Polysaccharide-peptide-conjugates

Chemistry: natural resins or derivatives; peptides or proteins; – Peptides of 3 to 100 amino acid residues – Peptides containing saccharide radicals – e.g. – bleomycins – etc.

Reexamination Certificate

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C530S395000, C530S402000, C530S403000, C424S001730

Reexamination Certificate

active

06472506

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a polysaccharide peptide conjugate and a process for making it. In a particular embodiment of the invention, the conjugate uses bacterial or fungal polysaccharides and thus can be useful for vaccine purposes.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Polysaccharides constitute a broad family of polymeric molecules which are useful in various technical fields. In some cases, they require to be coupled to a polypeptide, e.g. protein or peptide. For example, polysaccharides are used in diagnosis or purification technics as a matrix medium for peptide reagents. Non-immunogenic polysaccharides such as dextran, are also useful to present small peptides, to the immune system as described in EP 326 111. Indeed, peptides have to be linked to protein carriers or have to be administered with an adjuvant, the most commonly used adjuvants being aluminium compounds. However, small peptides mixed, adsorbed or precipitated with these adjuvants may be hindered by the aluminium gel and therefore, not available to the immune system. To overcome this problem, EP 326 111 teaches that peptides may be conjugated to non-immunogenic polysaccharides. Such conjugates, in the presence of aluminium compounds, are able to elicit an immune response against the peptide moiety.
In the vaccinal field, it is also highly interesting to conjugate polypeptides e.g., peptide or protein, to immunogenic polysaccharides, this once pursuing an immune response to the polysaccharides. Indeed, capsule and cell wall of bacteria (and also cell wall of fungi) are essentially constituted by polysaccharides composed of very specific repeat units that bear epitope motives that are usually not found in mammals and can mediate immunogenicity. Therefore, polysaccharides e.g., capsular polysaccharides have been already used as vaccines against bacterial diseases such as meningitis, pneumonia and typhoid fever.
However, there is a major problem when using polysaccharides as vaccines. Although they have been proven immunogenic i.e., in other words, they elicit an immune response when administered as such to a mammal, even if this response may be poor, they are specific in that they belong to the small number of antigens that are able to induce B-cells production without help from T-cells. Accordingly, they are called T-independent.
The immune response induced by T-independent antigens is characterized by a number of features, among which:
(i) The primary response is weaker and earlier than the response to T-dependent antigens;
(ii) The antibody response does not mature into high IgG production, with affinity increase, as observed with T-dependent antigens;
(iii) The immune memory corresponding to T-independent antigens is poor and thus, as the immune memory is the key of the secondary immune response that constitutes the basis of the vaccination principle, a T-independent antigen is a poor antigen for inducing a long term protective immune response; and
(iv) Infants are unable to respond to polysaccharides before one or two years of age.
In order to induce a secondary immune response, T-independent antigens require to be covalently coupled to a carrier protein such as diphtheria or tetanus toxin, which give the antigen the T-dependent character. The conjugate thereof may then be complemented with an adjuvant such as an aluminium compound or the complete or incomplete Freund's adjuvant (these two latter, exclusively for use in mammals other than humans), so that the immune response is enhanced (adjuvant effect).
By the term “carrier” is meant a molecule that, when covalently linked to an antigen e.g. a polysaccharide, is capable of promoting a T-dependent response to the antigen. Such a response is shown upon a vaccination scheme comprising at least two injections of the antigen-carrier conjugate, at days, weeks or months apart (priming and booster). Upon the first infection (priming), a weak antibody response is shown, while upon the booster injection, the antibody response is elicited at a high level. Such a magnified response is not to be seen with the negative control constituted by the unconjugated antigen.
Various conjugation methods are already available in the art. Polysaccharide functional groups that are commonly involved, may be amino, carboxyl or hydroxyl groups located along the chain or aldehyde groups either terminal or along the chain. Polypeptide functional groups that are usually involved, may be amino or carboxyl groups, terminal or present on the amino acid side chains or even thiol groups.
In a general manner, polysaccharide conjugates may exibit three types of structure depending upon the location of functional groups of both polysaccharide (either along the chain or at the end) and carrier, that are involved in the linkage. These types of structure are called for ease of description, “Sun” or “Ear”, “Rake” and “Lattice” types. They are illustrated in
FIG. 1
, wherein (A), (B) and (C) respectively stand for “Sun” (neoglycoconjugate), “Rake” and “Lattice” types.
In the “Sun” type, a polysaccharide is attached to a protein or peptide through a reactive group exclusively located at an extremity of the polysaccharide chain. Usually, this involves a carbonyl group located at the reductive end of the polysaccharide chain. Several polysaccharide chains may be attached onto the protein, the attachement usually involving an amino group carried by e.g., a lysine residue. Such conjugates are also defined as neoglycoconjugates. As a matter of example, a conjugate of this type is achieved in Alonso de Velasco et al, Infect. Immun. (1995) 63: 961, Paradiso et al, Vaccine Research (1993) 2 (4): 239, and Jennings U.S. Pat. No. 4,356,170.
In the “Rake” type, peptides are attached along the polysaccharide chain. An example of this type is provided in Lett et al, Infect. Immun. (1994) 62: 785, and more appropriately, Lett et al, Infect. Immun. (1995) 63: 2645 and Könen-Waisman et al, J. Immunol. (1995): 5977. Attachement involves the amino group carried by the single lysine residue internal to the peptide sequence and/or the terminal amino group.
In the “Lattice” type, the protein and the polysaccharide are cross-linked. This is made possible due to the fact that a protein rather than a peptide is used (usually amino or acid groups located along the protein) and that reactive groups located along the polysaccharide chain are involved. A conjugate of this type is described in Anderson U.S. Pat. No. 4,673,574. Schneerson et al, J. Exp. Med. (1980) 152: 361 also describes a conjugation method leading to a “Lattice” type” It uses CNBr and as a linker, adipic acid dihydrazide (ADH). Hydroxyl groups present all along the polysaccharide chain and side chain amino groups of the protein are involved.
Each of these structures may be achieved according to a variety of conjugation processes. The bound may be a direct bound as in Anderson U.S. Pat. No. 4,673,574, Jennings U.S. Pat. No. 4,356,170, Lett et al or Könen-Waisman et al. The bound may also be an indirect bound in that a linker molecule is used as illustrated by Schneerson et al. Additional to a linker, a spacer may also be used as described in Alonso de Valesco et al or Paradiso et al (for the pneumococcal polysaccharide). Various functional groups present on polysaccharide, protein, linker and optionally, spacer may be involved.
Some of the prior art reference cited above are presented with further details as follows:
In Alonso de Velasco et al, the carrier is a peptide of about 20 amino acid residues that comprises a single cysteine residue at either end.
Streptococcus pneumoniae
17F polysaccharide is first derivatized at the reductive end by reductive amination with diaminopropane in the presence of NaCNBH
3
. Then the derivatized polysaccharide is bromoacetylated with N-succinimidyl bromoacetate as a linker and the polysaccharide so activated is coupled to the thiol group of the single N- or C-terminal cysteine residue of the peptide. A single-ended conjugate is thus obtained.
In Lett et al (1994),
S. mutans
or
Saccaromyces cer

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