
AAAGCTCCCAAATACACAGTATTACAACATAATGAT CAGCTCCATGCGOTAAAAGATAAA
ATAACCCArsCAAGAGGGATATOOTTTTTTTGAAGCCACTAAGTTAAAATCAGCGGATGC
AACATTATTATCCAGTGATGCGCCOGTTATGGT CATGGCTAAAATACAAAATCAGCAATT
AACATTAAGTATTGTTAATCCTGATTTAAATTTATATCAAGGTAGAGGATCAATT
TGATGATAAAGGTAATCAAATCGAAGTTAGTGTTTATTCTCGTCATTGGCTTACAGCAGA
ATCGCAATCAACAAATAGTACTATTACCGTAAAAGGAATATGGAAATTAACGACACCTCA
ACCCGGTGTTATTATTAAGCACCACAATAACAACACTCTTATTACOACAACAACCATACA
GGCAACACCTACTGTTATTAATTTAGTTAAGTAA
The above discrepancies, bold text, at the nucleotide level resulted in 98.3%
identity at the amino acid level and the substituted residues are marked in bold text in the following.
SEQ ID NO: 27 Present Invention Chondroitinase ABC U protein ABC (present invention) 990 aa vs.
ABC (mature) 990 aa 0-joring matrix: , gap penalties: -12/-2 98.3% identity; Global alignment score: 6393 _ LPTLSHEAFGDIYLFEGELPNTLTTSNNNOLKISKQHAKDGEQSLKWOWPQATLTINN/
.................................................. ; .......
_ VNYQDOKNTATPLTFMMWIYNEXPQ8SPLTLA5'KONNICIALSFRAELMFTGWRGIAVPER
70 80 90 , 100 110 120 : .................................... s ..............
¨
WSALLMYDQMFQAHYPTIAFDTEFRDDQTRMASRYORFEYYWIRSOKKTTPDMIOKHLA
¨
LWEKLVIITQHADWITGKALDHPNRQHFMKVEGVFSRGTQKALLDANMLRDVGKTLIJQTA
¨
_ VIJAMILLAPTQQAMMWYNATGRIFEKNNEIVDANVDILNTQLQWMIKKILMLPDYQQRQ
¨
.......................... 1 ................................ ..
¨
QALAQLQRWLNKTILSSKGVAGGFKSDCISIFlinSQHYPAYAKDAFGGLAZSVYALSDSPF
1 tt:t:tt ............................................
RLSTSMIERLKDVLLICMRIYTKETQIPAVLSGREPTGLHICIGIAPFKWMALAGTPDGICQK
......................... 1 .... t ....................... 1.=
¨
........................................ t .................. :
SRYLVGNESYENNNRYGRYDQYGOLEIIPADLTOSOPSHAOWDWNRYPOTTTIMPYNEL
_ RVIALGSGIENDDKOTTETTLFQFAVPKI4SVIINGKKVNOLDTQLTLNN1\DTLIDPAG
_ NLYKITKGQTVKFSYQKQHSLDORNSKPTEQLFATAVISHGKAPSNENYEYAIAIEAQNN
_ KAPEYTVLOUNDOPHAVKDKITOBEGYAFFEATKIIKSADATLIASEMPVMVMAKIWQQL
_ .850 660 870 880 890 900 _ TLSIVNPDLNLYQGREKEWDOKGNQIEVSINSRHWLTAESQSTNSTITVKOTWKLTTPQ
............... 1 ................
_ PGVIIKHENNITTLITTTTIOATPTVINLVK
SEQ ID NO: 28 Present Invention Chondroitinase ABC 1 nucleic acid ... ABCI present invention 2994 nt vs.
.... ABCI mature 2994 nt scoring matrix: , gap penalties; -12/-Z
99.7% identity; , Global alignment score: 11909 GCCACCAOCAATCCTGCATTTGATCCTAAVATCTGATGCAGTCAGAAATTTACCATTTT
_ .................................................. : .......
_ GCACAAAATAACCCATTAGCAGACTTCTCATCAGATAAAAACTCAATACTAACGTTATCT
..................................................... : .....
GATAAAcGTAGCATTATGGGAAACCAATCTCTTTTATGGAAATGOAAAGGTGGTAGTAGC _ TTTACTTTACATAAAAAACTGATTGTCCCCACCGATAAAGAAGCATCTAAAGCATGGOGA _ _ COCTCATCTACCCCCGTTTTCTCATTTTGOCTTTACAATGAAAAACCGATTGATGGTTAT
CTTACTATCGATTTaIGAGAAAAACTCATTTCARCCAGTGAGGCTCAGGCAGGCTTTAAA
_ 310 320 330 340 350 360 , ; ............................................................
_ GTAAAATTAGATTTCACTGGCTGGCGTGCTOTGGGAGTCTCTTTAAATAACGATCTTGAA
AATCGAGAGATGACCTTAAATOCAACCAATACCTCCTCTGATGOTACTCAAGACAGCATT _ _ GGGCGTTCTTTAGGTGCTAAAGTCGATAGTATTCGTTTTAAAMGCCTTCTAATGTGAGT
' CAGGGTGAAATCTATATCGACCGTATTATGTTTTCTGTCGATGATOCTCGCTACCAATGG
_ 806559 TCTGATTATCAAnTAAAAACTCGCTTATCAGAACCTGAAATTCAATTTCACAACGTAAAG
_ TCTGATTATCAAOTAAAAACTCGCTTATCAGAACCTGAAATTCAATTTCACAACGTAAAG
_ CCACAACTACCTGTAACACCTGAAAATTTAGOGGCCATTGATCTTATTCGCCAACGTCTA
ATTAATGAATTTOTCOCIAMTGAAAAAGAGACAAACCTCGCATTAGARGAGAATATCAGC _ 806559 WaTAAAAAGTGATTT CGATGCTCTIAATACTCACACTTTAGCAAATGGTGGAACG CAA
¨
AAATTAMAAGTGATTTCGATGCTeTTAATATTCACACTTTAGCAAATGGTOGAACGCAA
GGCAGACATCTGATCACTGATAA/XCAAATCATTATTTATCAACCAGAGAATCTTAACTCC
_ .............. e ...........................................
_ MAGATAAACAACTATTTGATAATTATGTTATTTTAGGTAATTACACGACATTAATGTTT
AATATTAGCCGTGC TTATGTG CTGGPGATCCCACACAAAAGGCGCAACTAAAGCAG
_ 806559 ATGTACTTATTAATGACAAAGCATTTATTAGATCAAGGCTTTGTTAAAGGGAGTGCTTTA.
_ _ GTGACAB; CCCAT
CAC TOGGGATACAG TTCT C GTTGGTGGTATATTT C CACGTTATTAATG
................... 1= . e .............................
TCTGATOCACTAAAAGAMICGAACCTACAAACTCAACTTIATGIATTCATTACTGTGGTAT
.....
_ TCACGTGAGTTTAAAAGTAGTTTTGATATGAAAGTAAGTGCTGATAGCTCTGATCTAGAT
.............................................. 1 ...........
TATTTCAATACCTTATCTCGCCAACATTTAGCCrTATTATTACTAGAGCCTGATGATCAA
_ .................................................... s t ..
AAGCGTATCAACTTAGTTAATACTTTCAGCCATTATATCACTGGCGCATTAACOCAAGTO
1.330 1.340 1350 1360 1370 1380 CCACCGCGTOGTAAAGATGGTTTACGCCCTGATGGTACAGCATGGCGACATOAAGGCMC
_ TATCCGGGCTACTCTTTCCCAGCCITMAAAATGCCTCTCAGCTIATTTATTTATTACGC
_ 1450 1460 1470 1.480 1490 1500 3.510 1520 1530 1540 1550 1560 ................................................. ; ........
GATACACCATTTTCAGTGGOTGARAGTGGTTOGAATAACCTOAAAAAACCGATGGTTTCA
_ t3CGTOCIATCTACAGTA'ATCCAGAACTTGGATTACCGCTTGCAGOAAGACACCCTTTTAAC _ 1570 1580 1590 1600 3.610 1620 _ TCAC
CTTCGTTAMATCACTCGCTCAAGGCTATTACTGGCTTGCCATGTOTGCAAAATCA
TCGCCTGATAMACACTTGCATCTATTTATCTTOCGATTAGTGAMAAACACAMATGAA
¨
1690 1700 1710 1720 1730 1.740 ............................. z . t ...................
TCAACTGCTATTTTTGOAGAAACTATTACACCAGCGTCTTTACCTCAAGGTTTCTATGCC
_ TTTAATOGCOGTGCTTTTGGTATTCATCGTTGGCAACIATRAAATOGTGACACTGAAAGCT
_ TATAACACCAATOTTTGOTCATCTGAAATTTATAACAAAGATAACCGTTATGGCCGTTAC
¨
CA 3025063 2018 ¨11 ¨23 CAAAGTCATGGTOTCGCT CAAATAGTGAGTAATGGCTCGCA.GCTTTCACAGGGCTATCAG
-...................... : ...................................
CAAGAAGGTTGOGATTGOAATAGAATGCAAGGGCCA.ACCACTATTCACCTTCCTOTTAAA _ -: ....
ACATCATCCCTTGAAGGTC.AATATCGCATGATGGCATTCGATCTTA.TTTATCCCGCCAAT
_ CTTOACICGTTTTGATCCTAATTTCACTOCGAAAPAGAGTGTATTAGCCGCTGATAATCAC
-..................................... t ....................
TTAATTTTTATTGGTAGCAATATAAATAGTAGTOATAAAAATAAAAATGTTGAAACCACC _ -TTATTCCAACATGCCATTACTCCAPLCATTIVIATACCCTTTGGATTAATCGACAAAAGATA
CAAAACATCCCTTA.TCMACAACACTTCAACAAGOTGATTGGTTAATTGATAGCAATGGC
2350 2360 2370 ' 2380 2390 2400 AATGGTTACTTAATTACTCA A.GCAOAAAAAOTAAATGTAAGTCGCCAACATCAGGTTTCA
...
........................................... 3 ..............
, .................. t .................... t ...............
AGCACTCGCCCCAAAGATGCCAGTTATGAGTATATGGTCTTTTTAGATGCGACACCTGAA
AMATGCIGAGAGATGGCACAMAATTCCGTOAAAATAATOGGTTATATCAGGTTCTTCGT
2'590 2600 2610 2620 2630 2640 AAGGATAAAGACGTTCATATTATTCTCGATAAACTCAGCAATGTAACOGGATATGCCTTT
................................... . = r TATCAGCCAGCATCAATTGAWACAPATGOATCP.AAPAGGTTAATAAACCTGCAATTGTO
.......................................................... : .. .
ATGACTCATCGACAAAAAGACACTCTTATTGTCAGTGCACITTACACCTGATTTAAATATG
ACTCGCCAAMAGCAGMACTCCTGTCACCATCAATOTCACCIATTJNATGGCAAATGGCAA.
TCTGCTGATAMAATAGTGAAGTGAAATATCAGGTTTCTGGTGATAACACTGAACTGACG
806559 TTTACGAGTTACTTIGGTATTCCACAAGAARTCAAP.CTCTCGCCACTCCCTTGA
TTTACGAGTTACTTTGGTATTCCACAAGAAATCAAACTCTCGCCACTCCCTTGA
The sequence identity at the amino acid level is shown below:
SEQ ID NO: 29 Present Invention Chondroitinase ABC I protein ABC' Present Invention 997 aa vs.
>__ABC1 mature 997 aa scoring matrix: , gap penalties: -12/-2 99.5% identity; Global alignment score: 6595 ATSNPAFDPKNLMOSEIYHFAQNNPLADFSSDKNSILTLSDKRSIMGNQSLLWKWKGGSS
- FTLHKKLIVPIDKEASKAWGRSSTPVFSFWLYNEKPIDGYLTIDFGEKLISTSEAQAGFK
- VKLDFTGVVRAVGVSLNNDLENREMTLNATNTSSDGTQDSIGRSLGAKVDSIRFKAPSNVS
QGEIYIDRIMFSVDDARYQWSDYQVKIRLSEPEIQFHNVKPQLPVTPENLAAIDLIRQRL
INEFVGGEKETNLALEENISKLKSDFDALNIHTLANGGTQGRHLITDKQIIIYQPENLNS
QDKQLFDNYVILGNYTTLMFNISRAYVLEKDPTQKAQLKQMYLLMTKHLLDQGFVKGSAL
VTIFIHWGYSSRWWYISTLIASDALKEANLQTQWDSLLWYSREFKSSFDIVIKVSADSSIDLD
365019 YFNILSRQHLALLILEPODQKRINLVNTFSHYITGALTQVPPGGI<DGLRPDGTAWRHEGN
_ YFNITLSRQHLALLLLEPDIDQKRININNTFSHYITGALTQVPPGGKDGLRPEDGTAWRHEGN
_ YPGYSFPAFKNASQUYLLRDTPFSVGESGWNNLKKAMVSAWIYSNPEVGLPLAGRHPFN
SPSLKSVAQGYYWLAMSAKSSPDKTLASIYLAISDKTQNESTAIFGETITPASLPQGFYA
_ _ FNGGAFGIHRWQDKMVTLKAYNTNVWSSEIYNKDNRYGRYQSHGVAQIVSNGSQLSQGYQ
QEGWDWNRMQGATTIHLPLKDLIOSPKPFITLMQRGERGFSGTSSLEGQYGMMAFDLIYPAN
_ LERFDPNFTAKKSVLAADNHLIFIGSNINSSDKNKNVETTIFQRAITPTLNTLWINGQKI
ENMPYQTTLQQGDWLIDSNGNGYLITQAEKVNVSRQHQVSAENKNRQPTEGNFSSAWIDH
STRPKDASYEYMVFLDATPEKMGEMAQKFRENNGLYQVLRKDKDVHIILDKLSNVTGYAF
YQPASIEDKWIKKVNKPAIVMTHRQKDTLIVSAVTPDLNMTRQKAATPVTINVTINGKWQ
SADKNSEVKYQVSGDNTELTFTSYFGIPQEIKLSPLP
REFERENCES
1. Fethiere 1, Eggimann B, Cygler M (1999) Crystal structure of chortdroitin AC lyase, a representative of a family of glycosaminoglycan degrading enzymes.
J Mol Biol, 288:635-47.
2. Pojasek K, Shriver Z, Kiley, P Venkataraman G and Sasisekharan R.
(2001) Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 286:343-51.
3. Huang W, Matte A, Li Y, Kim YS, Linhardt RJ, Su H, Cygler M.
(1999) Crystal structure of chondroitinase B from Flavobacterium heparinum and its complex with a disaccharide product at 1.7 A resolution. I Mol Biol. 294:1257-69.
4. Miura RO, Yamagata S. Miura Y, Harada T and Yamagata T. (1995) Anal Biochern. 225:333-40.
5. Yamagata T, Saito H, Habuchi 0 and Suzuki S. (1968)3 Biol Chem.
243:1536-42.
[00891 Although the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, other versions are possible.
Therefore the spirit and scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description and the preferred versions contain within this specification.
[00541j The regeneration of the nerve cells and restoration of plasticity in the affected CNS area allows the return of motor and sensory function. Clinically relevant improvement will range from a detectable improvement to a complete restoration of an impaired or lost nervous function, varying with the individual patients and injuries. The degree of functional recovery can be demonstrated by improved corticospinal tract conduction, improved tape removal, beam walking, grid walking and paw placement following chondroitinase treatment of a dorsal column lesion. Motor skill improvement as well as autonomic function: bowel, bladder, sensory and sexual function may also be used as measures of function improvement and related to molecular structure and components in the compositions of the present invention.
[0055] A series of polynucleotides that include coding for deletion or substition mutants of protedglycan degrading polyp eptides may be generated by PCR using the full length cDNAs for the proteoglycans as templates and cloned into an expression vector such as pET15b at the NdeI and Barcilli sites for expression in E. Coli. After induction of gene expression with isopropyl-13-D-thiogalactopyranoside (TTG), the bacteria can lysed by sonication with the concomitant extraction of the mutant polypeptide with a surfactant such as Trito;X-I14/PBS. The majority of recombinant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide may be found in the cytosolic fraction of the bacterial cell lysate and chondroitinase purification protocols can be used to obtain the mutant proteoglycan degrading enzyme with high activity *Trade-mark at high yields. This protocol may include purification by a column having anti-His antibody to selectively bind His-tagged mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides and may also includes cation-exchange chromatography as a capture step and gel filtration as a polishing step. After these steps, anion exchange membrane filtration, for example Intercept Q, Millipore, can be used for endotoxin and host DNA removal. Following filtration, the proteoglycan degrading mutant polypeptides can be dialyzed into volatile buffer, pH 8.0 and lyophilized to dryness. The final product is expected to be stable at -70 C
for long term storage. The pI of the purified basic proteoglycan degrading mutant polypeptide may be determined by IEF-PAGE analysis of the samples from the crude cell lysate.
[00561 A variety of analytical methods can be used to compare the enzymatic activity of the recombinant version the deletion or substitution mutants of proteoglycan degrading polypeptides with those of full length proteoglycan degrading molecules like chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO: 37) or a commercially available form of the enzyme.
The methods may also be adapted to evaluate the activity of fusion proteins including a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide portion. Specific activity measurements may be obtained using an accepted spectrophotometric assay that measures the change in absorbance due to the production of reaction products from the degradation of proteoglycans. Size exclusion chromatography can be used to compare the hydrodynamic properties of the mutant enzymes.
[0057] A form of zymography can used to characterize the mature proteoglycan degrading enzyme and may be adapted for characterization of the mutants proteoglycan degrading polypeptides. Polyacrylamidc gels can be polymerized in the presence of aggrecan, a substrate for proteoglycan degrading molecules like chondroitinase ABC!. The mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides, enzyme samples, may be resolved on the aggrecan-impregnated gels by electrophoresis in the presence of SDS. The gels can then be *Trade mark subjected to a renaturation step wherein the SDS can be extracted and the enzymes allowed to refold. The refolded enzyme regains activity then digests aggrecan within the gel and the resulting loss of carbohydrate in that region of the gel that can be visualized by a carbohydrate-specific stain. A similar loss of carbohydrate in the gel would be expected for equally active forms and concentration of the mutant proteoglycan degrading molecules. In the case of recombinant Chondroitinase ABC', its activity can be visualized as a clear spot in the zymogram. The zymography results are consistent with the spectrophotometric analysis.
[00581 HPLC methods may be used for detecting the four and six sulphated disaccharides (A4DS and A6DS, respectively) liberated as a result of mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide digestion of CSPG. The two disaccharides can be effectively resolved by anion exchange chromatography. The HpLc assay for the quantitation of A4DS
and A6DS from chromatograms is expected to yield a linear relationship proportional to the amounts injected into the 1-IPLC. Production of A4DS and A6DS from CSPG
digestion is directly related to the amount of chondroitinase specific activity as determined by the spectrophotometric assay. This assay may be used as a sensitive and accurate method to independently quantitate A4DS and A6DS released by mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide digestion of a variety of substrates and may also be used to determine the activity of mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides and fusion proteins including them.
[00591 Another functional assay that can be performed to characterize mutant proteoglycan polypeptide activity is where dorsal root ganglian (DRG) neurons are plated on aggrecan or aggrecan treated with a deletion or substitution mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide It is expected that neurons plated on aggrecan will fail to adhere to the plate and extend axons. In contrast, neurons plated on aggrecan treated with a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide in a composition or as part of a fusion polypeptide would be expected to adhere to the surface and extend axons. The extensive axon growth, which is observed for chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO:37) is believed to be due to the digestion of the carbohydrates on the aggrecart core protein which creates a more permissive substrate for axon growth.
[0060] Various aspects of the invention may be understood with reference to the following non-limiting examples.
[00611 This prophetic example illustrates the diffusion of molecules into cells and tissue using a deletion or substitution mutant of a proteoglycan degrading polypeptide in a composition.
100621 A brain from an adult Sprague Dawley rat may be removed from the skull and hemispheres may be soaked in buffer alone or containing about 33U/ml of a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide such as (SEQ ID NO: 9) NA50 CA200 AC (T74-T50o) protein for 2 hours at 37 'C. Hemispheres can be rinsed and immediately placed in dye such as Eosin Y (Sigma) or a saturated solution of Congo Red (Sigma) in 70%
ethanol. Slabs of tissue may be cut and images acquired on a scanner. The penetration of the dyes into the brain tissue may be used as an indication of the proteoglycan degrading activity of a mutant proteoglycan degrading molecule and expectant penetration or diffusion of therapeutic and diagnostic molecules into the same type of tissue.
[0063] This prophetic example illustrates a Chondroitinase ABC I Assay Protocol which may be modified to measure the activity of a mutant proteoglycan degrading molecule, *Trade-rnark for example a Chondroitinase ABCI deletion mutant or a fusion proteins including a deletion and or substitution mutant of a proteoglycan degrading polypeptide.
[0064] The production of reaction products from the catalytic activity of a proteoglycan degrading molecule or fusion protein can be determined by a measurement of the absorbance of the proteoglycan degradation product at a wavelength of 232 nm, A typical reaction mixture consisted of 120 p.1 of reaction mixture (40mM Tris, pH 8.0, 40rnlVI
NaAcetate, 0.002% casein) combined with a substrate (5 pl of 50 mM chondroitin C (MW
521), chondroitin 6 SO4, or dermatan sulfate) and 1.5 RI of chondroitinase .ABCI (SEQ ID
NO:1) or a mutant of chondroitinase like (SEQ ID NO:2). Reaction mixture aliquots of about 120 l can be prepared at 30-37 C for 3 min or longer. The product formation is monitored as an increase in absorbance at 232 am as a function of time at a wavelength of 232 tun using a spectrometer, The reaction may be stopped by addition of 0.1%
SDS
followed by boiling for 5 minutes. The observed activity may be converted to units (pmoles of product formed per minute) using the molar absorption coefficient for the C4-05 double bond formed in the reaction (3800 ertilmin-1).
100651 Knowing the molar absorption coefficient for the reaction product, measuring the change in the absorbance of the reaction product at 232 nrn reading over time upon addition of a known amount of the Chondroitinase ABCI (SEQ ID NO:1) or other other mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide to the 120 pi reaction mixture with 0002%
casein and a chondroitin substrate added, the specific activity in umolimin/mg of the mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide can be determined. Seikagaku Chondroitinase ABC I
has a specific activity under these assay conditions of about 450 mole/min/mg.
[00661 A proteoglycan degrading molecule like Chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID
NO:37), digests axon growth inhibiting chondroitin present in CNS tissue and improves functional recovery in rats having contusion spinal cord injuries. It is reasonable to expect that mutants of proteoglycan degrading molecules, such as .(SEQ ID NO: 11) AC (T74-T426) polypeptide that show proteoglycan degrading activity may also show some regeneration of nerves, stimulate plasticity and be useful for diffusion of agents into tissues.
The mode of administration, the timing of administration and the dosage are carried out such that the functional recovery from impairment of the CNS is enhanced by the promotion of neurite outgrowth and plasticity. It is reasonable to expect that once the deletion or substitution mutants of proteoglycan degrading molecules such as (SEQ ID NO:
11) NASD
CA275 AC (T74-T426) protein are administered, the degradation of CSPGs can remove the inhibitory molecules in tissue that block drug diffusion, block neurite outgrowth, and promote the regeneration of neurites or other therapeutics into the affected area. The regeneration and plasticity of the nerve cells into the affected CNS area may allow the return of motor and sensory function. Clinically relevant improvements will range from a detectable improvement to a complete restoration of an impaired or lost nervous function, varying with the individual patients and injuries.
[0067] This example shows that deletion mutants of chondroitinase are biologically active.
[0068] Recombinantly produced chondroitinases AC and B have shown efficacy in vitro by overcoming the barrier of an inhibitory substrate border, such as aggrecan and result in neurite extension for rat cortical neurons. To facilitate effective transport of the above enzymes to the injury site, deletion mutants of these chondroitinase,s were prepared to determine the minimally-sized polypeptides capable of degrading CSPGs. The cleavage activity of all these mutants have been screened in vitro by zyrnographic assay using aggrecan as substrate. A truncated polypeptide of chondroitinase AC (nA50-c275) (SEQ
ID NO:11) lacking 50 and 275 arnino acids from the amino and carboxy terinini respectively having a molecular weight of 38 kDa compared to 75kDa of the full length protein was found to be about the minimal size mutant chondroitinase AC that retains activity as tested by zymography assay FIG. 4(B). However, an even smaller mutant, the deletion mutant of ehondroitinase B (nA 120-cA 120) (SEQ ID NO:1.7) lacking 120 amino acids from each of the amino and carboxy termini, having a molecular weight of 26 kDa compared to 52 kDa of the full length protein has also shown to retain activity as well in zyrnography assay FIG.
6(B), These and other even smaller deletion mutants could be used as potential therapeutics with lesser immunogenicity and similar or higher tissue penetration ability compared to the mature enzyme and may be used for treatment of spinal cord injury.
[00691 :/1. series of chondroitinase AC and B deletion mutants were generated by PCR using the full-length cDNAs for chondroitinases AC and 13 as templates and cloned in the pET15b expression vector at the NdeI and BamHI sites. Full length and deletion mutants were constructed with Histidine-tags for ease of detection and purification.
Each of these cDNAs was induced by Isopropyl-p-D-Thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG,) and the expression was confirmed by Western blotting using anti-His antibody (Novagen). FIG. 3(A) show various non-limiting deletion mutants schematically, and FIG 3(B) shows confirmation of expression of these chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptides by anti-histidine tag Western blotting. Figures 5 and 6 show the same information for chondroitinase B
deletions. Western blots demonstrate proteins of predicted size. Zymog;raphic PAGE of deletion mutants show intense bands of substrate digestion (light) and negative carbohydrate staining.
(00701 Zymography assay. SDS-polyacrylamide gels were poured with aggrecan (85 ,g/m1) polymerized into it. Crude extracts of deletion mutants of chondroitinases AC
and B were run and renatured at 37 C overnight. After separation the gel is incubated in 0.2% Cetylpyridinium for 90 minutes at room temperature. The digestion of the proteoglycans by the chondroitinases is visualized by staining the gel with 0.2% Toludene Blue in ethanol-H2O-acetic acid (50:49:1 v/v/v) for 30 minutes and destained with ethanol-H20-acetic acid (50:49:1 v/v/v). Following destaining the gel is incubated overnight in a 50 ug/m1 solution of Stains-all in 50% ethanol in the dark and destained with H20. Appearance of clear bands on the gel shows the digestion of carboyhydratcs by the chondroitinases of the CSFG leaving the core protein which remains unstained (FIG 4.and FIG. 6), [0071] This example describes the linking of a His tag to a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide.
[0072] Deletion mutants of the chondroitinase ABC I enzyme where the mutant is missing a certain number of amino acids from the N-terminal and maintains proteoglycan degrading activity can be generated (SEQ ID NO:2-4). These N-terminal deletion maintain a histidine-tag that is attached to the N-terminus; however similarly tagged full length chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO:1) did not maintain the histidine-tag after experession.
[0073] Catalytically active deletion mutants of chondroitinase ABC I can be prepared for example but not limited to deleting 20, and 60 amino acids respectively from the N-terminus of the mature ABC I protein as shown in FIG. 7, A mutant polypeptide with both N and C terminal deletions such as chondroitinase ABC I-NA60-C180 (SEQ ID
NO:4) can also be made, [0074] These chondroitinase deletion mutants and mutants of other proteoglycan degrading molecules may used for construction of N-terminal fusion chimeric protein. Assay tests with these fusion polypeptides for chondroitin degradation and may be used to determine the efficacy of mature ABC' versus various deletion mutant in compositions and fusion proteins with respect to the substrate specificity, substrate binding and tissue penetration. Functional assay that can be performed to characterize the activity of mutant proteoglycan polypeptide or fusion polypeptides including them. In this functional assay, dorsal root ganglian (DRG) neurons can be plated on aggrecan or aggrecan treated with a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide or a fusion polypeptide including the mutant. It is expected that neurons plated on aggrecan will failed to adhere to the plate and extend axons. In contrast, neurons plated on aggrecan treated with a mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptide or a fusion polypeptide including the mutant in a composition or as part of a fusion polypeptide would be expected to adhere to the surface and. extend axons. The extensive axon growth, which is observed for a chondroitinase like chondroitinase ABC I
(SEQ ID NO: 1 or 37) treated aggrecan substrate is believed to be due to the digestion of the carbohydrates on the aggrecan core protein which creates a more permissive substrate for axon growth.
[00751 This prophetic example describes a mutant of chondroitinase ABC I that has native protein structure, but lacks proteoglycan degrading catalytic activity.
[00761 This mutant may be prepared as a null or a negative control for bioassays and SCI studies. Based on the crystal structure of chondroitinase ABC I a site-specific mutant designated H5Ola and Y508a (SEQ ID NO: 36) to knock out catalytic activity in the putative active site can be prepared. Such mutants can be tested for inactivation of catalytic activity and SEC to compare to the wild-type enzyme. The null activity mutant can also be used to provide a negative control for the various proteoglycan degrading fusion proteins for use in bioassays and ultimately in SCI animal studies.
[0077] This example illustrates examples of mutant proteoglycan degrading polypeptides that include both substitution and deletions from polypeptides of the present invention.
[0078] The chondroitinase ABC I sequence (SEQ ID NO: 37) is a published sequence for a mature chondroitinase ABC I peptide and includes the leader sequence.
Chondroitinase ABC I sequence (SEQ ID NO: 37) is similar to (SEQ ID NO: I or 29), however (SEQ ID NO: 1) does not have the first 25 amino acids of (SEQ ID NO:
37), and amino acids at positions 154 and 195 of (SEQ ID NO: 37) differ from those (substitutions) found in similar positions when (SEQ ID NO: 1) and (SEQ ID NO: 37) are aligned.
[0079] (SEQ ID NO: 38-40) illustrate deletions from either the N or C terminal of the (SEQ ID NO: 37) polypeptide and substitutions relative to (SEQ ID NO: 1).
These mutant polypeptides are NA20 (SEQ ID NO: 38), NA60 (SEQ ID NO: 39) and NA60 (SEQ ID NO: 40).
[0080] This example illustrates non-limiting illustrations of mutant polypeptides of the present invention fused with a membrane transduction polypeptide such as but not limited to a polypeptide portion of a HIV TAT protein. Full sequence listings for the mutants fusion polypeptides are provided in the Sequence listing included in the specification.
[0081) A nucleotide sequence for TAT-chondroitinase ABCI-nzi.20 (SEQ ID NO.
41), a portion of which is illustrated below, shows the TAT sequence nucleotides highlighted by underlining linked to chondroitinase nucleotides.
1 gete gtaaaaagcg tcgtcaacgt cgtcgtcetc, ctcaatgcgc acaaaataac 61 ccattagcag acttctcatc agataaaaac tcaatactaa cgttatctga taaacgtagc [00821 The underlined nucleotides in this portion of the nucleic acid sequence denote a TAT sequence attached to the 5' of chondroitinase ABC I-N620 nucleic acid (SEQ
II) NO. 47).
[00831 An amino acid sequence for TAT-chondroitinase ABC1-n6,20 (SEQ II) NO.
42), a portion of which is shown below, illustrates the TAT sequence amino acids highlighted by underlining at the N-terminus of chondroitinase ABCI-NA20 (SEQ II) NO, 2), grkktrqrnppqcaqnnpladfssdknsiltlsdkrsimgnqsllwlcwkggssftlhlddivptdkeaskawgrsstp vfsfwly nekpidgyltidfgeklistseticiagfkvkldftgwrtvgvslnndlenremtlnatntssdgtqdsigrslgalcv dsirilcapsnvsq geiy 100841 A nucleotide sequence for TAT-A13CI-NtS60 (SEQ ID NO. 43), a portion of which is illustrated below, shows the N-terminal TAT (SEQ ID NO. 49) nucleotides highlighted by underlining.
gatcgtanaaagotcgtcaacatcgtcgtcetcctcaatgctitactttacataaaaaactgattgtccccaccgataa agaageatcta aagcatggggacgcteatccacccecgMtetcattttggattacaatgaaaaaccgattgatggttatettactatcga tttcgg [0085] Amino acid sequence for TAT-ABCI-nA60 (SEQ ID NO. 44) a portion of which is shown below, illustrates the TAT sequence (SEQ ID NO. 50) highlighted by underlining at the N-terminus of chondroitinase ABC I -NA60 (SEQ ID NO. 3).
grkkrrqrrrppneftlhIcklivptdkeaskawgrsstpvfsfwlynekpidgyltidfgeklistscaqagfkvkld ftgwrtvgvsl nndlenremtinatritssdgtqdsigrslgalcvdsirfkapsnvsqgeiyidrirnfsvdciaryqwsdyqvktrls epeiqf....
[0086] Nucleotide sequence for ABCI-TAT-C (SEQ ID NO. 45), a portion of which is illustrated below, shows the C-terminal TAT sequence nucleotides highlighted by underlining. The stop codon from chondroitinase ABC I (SEQ ID NO. 28) was replaced by the TAT sequence and was placed at the 3' end of the TAT sequence.
...gattaatggcaaatggcaatctgctgataaaaatagtgaagtgaaatatcaggtttctggtgataacactgaactg acgtttacgagtt actttggtattccacaagaaateaaactctcgecacte cct ggl eel ti a ',1:1; ty,cgtezte gtcetegte etecte c:tag [00871 Amino acid sequence for ABCI-TAT-C (SEQ ID NO. 46), a portion of which is shown below, illustrates the TAT sequence, highlighted by underlining, linked to the chondroitinase polypeptide at the C-tenninus of the mature chondroitinase ABC
I (SEQ ID
NO. 1).
...aekvnvsrqhqvsaenkrirqptegnfssawidhstipkdasyeynivfldatpekingemaqkfrermglyqvir kcilcdvhi ildldsnvtgyafyqpasiedkwildoinkpaivmthrqkdtlivsavtpdlnmtrqkaatpvtinvtinglcwqsadk nsevkyq vsgdnteltftsyfgipqeiklsplpgrkkrrqrappqc [00881 This example illustrates the sequence of chondroitinase nucleic acid and polypeptides which may be used for deletions or substitutions in mutants of the present invention. In these sequence, discrepancies from published sequences are highlighted in bold text at both the nucleotide level and at the amino acid level. These are illustrative of substitutions in the present invention.
SEQ ID NO: 26 Present invention Chondroitinase ABC II Nucleic acid >_ ABC II mature 2973 nt ye.
>_ ABC II (preeent invention) 2974 nt scoring matrix: gap penalties: -12/-2 99.0% identity; ' Global alignment ecore: 11684 ..................................................... E = ..
TTACCCACTCTGTCTCATGAAGCTTTCGGCOATATTTATCTTTTTGAAGGCGAATTACCC
AATATCCTTACCACTTCAAATAATAATCAATTATCGCTAAGCAAACAGCATGCTAAAGAT
.............................................................. z GGTGAACAATCACTCAMTGGCARTATCAACCACAAGCAACATTAACACTAAATAATATT
..
GTTAATTACCAAGATCATAAAAATACAGCCACACCACTCACTTTTATGATGTGGATTTAT
_ , AATGAAAAACCTCAATCTTC CC CATTAACGTTAGCATTTAAACAAAATAATAAAATTGCA
_ ........................................... : ...............
CTAAGTTTTAATGCTGAACTTPATTTTACtIGGGTGGCGAGGTATTGCTGTTCCTTTTCGT
_ 806559 GATATGCAAGGCTCTGTGACAGGTCAACTTGATCAATTAGTGATCACCGCTCCAAACCAtk ¨
GATATGCAAGGCTCTGCGACAGGTCAACTTGATCAATTAGTGATCACCGCTCCAAACCAA
............................................ t ..............
_ GCCGGAACACTCYTTTTTGATCAAATCATCATGAGTGTACCGTTAGACAATCGTTGOGCA
806559 GTACCTGACTATCAAACACCTTACGTAAAMACGCAGTAAACACGATGaTTAGTAAAAAC
GTACCTGACTATCAAACACCTTACGTAAATAACGCAGTAAACACGATGGTTAGTAAAAAC
¨
806559 TaGAGTGCATTATTGATC4TACGATCAGATGTTTCAAGCCCATT1CCCTACTTTAAACTTC
................................................ t ........... I
TGGAGTGCATTATTGATGTACGATCAGATGTTTCAAGCCCATTACCCTACTTTAAACTTC
_ ..................................................... s I s s _ GATACTGAATTTCGCGATGACCAAACAGAAATGGCTTCGATTTATCAGCGCTTTGAATAT
806559 TATCAAGGAATTCGTAGTQATAAAAAAATTACTCCAC3ATATGCTAOAT2V.ACATTTAGCA
......................... 1 .................. I
TATCAAGGAATTCGTAGTGATAAAAAAATTACTCCAGA.TATOCTAGATAAACATTTAGCG
_ CA 3025063 2018 ¨11 ¨23 TTATGGGAAAAATTGGGGIVAACACAACACGCTGATGGCTCAATCACAGGARAAGCCCTT
...
GATCACCCTAACCGGCAACATTTTATGAAAGTCGAAGGTGTATTTAGTGAGGGGACTCAA
_ _ 806559 ATTTACTTGCGTAGCGATTC.ATTATCAGCAACTGATAGAAAAAAATTA.GAAGAQCGCTAT
ATTTACTTGCGTAGCGATTCATTATCACICAACTSGTAGAAAAAAATTAGAAGAGCOCTAT
_ 806559 TTATTAGGTACTCGTTATOTCCTTGAA.CAAGGTMCACCGAGGAAGTGGTTATCAAATT
_ . . . .
_ ATTACTCATGTTGGTTACCAAACCAGAGAACTTITTGATGCATGGTTTATTGGCCGTCAT
......................................... I .................
GTTCTTGCATAA(.:CTITTAGCCCCCACTCA.ACAAGCTATGATGTGGTACAACGCC
_ 806559 ACAGGACGTATTTTTGWAAAATAATGAAATTGTTGATGCAAATGTCGA.TATTCTCAAT
................................... I ........................
_ ACAGGACGTATTTTTGAAAAACATAATGAAATTOTTGATGCAAATQTCGATATTCTCAAT
I : ........................... :
_ ACTCAATTGCAATGGATGATAAAAAGCTTATTGATGCTACCGGATTATCANCAACGTCAA
............................ g ..............................
CAAGCCTTAGCGCAACTGCAAAOTTGGCTAAhTAAAACCATTCTAAGCTCAAAAGGTGTT
., GC TO0C3GTTTCAIWrCTGATGGTTCTAT TTTTCACCATTCACAACATTACCCCGCTTAT
806559 GCTAAAGAT0CATTTGGTGOTTTAGCACCCAGT0TTTAT0CATTAAGTGArrCACCTTTT
GCTAAAGATGCATTTGOTGGTTTAGCACCCAGTGTTTATOCATTAAGTGATTCACCITIT
COCTTATCTACTTCAGCACATGAGCATTTAAAAGATCTTTTGTTAAAAATGCGGATCTAC
ACCAAAGAGACACAPIATTCCTGTGOTATTAAGTGOITCGTCATCCAACTGGGTTGCATAAA.
806559 ATAGG'GATCGCGCCATTTAAATGGATGOCATTAGCAGGAACCCCAGATGGCAAACAAAAG
ATAGGGATCGCGCCATTTAAATOGATGGCATTAGCAGGAACCCCAGATOGCAAACPAAAG
TTACATACCACATTATCCOCCGCTTATOCAAACTTAGACAACAAAACGCMITTMAGGC
ATTAACGCTGAAAGTGAGCCAZTCGGCGCATGGGCAATGAATTATGCATCAATCGMATA
g : g ...................................................
CAACGAAGAGCATCGACCCAATCACCACAACAAAGCMGCTC0CCATACCGC0C0G7rrr = ............ g t .. I
1870 1880 1890 1.900 1910 1920 GGATOGGATTGRAATAGATATCCAGGTACAACAACTATTCATCTTCCCTATAACGAACTT
....
GARGCRAAACTTAATCAATTACCTOCTGCAGOTATTGAAGAAATOTTGCTTTCAACAGAA
_ ................................. 2 ................... t , AGTTACTCTGGTaCAAATACCCTTAATAATAACAGTATGTTTGCCATGAAATTACACGGT
_ ................................... 2 .......................
CACAGTAAATATCAACAACAAAGCTTAAGGGCAAATAAATCCTATTTCTTATTTGAMAT _ AGAGTTATTOCTTTAGGCTCAGGTATTGAAAATGATGATAAACAACATACOACCGAFACA
_ _ AATCAATTAGATACTCAATTAACTTTAAATAATGCAGA.TACATTAATTGATCCIVCCGGC
_ 1 ........................ 1 .................... 1 I : :
AATTTATATAACCTCACTAAAGGACAAACTGTAAAATTTAMTATCAAAAACAACATTCA
.......................................... t ................
CTTGATGATAGAAATTCAMACCAACAGINACAATTATTTGCAACAGCTGTTATTTCTCAT
806559 GGTAAGGCACCGAGTAATGAAAATTATGAATATGC.AATAGCTATCGAAGCACAAAATAAT
. = . . , . .............. , . , . . . . . . . ¨ . . . .................. . õ
. . .
GGTAAGGCACCGAGTAATOArIAATLATCAATATOCAATAGCTATCCIAACICACAAAATAAY
, : . . = t . t .................
AAAGCTCCCAAATACACAGTATTACAACATAATGAT CAGCTCCATGCGOTAAAAGATAAA
ATAACCCArsCAAGAGGGATATOOTTTTTTTGAAGCCACTAAGTTAAAATCAGCGGATGC
AACATTATTATCCAGTGATGCGCCOGTTATGGT CATGGCTAAAATACAAAATCAGCAATT
AACATTAAGTATTGTTAATCCTGATTTAAATTTATATCAAGGTAGAGGATCAATT
TGATGATAAAGGTAATCAAATCGAAGTTAGTGTTTATTCTCGTCATTGGCTTACAGCAGA
ATCGCAATCAACAAATAGTACTATTACCGTAAAAGGAATATGGAAATTAACGACACCTCA
ACCCGGTGTTATTATTAAGCACCACAATAACAACACTCTTATTACOACAACAACCATACA
GGCAACACCTACTGTTATTAATTTAGTTAAGTAA
The above discrepancies, bold text, at the nucleotide level resulted in 98.3%
identity at the amino acid level and the substituted residues are marked in bold text in the following.
SEQ ID NO: 27 Present Invention Chondroitinase ABC U protein ABC (present invention) 990 aa vs.
ABC (mature) 990 aa 0-joring matrix: , gap penalties: -12/-2 98.3% identity; Global alignment score: 6393 _ LPTLSHEAFGDIYLFEGELPNTLTTSNNNOLKISKQHAKDGEQSLKWOWPQATLTINN/
.................................................. ; .......
_ VNYQDOKNTATPLTFMMWIYNEXPQ8SPLTLA5'KONNICIALSFRAELMFTGWRGIAVPER
70 80 90 , 100 110 120 : .................................... s ..............
¨
WSALLMYDQMFQAHYPTIAFDTEFRDDQTRMASRYORFEYYWIRSOKKTTPDMIOKHLA
¨
LWEKLVIITQHADWITGKALDHPNRQHFMKVEGVFSRGTQKALLDANMLRDVGKTLIJQTA
¨
_ VIJAMILLAPTQQAMMWYNATGRIFEKNNEIVDANVDILNTQLQWMIKKILMLPDYQQRQ
¨
.......................... 1 ................................ ..
¨
QALAQLQRWLNKTILSSKGVAGGFKSDCISIFlinSQHYPAYAKDAFGGLAZSVYALSDSPF
1 tt:t:tt ............................................
RLSTSMIERLKDVLLICMRIYTKETQIPAVLSGREPTGLHICIGIAPFKWMALAGTPDGICQK
......................... 1 .... t ....................... 1.=
¨
........................................ t .................. :
SRYLVGNESYENNNRYGRYDQYGOLEIIPADLTOSOPSHAOWDWNRYPOTTTIMPYNEL
_ RVIALGSGIENDDKOTTETTLFQFAVPKI4SVIINGKKVNOLDTQLTLNN1\DTLIDPAG
_ NLYKITKGQTVKFSYQKQHSLDORNSKPTEQLFATAVISHGKAPSNENYEYAIAIEAQNN
_ KAPEYTVLOUNDOPHAVKDKITOBEGYAFFEATKIIKSADATLIASEMPVMVMAKIWQQL
_ .850 660 870 880 890 900 _ TLSIVNPDLNLYQGREKEWDOKGNQIEVSINSRHWLTAESQSTNSTITVKOTWKLTTPQ
............... 1 ................
_ PGVIIKHENNITTLITTTTIOATPTVINLVK
SEQ ID NO: 28 Present Invention Chondroitinase ABC 1 nucleic acid ... ABCI present invention 2994 nt vs.
.... ABCI mature 2994 nt scoring matrix: , gap penalties; -12/-Z
99.7% identity; , Global alignment score: 11909 GCCACCAOCAATCCTGCATTTGATCCTAAVATCTGATGCAGTCAGAAATTTACCATTTT
_ .................................................. : .......
_ GCACAAAATAACCCATTAGCAGACTTCTCATCAGATAAAAACTCAATACTAACGTTATCT
..................................................... : .....
GATAAAcGTAGCATTATGGGAAACCAATCTCTTTTATGGAAATGOAAAGGTGGTAGTAGC _ TTTACTTTACATAAAAAACTGATTGTCCCCACCGATAAAGAAGCATCTAAAGCATGGOGA _ _ COCTCATCTACCCCCGTTTTCTCATTTTGOCTTTACAATGAAAAACCGATTGATGGTTAT
CTTACTATCGATTTaIGAGAAAAACTCATTTCARCCAGTGAGGCTCAGGCAGGCTTTAAA
_ 310 320 330 340 350 360 , ; ............................................................
_ GTAAAATTAGATTTCACTGGCTGGCGTGCTOTGGGAGTCTCTTTAAATAACGATCTTGAA
AATCGAGAGATGACCTTAAATOCAACCAATACCTCCTCTGATGOTACTCAAGACAGCATT _ _ GGGCGTTCTTTAGGTGCTAAAGTCGATAGTATTCGTTTTAAAMGCCTTCTAATGTGAGT
' CAGGGTGAAATCTATATCGACCGTATTATGTTTTCTGTCGATGATOCTCGCTACCAATGG
_ 806559 TCTGATTATCAAnTAAAAACTCGCTTATCAGAACCTGAAATTCAATTTCACAACGTAAAG
_ TCTGATTATCAAOTAAAAACTCGCTTATCAGAACCTGAAATTCAATTTCACAACGTAAAG
_ CCACAACTACCTGTAACACCTGAAAATTTAGOGGCCATTGATCTTATTCGCCAACGTCTA
ATTAATGAATTTOTCOCIAMTGAAAAAGAGACAAACCTCGCATTAGARGAGAATATCAGC _ 806559 WaTAAAAAGTGATTT CGATGCTCTIAATACTCACACTTTAGCAAATGGTGGAACG CAA
¨
AAATTAMAAGTGATTTCGATGCTeTTAATATTCACACTTTAGCAAATGGTOGAACGCAA
GGCAGACATCTGATCACTGATAA/XCAAATCATTATTTATCAACCAGAGAATCTTAACTCC
_ .............. e ...........................................
_ MAGATAAACAACTATTTGATAATTATGTTATTTTAGGTAATTACACGACATTAATGTTT
AATATTAGCCGTGC TTATGTG CTGGPGATCCCACACAAAAGGCGCAACTAAAGCAG
_ 806559 ATGTACTTATTAATGACAAAGCATTTATTAGATCAAGGCTTTGTTAAAGGGAGTGCTTTA.
_ _ GTGACAB; CCCAT
CAC TOGGGATACAG TTCT C GTTGGTGGTATATTT C CACGTTATTAATG
................... 1= . e .............................
TCTGATOCACTAAAAGAMICGAACCTACAAACTCAACTTIATGIATTCATTACTGTGGTAT
.....
_ TCACGTGAGTTTAAAAGTAGTTTTGATATGAAAGTAAGTGCTGATAGCTCTGATCTAGAT
.............................................. 1 ...........
TATTTCAATACCTTATCTCGCCAACATTTAGCCrTATTATTACTAGAGCCTGATGATCAA
_ .................................................... s t ..
AAGCGTATCAACTTAGTTAATACTTTCAGCCATTATATCACTGGCGCATTAACOCAAGTO
1.330 1.340 1350 1360 1370 1380 CCACCGCGTOGTAAAGATGGTTTACGCCCTGATGGTACAGCATGGCGACATOAAGGCMC
_ TATCCGGGCTACTCTTTCCCAGCCITMAAAATGCCTCTCAGCTIATTTATTTATTACGC
_ 1450 1460 1470 1.480 1490 1500 3.510 1520 1530 1540 1550 1560 ................................................. ; ........
GATACACCATTTTCAGTGGOTGARAGTGGTTOGAATAACCTOAAAAAACCGATGGTTTCA
_ t3CGTOCIATCTACAGTA'ATCCAGAACTTGGATTACCGCTTGCAGOAAGACACCCTTTTAAC _ 1570 1580 1590 1600 3.610 1620 _ TCAC
CTTCGTTAMATCACTCGCTCAAGGCTATTACTGGCTTGCCATGTOTGCAAAATCA
TCGCCTGATAMACACTTGCATCTATTTATCTTOCGATTAGTGAMAAACACAMATGAA
¨
1690 1700 1710 1720 1730 1.740 ............................. z . t ...................
TCAACTGCTATTTTTGOAGAAACTATTACACCAGCGTCTTTACCTCAAGGTTTCTATGCC
_ TTTAATOGCOGTGCTTTTGGTATTCATCGTTGGCAACIATRAAATOGTGACACTGAAAGCT
_ TATAACACCAATOTTTGOTCATCTGAAATTTATAACAAAGATAACCGTTATGGCCGTTAC
¨
CA 3025063 2018 ¨11 ¨23 CAAAGTCATGGTOTCGCT CAAATAGTGAGTAATGGCTCGCA.GCTTTCACAGGGCTATCAG
-...................... : ...................................
CAAGAAGGTTGOGATTGOAATAGAATGCAAGGGCCA.ACCACTATTCACCTTCCTOTTAAA _ -: ....
ACATCATCCCTTGAAGGTC.AATATCGCATGATGGCATTCGATCTTA.TTTATCCCGCCAAT
_ CTTOACICGTTTTGATCCTAATTTCACTOCGAAAPAGAGTGTATTAGCCGCTGATAATCAC
-..................................... t ....................
TTAATTTTTATTGGTAGCAATATAAATAGTAGTOATAAAAATAAAAATGTTGAAACCACC _ -TTATTCCAACATGCCATTACTCCAPLCATTIVIATACCCTTTGGATTAATCGACAAAAGATA
CAAAACATCCCTTA.TCMACAACACTTCAACAAGOTGATTGGTTAATTGATAGCAATGGC
2350 2360 2370 ' 2380 2390 2400 AATGGTTACTTAATTACTCA A.GCAOAAAAAOTAAATGTAAGTCGCCAACATCAGGTTTCA
...
........................................... 3 ..............
, .................. t .................... t ...............
AGCACTCGCCCCAAAGATGCCAGTTATGAGTATATGGTCTTTTTAGATGCGACACCTGAA
AMATGCIGAGAGATGGCACAMAATTCCGTOAAAATAATOGGTTATATCAGGTTCTTCGT
2'590 2600 2610 2620 2630 2640 AAGGATAAAGACGTTCATATTATTCTCGATAAACTCAGCAATGTAACOGGATATGCCTTT
................................... . = r TATCAGCCAGCATCAATTGAWACAPATGOATCP.AAPAGGTTAATAAACCTGCAATTGTO
.......................................................... : .. .
ATGACTCATCGACAAAAAGACACTCTTATTGTCAGTGCACITTACACCTGATTTAAATATG
ACTCGCCAAMAGCAGMACTCCTGTCACCATCAATOTCACCIATTJNATGGCAAATGGCAA.
TCTGCTGATAMAATAGTGAAGTGAAATATCAGGTTTCTGGTGATAACACTGAACTGACG
806559 TTTACGAGTTACTTIGGTATTCCACAAGAARTCAAP.CTCTCGCCACTCCCTTGA
TTTACGAGTTACTTTGGTATTCCACAAGAAATCAAACTCTCGCCACTCCCTTGA
The sequence identity at the amino acid level is shown below:
SEQ ID NO: 29 Present Invention Chondroitinase ABC I protein ABC' Present Invention 997 aa vs.
>__ABC1 mature 997 aa scoring matrix: , gap penalties: -12/-2 99.5% identity; Global alignment score: 6595 ATSNPAFDPKNLMOSEIYHFAQNNPLADFSSDKNSILTLSDKRSIMGNQSLLWKWKGGSS
- FTLHKKLIVPIDKEASKAWGRSSTPVFSFWLYNEKPIDGYLTIDFGEKLISTSEAQAGFK
- VKLDFTGVVRAVGVSLNNDLENREMTLNATNTSSDGTQDSIGRSLGAKVDSIRFKAPSNVS
QGEIYIDRIMFSVDDARYQWSDYQVKIRLSEPEIQFHNVKPQLPVTPENLAAIDLIRQRL
INEFVGGEKETNLALEENISKLKSDFDALNIHTLANGGTQGRHLITDKQIIIYQPENLNS
QDKQLFDNYVILGNYTTLMFNISRAYVLEKDPTQKAQLKQMYLLMTKHLLDQGFVKGSAL
VTIFIHWGYSSRWWYISTLIASDALKEANLQTQWDSLLWYSREFKSSFDIVIKVSADSSIDLD
365019 YFNILSRQHLALLILEPODQKRINLVNTFSHYITGALTQVPPGGI<DGLRPDGTAWRHEGN
_ YFNITLSRQHLALLLLEPDIDQKRININNTFSHYITGALTQVPPGGKDGLRPEDGTAWRHEGN
_ YPGYSFPAFKNASQUYLLRDTPFSVGESGWNNLKKAMVSAWIYSNPEVGLPLAGRHPFN
SPSLKSVAQGYYWLAMSAKSSPDKTLASIYLAISDKTQNESTAIFGETITPASLPQGFYA
_ _ FNGGAFGIHRWQDKMVTLKAYNTNVWSSEIYNKDNRYGRYQSHGVAQIVSNGSQLSQGYQ
QEGWDWNRMQGATTIHLPLKDLIOSPKPFITLMQRGERGFSGTSSLEGQYGMMAFDLIYPAN
_ LERFDPNFTAKKSVLAADNHLIFIGSNINSSDKNKNVETTIFQRAITPTLNTLWINGQKI
ENMPYQTTLQQGDWLIDSNGNGYLITQAEKVNVSRQHQVSAENKNRQPTEGNFSSAWIDH
STRPKDASYEYMVFLDATPEKMGEMAQKFRENNGLYQVLRKDKDVHIILDKLSNVTGYAF
YQPASIEDKWIKKVNKPAIVMTHRQKDTLIVSAVTPDLNMTRQKAATPVTINVTINGKWQ
SADKNSEVKYQVSGDNTELTFTSYFGIPQEIKLSPLP
REFERENCES
1. Fethiere 1, Eggimann B, Cygler M (1999) Crystal structure of chortdroitin AC lyase, a representative of a family of glycosaminoglycan degrading enzymes.
J Mol Biol, 288:635-47.
2. Pojasek K, Shriver Z, Kiley, P Venkataraman G and Sasisekharan R.
(2001) Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 286:343-51.
3. Huang W, Matte A, Li Y, Kim YS, Linhardt RJ, Su H, Cygler M.
(1999) Crystal structure of chondroitinase B from Flavobacterium heparinum and its complex with a disaccharide product at 1.7 A resolution. I Mol Biol. 294:1257-69.
4. Miura RO, Yamagata S. Miura Y, Harada T and Yamagata T. (1995) Anal Biochern. 225:333-40.
5. Yamagata T, Saito H, Habuchi 0 and Suzuki S. (1968)3 Biol Chem.
243:1536-42.
[00891 Although the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, other versions are possible.
Therefore the spirit and scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description and the preferred versions contain within this specification.
Claims (54)
1. A purified chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide having a deletion up to 80 amino acids at the N-terminus.
2. A purified chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide having a deletion up to 19 amino acids at the C-terminus.
3. A purified chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide having a deletion up to 80 amino acids at the N-terminus, and a deletion up to 19 amino acids at the C-terminus.
4. The purified chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide of any one of claims 1-3, wherein the polypeptide comprises a sequence that is selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NO: 13, SEQ
ID NO: 14, SEQ ID NO: 15, SEQ ID NO: 16, and SEQ ID NO: 17.
ID NO: 14, SEQ ID NO: 15, SEQ ID NO: 16, and SEQ ID NO: 17.
5. The purified chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide of claim 4, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 13.
6. The purified chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide of claim 4, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 14.
7. The purified chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide of claim 4, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 15.
8. The purified chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide of claim 4, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 16.
9. The purified chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide of claim 4, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 17.
10. A composition comprising chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide having a deletion of up to 80 amino acids at the N-terminus; together with a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient, diluent, or carrier.
11. A composition comprising chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide having a deletion up to 19 amino acids at the C-terminus; together with a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient, diluent, or carrier.
12 . A composition comprising chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide having a deletion up to 80 amino acids at the N-terminus, and a deletion up to 19 amino acids at the C-terminus; together with a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient, diluent, or carrier.
13 . The composition of any one of claims 10-12, wherein the polypeptide comprises a sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NO: 13, SEQ ID NO: 14, SEQ ID NO:
15, SEQ ID NO:
16, and SEQ ID NO: 17.
15, SEQ ID NO:
16, and SEQ ID NO: 17.
14. The composition of claim 13, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 13.
15. The composition of claim 13, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 14.
16. The composition of claim 13, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 15.
17. The composition of claim 13, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 16.
18. The composition of claim 13, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 17.
19. The composition of any one of claims 13-18, further comprising a compound that facilitates plasticity, neurite growth and regeneration; a molecule that overcomes neurite outgrowth inhibition or promote nerve growth; a therapeutic molecule; a diagnostic molecule; or a combination of these.
20. The composition of claim 19, wherein the compound that facilitates plasticity and neurite growth and regeneration is selected from the group consisting of soluble NOGO
antagonists, neural cell adhesion molecules, neurotrophic factors, growth factors, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, inhibitors of MAG or MOG, neuregulins and antibodies that promote remyelination.
antagonists, neural cell adhesion molecules, neurotrophic factors, growth factors, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, inhibitors of MAG or MOG, neuregulins and antibodies that promote remyelination.
21. The composition of any one of claims 13-20 for use in treatment of a central nervous system injury or disorder.
22. The composition for use of claim 21, wherein the central nervous system injury or disorder is selected from the group consisting of a contusion injury, a traumatic brain injury, a stroke, multiple sclerosis, a brachial plexus injury, amblioplia, and a spinal cord injury.
23. The composition for use of claim 21 or 22, wherein the composition is formulated for topical application, bolus injection, intravenous injection, intrathecal injection, intramuscular injection, peritoneal injection, subcutaneous injection, continuous infusion, sustained release from implants, sustained release pharmaceuticals, or oral delivery.
24. A use of the purified chondroitinase B mutant polypeptide of any one of claims 1-9 for preparation of a medicament for treatment of a central nervous system injury or disorder.
25. The use of claim 24, wherein the central nervous system injury or disorder is selected from the group consisting of a contusion injury, a traumatic brain injury, a stroke, multiple sclerosis, a brachial plexus injury, amblioplia, and a spinal cord injury.
26. The use of claim 24 or 25, wherein the medicament is formulated for topical application, bolus injection, intravenous injection, intrathecal injection, intramuscular injection, peritoneal injection, subcutaneous injection, continuous infusion, sustained release from implants, sustained release pharmaceuticals, or oral delivery.
27. A purified chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide having a deletion up to 100 amino acids at the N-terminus.
28. A purified chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide having a deletion up to 275 amino acids at the C-terminus.
29. A purified chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide having a deletion up to 100 amino acids at the N-terminus, and a deletion up to 275 amino acids at the C-terminus.
30. The purified chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide of any one of claims 27-29, wherein the polypeptide comprises a sequenced selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID
NO: 6, SEQ ID NO:
7, SEQ ID NO: 8, SEQ ID NO: 9, SEQ ID NO: 10, and SEQ ID NO: 11.
NO: 6, SEQ ID NO:
7, SEQ ID NO: 8, SEQ ID NO: 9, SEQ ID NO: 10, and SEQ ID NO: 11.
31. The purified chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide of claim 30, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 6.
32. The purified chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide of claim 30, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 7.
33. The purified chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide of claim 30, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 8.
34. The purified chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide of claim 30, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 9.
35. The purified chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide of claim 30, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 10.
36. The purified chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide of claim 30, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 11.
37. A composition comprising chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide having a deletion up to 100 amino acids at the N-terminus; together with a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient, diluent, or carrier.
38. A composition comprising chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide having a deletion up to 275 amino acids at the C-terminus; together with a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient, diluent, or carrier.
39. A composition comprising chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide having a deletion up to 100 amino acids at the N-terminus, and a deletion up to 275 amino acids at the C-terminus; together with a pharmaceutically acceptable excipient, diluent, or carrier.
40. The composition of any one of claims 37-39, wherein the polypeptide comprises a sequence selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NO: 6, SEQ ID NO: 7, SEQ ID NO:
8, SEQ ID NO: 9, SEQ ID NO: 10, and SEQ ID NO: 11.
8, SEQ ID NO: 9, SEQ ID NO: 10, and SEQ ID NO: 11.
41. The composition of claim 40, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 6.
42. The composition of claim 40, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 7.
43. The composition of claim 40, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 8.
44. The composition of claim 40, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 9.
45. The composition of claim 40, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 10.
46. The composition of claim 40, wherein the polypeptide comprises the sequence SEQ ID NO: 11.
47. The composition of any one of claims 37-46, further comprising a compound that facilitate plasticity, neurite growth and regeneration; a molecule that overcome neurite outgrowth inhibition or promote nerve growth; a therapeutic molecule; a diagnostic molecule; or a combination of these.
48. The composition of claim 47, wherein the compound that facilitate plasticity and neurite growth and regeneration is selected from the group consisting of soluble NOGO
antagonists, neural cell adhesion molecules, neurotrophic factors, growth factors, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, inhibitors of MAG or MOG, neuregulins and antibodies that promote remyelination.
antagonists, neural cell adhesion molecules, neurotrophic factors, growth factors, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, inhibitors of MAG or MOG, neuregulins and antibodies that promote remyelination.
49. The composition of any one of claims 37-48 for use in treatment of a central nervous system injury or disorder.
50. The composition for use of claim 49, wherein the central nervous system injury or disorder is selected from the group consisting of a contusion injury, a traumatic brain injury, a stroke, multiple sclerosis, a brachial plexus injury, amblioplia, and a spinal cord injury.
51. The composition for use of claim 49 or 50, wherein the composition is formulated for topical application, bolus injection, intravenous injection, intrathecal injection, intramuscular injection, peritoneal injection, subcutaneous injection, continuous infusion, sustained release from implants, sustained release pharmaceuticals, and oral delivery.
52. A use of the purified chondroitinase AC mutant polypeptide of any one of claims 27-36 for preparation of a medicament for treatment of a central nervous system injury or disorder.
53. The use of claim 52, wherein the central nervous system injury or disorder is selected from the group consisting of a contusion injury, a traumatic brain injury, a stroke, multiple sclerosis, a brachial plexus injury, amblioplia, and a spinal cord injury.
54. The use of claim 52 or 53, wherein the medicament is formulated for topical application, bolus injection, intravenous injection, intrathecal injection, intramuscular injection, peritoneal injection, subcutaneous injection, continuous infusion, sustained release from implants, sustained release pharmaceuticals, and oral delivery.
Applications Claiming Priority (9)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US47124003P | 2003-05-16 | 2003-05-16 | |
US47123903P | 2003-05-16 | 2003-05-16 | |
US60/471,240 | 2003-05-16 | ||
US60/471,300 | 2003-05-16 | ||
US60/471,239 | 2003-05-16 | ||
US47437203P | 2003-05-29 | 2003-05-29 | |
US60/474,372 | 2003-05-29 | ||
CA2525784A CA2525784C (en) | 2003-05-16 | 2004-05-17 | Proteoglycan degrading mutants for treatment of cns |
US47130005P | 2005-05-16 | 2005-05-16 |
Related Parent Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
CA2525784A Division CA2525784C (en) | 2003-05-16 | 2004-05-17 | Proteoglycan degrading mutants for treatment of cns |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
CA3025063A1 true CA3025063A1 (en) | 2004-12-23 |
Family
ID=64456681
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
CA3025063A Abandoned CA3025063A1 (en) | 2003-05-16 | 2004-05-17 | Proteoglycan degrading mutants for treatment of cns |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
---|---|
CA (1) | CA3025063A1 (en) |
-
2004
- 2004-05-17 CA CA3025063A patent/CA3025063A1/en not_active Abandoned
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
AU2009251124B2 (en) | Proteoglycan degrading mutants for treatment of CNS | |
EP2354155A2 (en) | Fusion Proteins for Treatment of CNS | |
AU2016204464B2 (en) | Proteoglycan degrading mutants for treatment of cns | |
AU2013201097B2 (en) | Proteoglycan degrading mutants for treatment of cns | |
CA3025063A1 (en) | Proteoglycan degrading mutants for treatment of cns | |
AU2014265113A1 (en) | Fusion proteins for the treatment of cns |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
EEER | Examination request |
Effective date: 20190521 |
|
FZDE | Discontinued |
Effective date: 20220311 |
|
FZDE | Discontinued |
Effective date: 20220311 |