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Microbial arginine deiminase: A multifaceted green catalyst in biomedical sciences

Anubhuti Kawatra, Rakhi Dhankhar, Pooja Gulati

International Journal of Biological Macromolecules(2022)

Cited 6|Views4
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Abstract
Arginine deiminase is a well-recognized guanidino-modifying hydrolase that catalyzes the conversion of L-arginine to citrulline and ammonia. Their biopotential to regress tumors via amino acid deprivation therapy (AADT) has been well established. PEGylated formulation of recombinant Mycoplasma ADI is in the last-phase clinical trials against various arginine-auxotrophic cancers like hepatocellular carcinoma, melanoma, and me-sothelioma. Recently, ADIs have attained immense importance in several other biomedical applications, namely treatment of Alzheimer's, as an antiviral drug, bioproduction of nutraceutical L-citrulline and bio-analytics involving L-arginine detection. Considering the wide applications of this biodrug, the demand for ADI is ex-pected to escalate several-fold in the coming years. However, the sustainable production aspects of the enzyme with improved pharmacokinetics is still limited, creating bottlenecks for effective biopharmaceutical develop-ment. To circumvent the lacunae in enzyme production with appropriate paradigms of 'quality-by-design' an explicit overview of its properties with 'biobetter' formulations strategies are required. Present review provides an insight into all the potential biomedical applications of ADI along with the improvements required for its reach to clinics. Recent research advances with special emphasis on the development of ADI as a 'biobetter' enzyme have also been comprehensively elaborated.
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Key words
Arginine deiminase (ADI),Applications,Biomedical sciences,Cancer,Antiviral,Improvement strategies
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