• Vital Funding supports Investigation of PEG Variants
    Professor Holger Frey

News & Views

Vital Funding supports Investigation of PEG Variants

May 05 2022

To prevent active biopharmaceuticals from being attacked by our immune systems a standard procedure used since the 1980’s has been to create a "cloak of invisibility" around the drug by means of conjugation with the polymer polyethylene glycol (PEG). The mRNA vaccines designed to protect against infection with the coronavirus are, for example, PEGylated. More recently however, problems associated with this concept have been emerging; this includes studies revealing a rise in the number of individuals who are developing antibodies against PEG, which potentially could trigger severe allergic reactions.

Professor Holger Frey of Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU), who has been awarded an ERC Advanced Grant worth EUR 2.5 million to support his research, is in the process of developing a novel procedure intended to sidestep the drawbacks of PEGylation, but at the same time preserve its benefits.

"PEGylation of many commercially available drugs is absolutely indispensable," emphasised Professor Frey. "Without this, our bodies would identify the related active substances, including mRNA vaccines, as dangerous intruders and would rapidly degrade and excrete them. The camouflage effect has worked well for the past 30 years, but it looks like the magic is wearing off."

The purpose of the ERC-sponsored project RandoPEGMed, is thus to create modified polymers for conjugation with medicinal agents, the basis of which would still be polyethylene glycol, but which in the form of a PEG which has been supplemented with additional building blocks.

"What we are planning to do is break down the uniform structure by the insertion of randomly distributed irregularities," Frey clarified. "This should restore the masking effect, enabling the drugs to reach their intended destinations without being discovered by the immune system."

Using the experience gained with his research team during the last decade Holger Frey, Professor of Organic and Macromolecular Chemistry at JGU and an internationally recognised expert in the field of polyether chemistry, has come up with a method for analysis of polymer structures on the molecular level.

The Advanced Grant is the EU's most richly endowed funding program, awarded by the European Research Council (ERC) to outstanding researchers.

More information online


Digital Edition

International Labmate Buyers' Guide 2024/25

June 2024

Buyers' Guide featuring: Product Listings & Manufacturers Directory Chromatography Articles - Enhancing HPLC Field Service with fast-response, non-invasive flowmeters - Digital transformatio...

View all digital editions

Events

EuCheMS Chemistry Congress

Jul 07 2024 Dublin, Ireland

HPLC 2024

Jul 20 2024 Denver, CO, USA

ICMGP 2024

Jul 21 2024 Cape Town, South Africa

ADLM 2024

Jul 28 2024 San Diego, CA USA

InaLab 2024

Jul 30 2024 Jakarta, Indonesia

View all events