Recently, it is suggested that mTOR signaling pathway is an important mediator in many cancers especially breast cancer. Therefore, effects of sirolimus as a mTOR inhibitor in breast cancer have been studied in combination with paclitaxel with or without controlled release effect. In this work, we prepared a water-soluble formulation of sirolimus-conjugated albumin nanoparticles loaded with paclitaxel, to study the effects of sirolimus concentration when it releases more later than paclitaxel in comparison with sirolimus-paclitaxel-loaded albumin nanoparticles. Also effects of paclitaxel loading on cytotoxic properties of nanoparticles were studied. Sirolimus was succinylated at 42-OH with enzymatic reaction of Candida antarctica lipase B, and then its carboxylic group was activated with EDC/NHS and conjugated to the lysine residues of albumin. Paclitaxel was loaded on albumin surface by nab technique in concentration range of 0-10 μg/mL. Sirolimus-conjugated nanoparticles with 0.01 μg/mL paclitaxel showed lowest cell viability of 44% while it was 53% for non-conjugated nanoparticles in MDA-MB-468 cell lines after 48 h (p-value = 0.003). In MCF-7 cell lines, sirolimus-conjugated nanoparticles with 0.1 μg/mL paclitaxel showed lowest cell viability of 35.69% while it was 48% for non-conjugated nanoparticles after 48 h (p-value = 0.03). We guess that when cancer cell lines arrest in G2-M by anticancer drugs like paclitaxel, Akt activates mTOR to make cells continue living, then inhibiting mTOR can enhance anticancer effects.
Background:
Protein misfolding is a common problem in large-scale production of recombinant
proteins, which can significantly reduce the yield of the process.
Objective:
In this work, we aimed at treating a cell culture broth containing high levels (>45%) of incorrectly
folded Fc-fusion proteins by a simple redox buffer system in order to increase the proportion
of the protein with correct conformation.
Methods:
Multi-variable process optimization was firstly conducted at a small scale (25 mL), employing
an experimental design methodology. After identifying the key variables using a resolution IV
Fractional Factorial Design (FFD), the process was then optimized by the Central Composite Design
(CCD).
Results:
The optimal conditions for the refolding reaction were 340 mM Tris-base, 6.0 mM L-cysteine,
0.5 mM L-cystine, a buffer pH of 9.0, a reaction temperature of 8.5ºC and a reaction time of 24 h.
Based on the treatment conditions obtained at a small scale, the process was further scaled up to 4500-
L. The misfolded content was always less than 20%. The reaction can proceed well in the absence of
chemical additives, such as chaotropic agents, aggregation suppressors, stabilizers and chelators.
Conclusion:
The refolding process increases the fraction of active protein in the original broth reducing
the burden on downstream purification steps markedly.
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