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Title:
GLYCODENDRIMERS HAVING BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/2003/089010
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
The present invention relates to new anionic glycodendrimers having new biological activity, processes for preparing them and their use in medicine including veterinary medicine.

Inventors:
SHAUNAK SUNIL (GB)
GIANASI ELISABETTA (IT)
DUNCAN RUTH (GB)
Application Number:
PCT/GB2003/001133
Publication Date:
October 30, 2003
Filing Date:
March 18, 2003
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
POLYTHERICS LTD (GB)
SHAUNAK SUNIL (GB)
GIANASI ELISABETTA (IT)
DUNCAN RUTH (GB)
International Classes:
A61K31/7028; C07H13/02; A61K47/48; A61P1/04; A61P17/00; A61P19/02; A61P29/00; A61P31/04; A61P35/04; A61P37/06; C08B37/00; C08G73/00; (IPC1-7): A61K47/48
Domestic Patent References:
WO1998056353A11998-12-17
Other References:
ASHTON ET AL: "Synthetic carbohydrate dendrimers. 3. Synthesis of glycodendrimers by modification of poly(propylene imine) dendrimers", CHEMISTRY - A EUROPEAN JOURNAL, VCH PUBLISHERS, US, vol. 3, no. 6, June 1997 (1997-06-01), pages 974 - 984, XP002102633, ISSN: 0947-6539
PAGE D ET AL: "SYNTHESIS AND BIOLOGICAL PROPERTIES OF MANNOSYLATED STARBURST POLY(AMIDOAMINE) DENDRIMERS", BIOCONJUGATE CHEMISTRY, AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, WASHINGTON, US, vol. 8, no. 5, 1 September 1997 (1997-09-01), pages 714 - 723, XP000698650, ISSN: 1043-1802
MALIK N ET AL: "Dendrimers: - Relationship between structure and biocompatibility in vitro, and preliminary studies on the biodistribution of I-labelled polyamidoamine dendrimers in vivo", JOURNAL OF CONTROLLED RELEASE, ELSEVIER SCIENCE PUBLISHERS B.V., AMSTERDAM, NL, vol. 65, no. 1-2, March 2000 (2000-03-01), pages 133 - 148, XP004190318, ISSN: 0168-3659
VAN DUIJVENBODE ET AL.: "Synthesis and protonation behavior of carboxylated-functionalized poly(propyleneimine) dendrimers", MACROMOLECULES, vol. 33, 2000, pages 46 - 52, XP002247811
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
Silveston, Judith (20 Red Lion Street, London WC1R 4PQ, GB)
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Claims:
CLAIMS :
1. A glycodendrimer comprising carbohydrate moieties covalently linked to a carboxylic terminated dendrimer.
2. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 1 wherein the carboxy terminated dendrimer is a carboxy terminated poly (amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimer.
3. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2 wherein the dendrimer comprises one or more generations of dendrimers from generation 1. 5 to generation 9.5.
4. A glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 3 wherein the dendrimer is or comprises a dendrimer generation 2.5.
5. A glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 4 wherein the dendrimer is or comprises a dendrimer generation 3.5.
6. A glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 5, wherein a carbohydrate moiety is a monosaccharide, disaccharide, trisaccharide, oligosaccharide or polysaccharide, or a combination of one or more thereof.
7. A glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the carbohydrate moiety comprises one or more amine groups.
8. A glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 5, where the carbohydrate group is an amino sugar or a sulphated amino sugar, which amino sugar or sulphated amino sugar may be modifed.
9. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 8, wherein a modifed amino sugar or sulphated amino sugar is acylated, for example, Nacylated.
10. A glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 9, wherein the carbohydrate group is glucosamine, a glucosamine sulphate, Nacetyl glucosamine or an Nacetyl glucosamine sulphate.
11. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 10, wherein a glucosamine sulphate is glucosamine 6sulphate, glucosamine 3, 6disulphate or glucosamine 3,4, 6trisulphate, and an Nacetyl glucosamine sulphate is Nacetyl glucosamine 6sulphate, Nacetyl glucosamine 3,6disulphate or Nacetyl glucosamine 3,4, 6trisulphate.
12. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 1, which is dendrimer gen. 3. 5glucosamine, or dendrimer gen. 3.5glucosamine 6sulphate, or dendrimer gen. 3.5Nacetylglucosamine, or dendrimer gen. 3.5Nacetylglucosamine sulphate, or dendrimer gen. 3. 5mannosamine, or dendrimer gen. 3. 5mannosamine sulphate or dendrimer gen. 3. 5Nacetylmannosamine, or dendrimer gen. 3. 5Nacetylmannosamine sulphate, or a corresponding dendrimer gen.
13. 25, or any combination thereof.
14. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 12 or claim 13, wherein the dendrimer is a PAMAM dendrimer.
15. A pharmaceutical formulation comprising a glycodendrimers as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 13 and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
16. A pharmaceutical formulation as claimed in claim 14 wherein the concentration of the glycodendrimer is from 2.5 to 2, 500 gg/ml, for example, from 25 to 250 ttg/ml.
17. A pharmaceutical formulation as claimed in any one of claims 13 to 15 or a glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 12, in a form suitable for administration intravenously, intraarterially, into the lymphatic circulation, orally, intraperitoneally, topically, buccally, rectally, to the surface of the skin, transdermally, subcutaneously, intramuscularly, into the joint space, intranasally, intravitreally, by aerosol, or by pulmonary administration.
18. A pharmaceutical formulation as claimed in any one of claims 13 to 15, or a glycodendrimer as claimed in any of claims 1 to 12, in a form suitable for administration directly to the eye as eye drops, by deposition of a pellet in or around the eye, or by injection into any chamber within the eye, or by direct infusion through an organ.
19. A glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of clams 1 to 12 for use as a medicament.
20. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 18, for use as a medicament for the treatment of a disease in which chemokines and cytokines are increased.
21. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 18, for use as a medicament for the treatment of a disease in which angiogenesis is increased.
22. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 18, for use as a medicament for the treatment of a disease in which chemokines and cytokines are increased and angiogenesis is increased.
23. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 18, for use as a medicament for the treatment of severe sepsis, septic shock, the systemic inflammatory response associated with sepsis, rheumatological disease, eczema, psoriasis, contraction of tissues during wound healing, excessive scar formation during wound healing, transplant rejection, or graft versus host disease.
24. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 18, for use as a medicament for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile chronic arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, reactive arthritis occuring after an infection, acute ankylosing spondylitis, arthritis associated with inflammatory bowel disease, Behcet's disease including Behcet's disease with panuveitis and/or retinal vasculitis, inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis), or a disease associated with metastatic tumour cell growth.
25. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 22, wherein the transplant is a corneal, kidney, heart, lung, heartlung, skin, liver, gut or bone marrow transplant.
26. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 22, wherein severe sepsis, septic shock or systemic inflammatory response associated with sepsis is caused by the lipopolysaccharide from gram negative bacteria, or a superantigen toxin from a gram positive bacterium.
27. Use of a glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 12 for the manufacture of a medicament for the treatment of a disease or condition as defined in any one of claims 19 to 25.
28. A method of treating a subject to treat or prevent a disease or condition as defined in any of claims 19 to 25, comprising administering to the subject an amount of a glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 12 effective to achieve the desired treatment..
29. A process for preparing a glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 12 comprising covalently linking an amino functionalised carbohydrate to a carboxy terminated dendrimer, wherein the covalent linkage is achieved by the use of a coupling reagent.
30. A process as clamed in claim 28, wherein the coupling reagent is a carbodimide coupling reagent.
31. A process as claimed in claim 29, wherein the coupling reagent is 1ethyl3 (3 dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide hydrochloride.
32. A process as calimed in any one of claims 28 to 30, wherein an amino functionalised carbohydrate is a monosaccharide, disaccharide, trisaccharide, oligosaccharide or polysaccharide.
33. A process as claimed in claim 31, wherein the carbohydrate is a monosaccharide, disaccharide, trisaccharide, oligosaccharide or polysaccharide functionalised with one or more reactive amine groups.
34. A process as claimed in claim 32, wherein an amine group is a primary amine group.
35. A process as claimed in any one of claims 28 to 30, wherein the carbohydrate is glucosamine or a sulfated glucosamine, mannosamine or a sulphated mannosamine, galactosamine or a sulfated galactosamine, Nacetyl glucosamine or a sulfated Nacetyl glucosamine, Nacetyl mannosamine or a sulphated Nacetyl mannosamine, Nacetyl galactosamine or a sulfated Nacetyl galactosamine, or any combination thereof.
36. A process as claimed in calim 34, wherein a sulphated glucosamine is D glucosamine 6 sulphate, Dglucosamine 3,6,disulphate or Dglucosamine 3,4, 6 trisulphate, Dglucosamine 3sulphate, Dglucosamine 4sulphate, Dglucosamine 3,4 disulphate, or Dglucosamine 4,6 disulphate.
37. A process as calaimed in any of claims 28 to 35, carried out at at a temperature not greater than 40°C.
38. A process as claimed in any one of claims 28 to 36, carried out without the application of an external, additional energy source.
39. A process as claimed in any of claims 28 to 37, which is carried out in aqueous solution.
40. A glycodendrimer as defined in any one of claims 1 to 12, obtainable by a process comprising covalently linking an amino functionalised carbohydrate to a carboxy terminated dendrimer using a coupling reagent, the covalent linkage being carried out in an aqueous medium.
41. A glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 39, wherein the process is carried out as defined in any one of claims 29 to 37.
42. A pharmaceutical formulation as claimed in a ny one of claims 13 to 17, wherein the glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 39 or claim 40.
43. A glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of claims 18 to 25 wherein the glycodendrimer is as claimed in claim 39 or claim 40.
44. Use of a glycodendrimer as claimed in claim 26, wherein the glycodendrimer is as claimed in claim 39 or claim 40.
45. A method of treatment as claimed in claim 28, wherein the glycodendrimer is as claimed in claim 39 or claim 40.
46. A method comprising treating a tissue or organ for tranplantation with a glycodendrimer as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 13,39 and 40 ire vitro before transplantation.
47. A method as claimed in claim 45, wherein the tissue or organ is a cornea.
48. A process to covalently link a molecule, for example, a biologically active molecule, to an anionic dendrimer wherein the dendrimer is reacted with the biologically active molecule in the presence of a coupling agent, for example, a carbodiimide coupling agent.
Description:
GLYCODENDRIMERS HAVING BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY The present invention relates to new glycodendrimers having new biological activity, processes for preparing them and their use in medicine including veterinary medicine.

Dendrimers are a class of polymeric compounds that can be distinguished from conventional linear polymers by their highly branched, but circular and symmetrical architecture (Figure la and Figure lb). They have a molecular structure that can be much more precisely defined than is possible for linear polymers (Tomalia DA, Naylor AM, Goddard III WA. (1990) Starburst dendrimers: molecular level control of size, shape, surface chemistry, topology and flexibility from atoms to macroscopic matter. Angewandte Chemie-International Edition in English 29,138-175). STARBURST TM polymers (a trade mark of Dendritech Inc. Midland, Michigan) are dense star polymers. They are a particular type of dendrimer which is formed by the generational addition of branched layers from a core. Typically, they are available in generations 1.5, 2.5, 3.5, 5.5, 7.5, and 9.5. Generation is a term which relates to the way the molecules are synthesised and to their molecular weight. They have from 16 (gen 1.5) up to 4,096 (gen 9.5) terminal carboxylic acid groups.

WO 95/24221 [Dow Chemical Company] discloses dendritic polymer conjugates comprising dense star polymers complexed or conjugated with biological response modifiers.

The reactive end groups of dendrimers are present at the periphery of the molecule and these groups can be cationic or anionic (Newkome GR, Nayak A, Behera RK, Moorefield CN, Baker GR & Johnson AL. (1992) Chemistry of micelles series. 22. cascade polymers- synthesis and characterization of 4-directional spherical dendritic macromolecules based on adamantane. Journal of Organic Chemistry 57,358-362). End group modification is usually employed in dendrimers that have been prepared by the divergent approach :- i. e. poly (amidoamine) dendrimers (PAMAM dendrimers) and poly (propyleneimine) dendrimers (DAB dendrimers). Such modification of the functional groups on the outer surface of the dendrimer can significantly alter the biological properties of these molecules as a consequence of co-operative effects (Jansen JFGA, de Brabander-van de Berg EMM & Meijer EW. (1994) Encapsulation of guest molecules into a dendritic box. Science 266,

1226-1229). Compounds able to produce co-operative effects are very important in modulating biological control mechanisms in the immune system.

Previously it has not proved possible to covalently couple biological molecules to anionic dendrimers in order to make new compounds with novel and unique biological activity.

The present invention now provides a process to covalently link a molecule, for example, a biologically active molecule to an anionic dendrimer wherein the dendrimer is reacted with the biologically active molecule in the presence of a coupling agent, for example, a carbodiimide coupling agent, for example, 1-ethyl-3- (3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide hydrochloride (Figure 2). The reaction is preferably carried out in an aqueous solvent. The molecule to be linked to the dendrimer, for example, a biologically active agents, includes drugs, nucleic acids (in particular DNA), proteins, peptides, carbohydrates and antibodies of natural or synthetic origin.

The process of the present invention has the advantages of comprising single step, water based chemistry, which can be performed at room temperature (i. e. typically below 40°C).

The process of the present invention has the further advantage that it avoids the need for organic solvents that are often toxic in vivo. Furthermore, organic solvents require additional, complicated and expensive purification of the product from the organic solvent.

Conjugation, that is to say, covalent linkage of the components, in an aqueous environment facilitates the purification of the final product. This is important from an industrial, manufacturing perspective for the new drugs. A particular advantage of the process of the present invention is that conjugation can be carried out at ambient room temperature and does not require the application of an external energy source.

The process of the present invention is particularly useful for the preparation of anionic glycodendrimers.

In 1996, Roy defined glycodendrimers as"a new class of low molecular weight multiantennary carbohydrate containing biopolymers" (Page D & Roy R. (1997) Synthesis and biological properties of mannosylated Starburst poly (amidoamine) dendrimers.

Bioconjugate Chemistry 8,714-723). They were synthesised by convergent approaches with incorporation of various carbohydrate structures at the last step.

Glycodendrimers have been described by the manner in which saccharide residues are incorporated as complexes or conjugates into them as one of two types (Ashton PR, Boyd SE, Brown CL, Nepogodiev SA, Meijer EW, Peerlings HWI & Stoddart JF. (1997) Synthesis of glycodendrimers by modification of poly (propyleneimine) dendrimers.

Chemistry a European Journal 3 (6), 974-98420): (i) carbohydrate coated dendrimers characterised by the presence of saccharide residues attached to the end groups of the dendrimer.

(ii) fully carbohydrate dendrimers where the saccharides are used as multifunctional building blocks giving rise to dendrimers that are totally carbohydrate.

Although it is known that neoglycoconjugates can be prepared by linking saccharides to carriers, only those pre-formed dendrimers bearing primary amino groups on their periphery have been investigated as a macromolecular support for the attachment of carbohydrates (Ashton PR, Boyd SE, Brown CL, Nepogodiev SA, Meijer EW, Peerlings HWI & Stoddart JF. (1997) Synthesis of glycodendrimers by modification of poly (propyleneimine) dendrimers. Chemistry a European Journal 3 (6), 974-984). In these cases, the primary amine terminated dendrimers can be modified with relative ease with a variety of reagents. In contrast, it had not been possible to modify the carboxylic acid groups on the surface of carboxvlic terminated, anionic dendrimers in order to give the dendrimer different functional activity. The biological problem that this has led to is that aminic terminated dendrimers are considerably more toxic than the carboxylic terminated dendrimers in vivo (Malik N, Wiwattanapatapee R, Klopsch R, Lorenz K, Frey H, Weener JW, Meijer EW, Paulus W & Duncan R. (2000) Dendrimers: Relationship between structure and biocompatibility in vitro, and preliminary studies on the biodistribution of 5I-labelled polyamidoamine dendrimers in vivo. Journal of Controlled Release 65,133- 148). Therefore it was important to develop new glycodendrimers that were based upon carboxylic terminated dendrimers as the starting material.

In a further aspect, the present invention now provides new anionic glycodendrimers comprising covalently linked carboxylic terminated dendrimers. A glycodendrimer of the present invention comprises a carbohydrate moiety covalently linked to an anionic dendrimer, in particular a carboxylic terminated dendrimer. The term'a glycodendrimer'is used herein to include glycodendrimers that comprise more than one species of

carbohydrate moiety covalently linked to one species of carboxylic terminated dendrimer, glycodendrimers that comprise one species of carbohydrate covalently linked to a mixture of species of carboxylic terminated dendrimer dendrimers, and glycodendrimers that comprise more than one species of carbohydrate moiety covalently linked to a mixture of species of carboxylic terminated dendrimers.

A carboxylic terminated dendrimer is, for example, a carboxylic terminated dendrimer from any of generations 1.5 to 9.5, for example, generation (gen) 2.5 or gen 3.5. A mixture of species of carboxylic terminated dendrimer is, for example, a mixture of carboxylic terminated dendrimers of different generations, for example, from gen (generation) 1.5 to gen 9.5. For example, a gen 2.5 or gen 3.5 dendrimer may be used alone or in combination with any one or more other generation denrimers.

The carboxylic terminated dendrimer may be, for example, a carboxy terminated poly (amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimer. For example, one or more PAMAM dendrimers from gen 1.5 to gen 9.5 may be used, for example, a mixture generations of PAMAM dendrimers from generation 1.5 to generation 9.5 may be used. For example, a dendrimer may be or may comprises a PAMAM dendrimer gen 2.5 or 3.5.

Preferably the dendrimers are PAMAM dendrimers; particularly preferred PAMAM dendrimers are generation 3.5, which have up to 64 terminal carboxylic acid groups.

A carbohydrate moiety is covalently linked to the carboxylic terminated dendrimer. The carbohydrate group may be, for example, a monosaccharide, disaccharide, trisaccharide, oligosaccharide or polysaccharide, or a combination of one or more thereof. The carbohydrate group generally comprises one or more amine groups.

The carbohydrate moiety is preferably an amino sugar or a sulphated amino sugar, which amino sugar or sulphated amino sugar may be modified, for example, acylated, for example, N-acylated. The carbohydrate group may be derived, for example, from glucose, mannose or galactose. The carbohydrate group is, for example, glucosamine, a glucosamine sulphate, N-acetyl glucosamine or an N-acetyl glucosamine sulphate group. A glucosamine sulphate may have one ore more sulphate groups, for example, at any one or more of positions 3,4 and 6. A glucosamine suplate is, for example, glucosamine 6-

sulphate, glucosamine 3,6-disulphate or glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulphate. A glusosamine sulphate may be acetylated, for example, N-acetylated. An N-acetyl glucosamine sulphate is, for example, N-acetyl glucosamine 6-sulphate, N-acetyl glucosamine 3,6-disulphate or N-acetyl glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulphate.

Mannosamine and galactosamine and derivatives thereof, for example, sulphated and/or acylated derivatives corresponding to the above glucosamine derivatives, for example, glucosamine sulphates and N-acylated glucosamine and N-acylated glucosamine sulphates may be used.

A glycodendrimer of the present invention is, for example, dendrimer gen. 3. 5-glucosamine or dendrimer gen. 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulphate or dendrimer gen. 3. 5-N-acetylglucosamine or dendrimer gen. 3. 5-N-acetylglucosamine sulphate or dendrimer gen. 3.5-mannosamine or dendrimer gen. 3.5-mannosamine sulphate or dendrimer gen. 3. 5-N-acetylmannosamine or dendrimer gen. 3. 5-N-acetylmannosamine sulphate or any combination thereof.

Preferably, the dendrimers are covalently linked to compounds containing aminic groups, for example, amine groups, for example, primary amine groups, such as aminic sugars and sulphated sugars. Preferred sugars are glucosamine or suphated glucosamine.

The one-step reaction of the present invention may be used for the covalent conjugation of PAMAM anionic dendrimers gen 2.5 to sugars containing aminic groups and to sulfated sugars containing aminic groups.

Linear molecules, that is molecules without a ring structure, can also be attached to the anionic PAMAM dendrimers using the same chemistry. This has been successfully achieved for 3-amino-1-propanesulfonic acid for example.

Typically the covalent linker bond is stable over a period of at least 90 days.

Subsequent purification of the products has also been made simple and straightforward.

Until now, it has only been possible to covalently link molecules to cationic PAMAM dendrimers using multistep organic chemistry followed by a large number of purification steps.

Carboxylic acid terminated anionic PAMAM dendrimers have a remarkable lack of toxicity both in vitro and in vivo compared to cationic PAMAM dendrimers (Tsutsumiuchi K, Aoi K, & Okada M. (1999) Globular carbohydrate macromolecule"Sugar Balls"IV. Synthesis of dendritic nanocapsules with molecular recognition sites on periphery. Polymer Journal 31,935-941). Cationic dendrimers cause red cell haemolysis at a concentration of 10 pg/ml whilst anionic dendrimers have no such effect even at 2, 000, ug/ml. Anionic dendrimers have a longer circulation time in the systemic vascular circulation than cationic dendrimers, and this is associated with a lower degree of accumulation of the molecule in the liver. This inherent toxicity of higher generation cationic dendrimers means that they are unlikely to be suitable or safe for either high dose intravenous administration or for repeated intravenous administration (Malik N, Wiwattanapatapee R, Klopsch R, Lorenz K, Frey H, Weener JW, Meijer EW, Paulus W & Duncan R. (2000) Dendrimers: Relationship between structure and biocompatibility in vitro, and preliminary studies on the biodistribution of l25I-labelled polyamidoamine dendrimers in vivo. Journal of Controlled Release 65,133-148).

In a preferred aspect of the present invention the attachment of molecules, for example, non-biologically active molecules, to anionic PAMAM dendrimers allows the effective manipulation of chemokines and, in turn cytokines, as well as new blood vessel formation even though dendrimers, and molecules such as glucosamine and glucosamine 6-sulphate, have no proven intrinsic anti-inflammatory or antiangiogenic activity.

Glucosamine is a sugar moiety that can be conjugated to the dendrimer core via the ability of the amine group to react with the carboxylate groups present on the surface of anionic dendrimers. This leads to the formation of a stable amide bond. Glucosamine containing various combinations of sulfate moieties at the 3', 4'and 6'positions of the glucan moiety were also suitable for attachment using the same chemistry. This resulted in the formation of a new anti-angiogenic glycodendrimer with immunomodulatory properties and antiangiogenic properties.

The number of molecules of sugar or sulfated sugar covalently bound to the surface of the dendrimer increases in proportion to the number of carboxylic groups that are present on the surface of the dendrimer. The amount of glucosamine linked to the dendrimers, expressed as a percentage of converted carboxylic groups may range, for example, from 1.5

to 10.1 %. In the case of the sulfated dendrimers, the sulphur content increased in the following order: monosulfated sugar (2.79 % m: m S); disulfated sugar (5.78 % m: m S); trisulfated sugar (7.93 % m: m S). The amount of sulfate present in the conjugate was 6 % for glucosamine 6-sulfate, 11 % for glucosamine 3,6-disulfate, and 15 % for glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate.

The present invention also provides a glycodendrimer of the present invention for use as a medicament, and further provides methods of treatment of various diseases and conditions comprising administering an effective amount of a glycodendrimer of the invention to a subject, generally a human, in need of such treatment. For use as a medicament or in medical treatment, a glycodendrimer of the present invention is preferably produced according to the process of the present invention using an aqueous solvent. The term 'treatment'is used herein to mean treatment and/or prevention, as appropriate. The invention includes the use of the glycodendrimers of the invention in veterinary medicine.

These new anionic glycodendrimers downregulate the immune system by acting first and foremost on the release of chemokines, most notably macrophage inflammatory protein (nus) lp, MIP-la and interleukin 8 (IOL-8. The compounds inhibit the release of pro- inflammatory chemokines which, in turn, inhibits the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines most notably tissue necrosis factor (TNF)-a, IL-1 (3 and IL-6. The compounds of the invention also have antiangiogenic properties.

Accordingly, the present invention also provides a glycodenrimer of the present invention for use as a medicament for the treatment of a disease in which chemokines and cytokines are increased, and also provides a method of such treatment, and the use of a glycodendrimer of the present invention for the manufacture of a medicament for such treatment.

The compounds of the invention are particularly useful in the treatment of, for example, sepsis, severe sepsis, septic shock, the systemic inflammatory response associated with sepsis, rheumatological disease, eczema, psoriasis, contraction of tissues during wound healing, excessive scar formation during wound healing, transplant rejection, graft versus host disease and various conditions associated with angiogenesis in animals and man. A glycodendrimer of the iinvention may be used therapeutically or prophylactically.

Rheumatological and inflammatory conditions include rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile chronic arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, reactive arthritis occuring after an infection, active ankylosing spondylitis, arthritis associated with inflammatory bowel disease, Behcet's disease including Behcet's disease with panuveitis and/or retinal vasculitis, psoriasis, inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis).

Further conditions include allogeneic organ and tissue transplantation, graft versus host disease. A transplant may be a corneal, kidney, heart, lung, heart-lung, skin, liver, gut or bone marrow transplant. Diseases and conditions involving angiogenesis include diseases associated with metastatic tumour cell growth, which includes many cancers, and diabetic retinopathy. In the case of transplantion, a glycodendrimer of the invention may be adminsitered to the recipient before the transplantation is carried out. Alternatively or in addition, a tissue or organ for transplantaion may be treated with a glycodendrimer of the invention in vitro before transplantation, for example, in the case of a corneal transplant, a glycodendrimer of the invention may be added to the solution in which the cornea is stored before transplantation.

The term'sepsis syndrome'refers to sepsis plus impaired organ perfusion. The spectrum of clinical syndromes ranging from bacteremia to sepsis to severe sepsis to septic shock to refractory septic shock and to the systemic inflammatory response syndrome represents a continuum in which localised inflammation is at one end with a severe generalised inflammatory response leading to multi-organ failure being at the other end of the spectrum. In severe cases, death can occur within a few hours.

In a preferred aspect of the present invention, the compounds have activity against the systemic inflammatory response syndrome that is associated with bacterial or fungal infections. A glycodendrimer of the present invention may be used to treat sepsis caused by the lipopolysaccharide from gram negative bacteria, or a superantigen toxin from a gram positive bacterium, for example the severe sepsis, the septic shock or the systemic inflammatory response associated with sepsis caused by the lipopolysaccharide from gram negative bacteria, or a superantigen toxin from a gram positive bacterium.

In a further aspect, the present invention provides a pharmaceutical formulation comprising a glycodendrimers of the invention and optionally a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.

The compounds and formulations of the invention are suitable for administration intravenously, orally, intraperitoneally, topically (skin), buccal, rectally, to the surface of the skin, transdermal (slow release preparation), subcutaneously, intramuscularly, intranasally, by aerosol, by pulmonary adminsitration, and directly to the eye.

Particularly preferred compounds according to the invention are dendrimer gen. 3.5- glucosamine and dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulphate which have been proven to be useful.

For example in human cell lines, the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine showed ICso toxicity values that ranged from 1,825 to 3, 000 ug/ml, and the dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6- sulfate showed IC50 toxicity values that ranged from 246-307 p, g/ml. In freshly isolated, human peripheral blood mononuclear (PBMN) cells and in freshly isolated human monocyte-derived-macrophages (MDM), the IC50 toxicity value for dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine was 340-360 ug/ml. k freshly isolated, human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and in freshly isolated human monocyte-derived macrophages, the IC50 toxicity value for dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate, the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6- disulfate, and the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate was 230-260 p, g/ml.

Single donor MDMs were cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine up to a concentration of 150 llg/ml for 72 h. No reduction in cell viability was seen. Single donor HUVECs were cultured with dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine up to a concentration of 100 t, lg/ml for 72 h. No reduction in cell viability was seen. The dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was not toxic to Wistar rats when injected intravenously at a concentration of up to 30 mg/kg.

Neither dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine nor dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate affected the release of chemokines or cytokines from immune cells that were in their normal resting state. Activity of these two compounds was only seen when these compounds were cultured with cells that had been immunologically stimulated by an antigen in some way. Therefore, these two compounds do not interfere with the normal

homeostatic control under which primary, human cells operate on a day-to-day basis. As such, they differ from all other sulphated polysaccharides.

When single donor PBMN cells are cultured with dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine at 100 g/ml the release of macrophage inflammatory protein-la (MIP-la ; chemokine), macrophage inflammatory protein-lp (MIP-lß ; chemokine), Interleukin-8 (IL-8; chemokine), Tumor Necrosis Factor-a (TNF-a ; cytokine), Interleukin-lß (Llß ; cytokine) and Interleukin-6 (IL-6 ; cytokine) by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) at 5 ng/ml is significantly reduced. When single donor PBMN cells are cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine at 200 ug/ml the release of MIP-la, MIP-1 (3, IL-8, TNF-a, IL-lß and IL-6 by LPS at 5 ng/ml is significantly reduced. When single donor PBMN cells are cultured with LPS at 5 ng/ml for 30 min, or 1 hour, or 2 hours, or 3 hours, or 4 hours before the addition of dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine at 100 ug/ml, the release of MIP-la, MIP-lp, IL-8, TNF- a, IL-lp and IL-6 is significantly reduced. It has been shown that the dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine is not mediating its activity by binding to the LPS used in these experiments.

It is believed that the dendrimer gen. 3.5-glucosamine and dendrimer gen. 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulphate mediate their effects by acting as polyvalent binding inhibitors of the immunoregulatory functions of dendritic cells and of lymphocytes. This action is mediated through toll like receptors, chemokines and cytokines.

When single donor PBMN cells are cultured with dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine at 300 Rg/ml whose loading with glucosamine is only 3% (rather than the 7% used in all other experiments), the release of MIP-la, MIP-lß, IL-8, TNF-a, IL-1 (3 and IL-6 by LPS at 5 ng/ml is significantly reduced. When single donor PBMN cells from 2 or 3 individuals are mixed together and dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine is added at 50 Fg/ml, there is a significant reduction in the release of MIP-1 (3 and TNF-a. When single donor PBMN cells from 2 or 3 individuals are mixed together and dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine is added at 100 pg/ml, followed by LPS at 5 ng/ml or 10 ng/ml, there is a significant reduction in the release of MIP-1 P.

None of the compounds described (ie: dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine, dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine 6-sulfate, dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6-disulfate, or dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate) has any anticoagulant activity as determined using the

following in vitro assays :- kaolin partial thromboplastin time, prothrombin time, thrombin time and a Factor Xa assay. No anticoagulant activity was seen at the maximum concentration of 200 ug/ml that was analysed for all of the compounds tested. For dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine, this was also confirmed at a concentration of 300 ug/ml.

The compounds of the present invention constitute the first group of sulphated polysaccharides that have been synthesised that have no anticoagulant activity. They are therefore particularly suitable for intravenous administration in animal and in man.

New vessel formation is inhibited by a direct effect of dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6- sulfate on normal endothelial cells. Its effect is to prevent endothelial cells coming together to form new endothelial vessels and to form new blood vessels. In contrast to all other sulphated polysaccharides that have been developed as anti-angiogenic compounds, the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate synthesised has no anticoagulant activity. The dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate does not affect cell viability or the growth characteristics of PBMN cells or MDMs when present at a concentration of up to 150 llg/ml in cultures of these cells that are maintained for up to 5 days.

The dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate construct is not toxic to HUVECs when added to cultures of these cells up to a concentration of 100 pg/ml for up to 72 hours.

When single donor PBMN cells are cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate at 150, ug/ml or at 200 ug/ml, the release of MIP-lp and TNF-a by LPS at 5 ng/ml is significantly reduced.

When single donor MDMs from 4 individuals are mixed and dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine or dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate is added at 25, ug/ml, there is a significant reduction in the release of MIP-1 ß.

Using the human umbilical vein endothelial cell Matrigel assay as an in vitro model of angiogenesis, dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate inhibits new vessel formation and prevents new blood vessel formation; ie: angiogenesis.

Using an in vitro angiogenesis assay based on the outgrowth of new blood vessels from human placentas, dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate causes a reduction in the

number of new vessels that are formed when it is present at 25 ug/ml. The effect is significantly greater at 50, ug/ml.

The compounds of the invention are suitable for reducing the severity of the sepsis syndrome in animals and in man. They can be administered intravenously, orally or intraperitoneally at a concentration ranging from 2.5 to 2, 500) J. g/ml. The preferred concentration is 25 pg/ml to 250 p, g/ml.

In rheumatoid arthritis the compounds of the invention slow, abort or even prevent the acute-on-chronic tissue damage that is seen in this disease. The administration of the compounds in rheumatoid arthritis (especially early on in the course of the disease) would significantly reduce the release of the pro-inflammatory chemokines (MIP-1 a, MIP-1 (3 and IL-8) which, in turn, would reduce or abolish the release of the pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-a, IL-1 and IL-6).

The simultaneous administration of mixtures of two or more compounds of the invention to inhibit the release of pro-inflammatory chemokines and, in turn, inhibit the release of pro- inflammatory cytokines, and to concurrently inhibit angiogenesis is able to result in considerable synergy of action with minimal toxicity. For example the simultaneous administration of dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine and dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6- sulfate provides considerable synergy of action with lower doses and less frequent administration being possible.

The application of topical (ie: skin) preparations of the compounds of the invention to the active plaque lesions of psoriasis or eczema or excessive scar formation or the contraction of tissues during wound healing (especially early on in the course of the disease) results in the healing of these lesions by reducing or preventing endothelial cell proliferation and the angiogenic response.

The application of compounds of the invention to reduce or prevent new endothelial cell formation into vessels during its earliest stages is beneficial for the treatment of the skin lesions of psoriasis or eczema or excessive scar formation or the contraction of tissues that can occur during wound healing. In particular the administration of compounds such as dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine is suitable to reduce the release of the pro-inflammatory

chemokines (MIP-la, MIP-lp and IL-8) and, in turn, the release of the pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-a, IL-1 and IL-6) The simultaneous administration of mixtures such as dendrimer glucosamine and dendrimer glucosamine 6-sulfate to inhibit angiogenesis and to inhibit the release of pro-inflammatory chemokines and, in turn, the release of the pro-inflammatory cytokines results in considerable synergy of action with minimal toxicity in psoriasis. In particular, this provides a therapeutic benefit to the treatment of dermatological and rheumatological conditions.

The compounds of the invention are suitable for administration intravenously, orally, buccal, intraperitoneally, into the joint space, rectally, to the surface of the skin, transdermal (slow release preparation), subcutaneously, intramuscularly, intranasally, to the eyes as eye drops, by intravitreal (i. e. into the eye) injection, or by aerosol (eg. topically to the lungs) at a concentration ranging from 2.5 to 2, 500 pg/ml. The preferred concentration is 25 ug/ml to 250 ug/ml.

Crohn's Disease and Ulcerative Colitis are the major forms of inflammatory bowel disease.

The oral or intravenous administration of compounds such as dendrimer gen. 3.5- glucosamine and dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate are especially suitable early on in the course of the disease. The drug would accumulate in the tissues associated with the small bowel and the large bowel.

Intervention with a compound of the invention which reduces or prevents new endothelial cell formation into vessels (i. e.: neo-angiogenesis) during its earliest stages is beneficial for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease.

Intervention with a compound of the invention which reduces or prevents new endothelial cell formation into vessels (i. e.: neo-angiogenesis) during its earliest stages could be beneficial for the prevention of the destructive arthritis that can develop in the clinical course of inflammatory bowel disease.

The administration of compounds of the present invention could significantly reduce the release of the pro-inflammatory chemokines (MIP-la, MIP-1 (3 and IL-8) and, in turn, the

release of the pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-a, IL-1 and IL-6) in inflammatory bowel disease.

The simultaneous administration of compounds such as dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine and dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate to concurrently inhibit angiogenesis and to inhibit the release of pro-inflammatory chemokines and, in turn, the release of pro- inflammatory cytokines provides for considerable synergy of action with minimal toxicity.

The compounds will accumulate in the inflamed tissues that are central to the pathophysiology of rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease and psoriasis. The endothelial cells associated with areas of inflammation and the increased vascularity caused by the development of angiogenesis will facilitate the accumulation of the compounds into the areas of inflammation.

Particularly advantageous features of the present invention include: the inhibition of the release of chemokines and, in turn, cytokines that results in the rejection of autologous, allogeneic, syngeneic or xenogenic organ transplants, the inhibition of the release of chemokines and, in turn, cytokines, and the angiogenesis that results in the rejection of autologous, allogenic, syngeneic or xenogenic organ transplants, effective maintenance of the counter inflammatory environment that is required to prevent the rejection of the transplanted organ, and effective maintenance of the counter inflammatory environment that is required to prevent the development of graft versus host disease.

In a preferred aspect, the present invention also provides the use of dendrimer gen. 3.5- glucosamine and/or dendrimer gen. 3.5-glucosamine sulfate in any form of organ or tissue transplant. This includes corneal, kidney, heart, lung, liver, gut, skin and bone marrow transplantation.

Dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate has a direct effect on normal endothelial cells which leads to the inhibition of new vessel formation. The administration of dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate to patients provides a way of preventing the angiogenesis that is necessary for the establishment and the subsequent growth and development of a metastatic deposit of malignant cells into a tumour especially if administered early on in the course of the disease.

A drug like dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate or a combination of dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine and dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate which reduces or prevents the proliferation of endothelial cells and prevents neo-angiogenesis during the earliest stages of the growth of the metastatic lesion provides a way to abort or even prevent the development of the metastatic lesion.

A particularly preferred formulation for use in patients is dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine (7%) and dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate (7%) which is being used at 100 to 200 p. g/ml.

Particularly preferred polymers have glucosamine or sulfated glucosamine covalently linked to the anionic dendrimer. The dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine and dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate were found to downregulate the release of the chemokines macrophage inflammatory protein-la, macrophage inflammatory protein-lp, and interleukin-8, and, in turn, downregulates the release of the cytokines tumour necrosis factor-a, interleukin-lp and interleukin-6 from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells.

Compounds of the present invention such as dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine can also be used in combination with existing and accepted therapeutic approaches as adjuvant therapy. For example, in the sepsis syndrome they could be used with antibacterial drugs or antifungal drugs. In rheumatoid arthritis and related conditions, Behcet's disease, inflammatory bowel disease and psoriasis, they could be used with steroids and disease modifying drugs such as methotrexate or disease modifying therapeutic antibodies. In the treatment of cancer metastases, they could be used with anti-mitotic drugs. In the treatment of organ transplant rejection, and in graft versus host disease, they could be used with steroids and/or cyclosporin and/or FK506 and/or azathioprine and/or tacrolimus and/or sirolimus and/or basiliximab and/or daclizumab.

The dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate has anti-inflammatory and anti-angiogenic properties. It is therefore useful as sole or as adjuvant therapy in rheumatoid arthritis and related conditions, Behcet's disease, inflammatory bowel disease, psoriasis, in the treatment of cancer metastases, rejection of organ transplants, and graft versus host disease. Alternatively, the dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine and the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine

6-sulfate could be used in combination for the treatment of each of these disorders. The simultaneous administrations of dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine and dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine 6-sulfate offers considerable synergy of action with lower doses and less frequent administration being required and thereby reduce drug toxicity.

A further advantage of the glycodendrimers of the present invention is that they are large molecules. Tissue based sites of inflammation are more permeable to circularing molecules and cells than is healthy tissue, irrespective of what triggers the inflammatory response.

Large molecules accumulate in areas of inflammation more rapidly that they do in normal tissue. The glycodendrimers of the present invention will therefore tend to accumulate at sites of inflammation.

The invention is further illustrated in the following examples.

A) CHEMISTRY AND TOXICITY : Examples A 1) Chemical synthesis : Starburst PAMAM anionic dendrimers generation 2.5 and 3.5 (Figure la & b) synthesised by the divergent approach were used (Available from Dendritech Inc, Midland, MI, USA or Sigma/Aldrich, Gillingham, Dorset, England, UK). D-glucosamine hydrochloride, D- glucosamine 6-sulfate hydrochloride, D-glucosamine 3,6-disulfate and D-glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate were used as the sodium salt. A known amount of the dendrimers (gen 1.5 or gen 2.5 or gen 3.5) stored as the sodium salt in methanol solution were evaporated under a nitrogen stream in order to obtain 1 mmol of dendrimer sodium salt. The dendrimers were then solubilised in double deionised water and the pH reduced with hydrochloric acid (tIC1) in order to transform the surface groups from the non-reactive sodium carboxylated (COO- NaF) to the reactive carboxylic acid (COOH). A known amount of glucosamine hydrochloride, glucosamine 6-sulfate, glucosamine 3,6-disulfate, or glucosamine 3,4, 6- trisulfate was solubilised in double deionised water and the pH increased with triethylamine in order to obtain the reactive free base (NH2). In the preparation of the dendrimer- glucosamine conjugates, the reaction was spiked with a known amount of 14C-glucosamine solution in double deionised water in order to follow the reaction and determine the amount of glucosamine attached to the dendrimers. The glucosamine and 14C-glucosamine aqueous solution or sulfated glucosamine solutions were then added to the dendrimer solution and an acid pH maintained with HCI. Subsequently, an excess of the condensing agent 1-ethyl- 3- (3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide hydrochloride was solubilised in water and added

to the reaction solution (Figure 2). The reaction mixture was stirred at room temperature.

Notably, the reaction can take place at ambient room temperature (i. e. <40°C) and does not require the application of an external energy source.

Having prepared the dendrimer-glucosamine conjugates, some of the reaction mixture was passed through a PD-10 column and the fractions collected read on a B-counter to establish the presence of a high molecular weight conjugated compound. The reaction mixture was then purified in order to eliminate the unreacted glucosamine, the excess 1-ethyl-3- (3- dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide hydrochloride, and the urea formed during the reaction. In the case of dendrimers gen 3.5, the reaction mixture was dialysed against water and subsequently freeze-dried. In the case of the lower molecular weight generation dendrimers, the reaction mixture was freeze-dried, re-solubilised in deionised water and then passed through a Sephadex G15 column. The fractions at higher molecular weight containing the purified conjugate were collected, pooled together and freeze-dried.

After purification, a portion of the dendrimer-glucosamine conjugate was passed through a PD-10 column and the fractions collected read on a B-counter to monitor for the presence of unbound glucosamine. The total amount of glucosamine bound to the surface of the dendrimers was also determined using a B-counter. Characterisation and reproducibility of synthesis data for the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine is shown in Table 1. In the case of the dendrimer-glucosamine sulfate conjugates, the amount of sulfated sugar attached to the polymer was determined by sulphur analysis: a known weight of the sample was combusted in an atmosphere of oxygen in a Schoniger oxygen flask. The products of combustion were washed into a 50 ml flask with double deionised water and made up to volume. This solution was analysed for sulphate content by ion chromatography using Dionex 100 ion chromatography. All of the prepared conjugates were also analysed by infrared spectroscopy. Characterisation and reproducibility of the synthesis data for the dendrimer gen 3.5-sulfated glucosamine constructs is shown in Table 2.

All of the conjugates were treated with activated carbon to remove endotoxin (i. e.: LPS) prior to their biological evaluation. Endotoxin could also be removed from the compounds synthesised using a column packed with polymixin B. The freeze-dried, purified, hygroscopic product was stored under airtight conditions. Endotoxin levels were

determined using the limulus amebocyte lysate assay. All biological data was derived with batches of compounds whose endotoxin level was <0. 1 EU/ml.

Examples A 2: Chemical characterisation of dendrimer-glucosamine and dendrimer- sulfated glucosamine coniusates : When glucosamine was conjugated to the dendrimers, the fractions collected by gel filtration (PD-10 column) of the reaction mixture and subsequently analysed at the B- counter showed a peak in fractions 7,8, 9 & 10 collected (Figure 3). This peak denotes the presence of a high molecular weight structure containing 14C-glucosamine confirming the formation of a dendrimer-glucosamine conjugate. FT-IR spectra peaks at 1640 cm~l and 1560 cil', in conjugation with the peak at 3260 caf indicate the formation of the amide bond (Figure 4 and Figure 5). In the case of dendrimer-sulfated glucosamine conjugates, the further peak at 1210 cm' (Figure 6 for the dendrimer-glucosamine 6-sulfate conjugate) indicates the presence of sulfated glucosamine with prevention of loss of sulfuric acid during the conjugation.

The amount of glucosamine linked to the dendrimers, expressed as a percentage of converted carboxylic groups, ranged from 1.5 to 10.1 %. In the case of the sulfated dendrimers, the sulphur content increased in the following order: monosulfated sugar (2.79 % m: m S); disulfated sugar (5.78 % m: m S) ; trisulfated sugar (7.93 % m: m S). From the sulphur content, it was possible to calculate the amount of sulfate present in the conjugate as being 6 % in the case of glucosamine 6-sulfate, 11 % in the case of glucosamine 3,6- disulfate and 15 % in the case of the glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate conjugate.

The one-step reaction was also investigated as a feasible method for the conjugation of :- a) PAMAM anionic dendrimers gen 2.5 to molecules containing aminic groups as well as to glucosamine 6-sulfate. The presence of characteristic peaks for the amide bond (3270 cm'\ 1640 and 1550 cm~l) indicated the formation of a conjugate between dendrimers and glucosamine or sulfated glucosamine as was seen with the generation 3.5 dendrimers.

Molecules described above, can be attached to the anionic PAMAM dendrimers using the same chemistry. This has been successfully achieved for 3-amino-1-propanesulfonic acid, 2-amino ethanesulfonic acid and aminomethane sulfonic acid as examples.

It is known that guest molecules can become trapped in the core of the dendrimer (Kempen HJM, Hoes C, van Boom JM, Spanjer HH, de Lange J, Langendoen A & van Berkel TJC.

(1984) A water-soluble cholesteryl-containing trisgalactoside-synthesis, properties, and use in directing lipid-containing particles to the liver. Journal Medicinal Chemistry 27, 1306-1312). Therefore it was important to determine the amount of unbound glucosamine inside the dendritic structure. This was undertaken by keeping a known amount of the conjugate in solution over a period of time and then determining the amount of unbound glucosamine present by gel filtration. Figure 7 (i) shows the gel filtration profiles of the conjugate stored in aqueous solution compared to free glucosamine; the amount of unbound glucosamine increased only slightly over time from 3.1 wt % at day 0 to 7.5 wt % after 90 days of storage at 4°C. Therefore, it was concluded that the covalent amide bond is stable and that there was no significant entrapment of free glucosamine within the dendrimer.

Similar results were obtained from the dendrimer-glucosamine gen 2.5 after 30 days of storage under similar conditions (Figure 7 (ii)).

These observations allow a calculation of the number of molecules of glucosamine or sulfated glucosamine that have been linked to 1 molecule of dendrimer because all of the glucosamine or glucosamine sulfate molecules are linked to the outer surface of the dendrimer. The number of molecules of sulfated sugar linked to 1 molecule of dendrimer did not change with increasing numbers of sulfated groups attached to the glucosamine moiety, showing that the one-step reaction can be used as a standard method for conjugating sulfated glucosamine derivatives to dendrimers. The number of molecules of glucosamine or sulfated glucosamine linked to 1 molecule of dendrimer generation 2.5 is lower when compared to generation 3.5 because there are 32 carboxylic terminal groups in the former and 64 carboxylic acid groups in the latter. Therefore, due to the higher loading and the minimal toxicity of the generation 3.5 dendrimers, these conjugates were chosen as candidates for further biological investigation.

Examples A 3: Coniugation of glucosamine to dendrimer gen 3.5 with DMSO as the reaction solvent: A test tube was charged with PAMAM dendrimer gen 3.5 methanol solution and the solvent removed under a fast stream of nitrogen. The clear solid residue obtained was further dried in a vacuum oven for approximately 3 hours. The isolated solid was then dissolved in de-ionised water and the resulting solution acidified to approximately pH 3

using 0.1 N HC1. The solution was then purified/de-salted by dialysing against de-ionised water for 2 days (Visking dialysis tubing, Medicell International Ltd, MWCO 3500). Freeze-drying of the dialysed solution afforded the protonated dendrimer as a clear glassy solid.

The protonated dendrimer (150 mg), N-hydroxysuccinimide (9.6 mg), glucosamine hydrochloride (12.6 mg) and a magnetic stir bar were added to a 1.5 mL vial and the vial sealed with a septum-centred screw cap lid. A nitrogen atmosphere was then introduced into the vial, followed by anhydrous DMSO (0.7 mL) using a syringe. The resulting mixture was allowed to stir until a homogeneous solution had formed. Separately, 1,3- dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (17.1 mg) was dissolved in anhydrous DMSO (0.3 mL) under a nitrogen atmosphere in a 1.5 mL vial. A homogeneous solution was allowed to form which was then added by syringe to the stirred dendrimer reaction solution. The 1,3- dicyclohexylcarbodiimide vial was washed with fresh DMSO (0.1 mL) and this solution was also added to the dendrimer vial. After 15 min, triethylamine (12 L) was added to the dendrimer solution by syringe and the resulting solution allowed to stir overnight at room temperature. To the reaction mixture was then added 1 N sodium hydroxide (800 pL). The resulting mixture was transferred to a larger vial, diluted with approximately 3 mL of de- ionised water and then filtered through a glass pipette with a piece of cotton-wool to act as a filter. The homogeneous supernatant was diluted to approximately 100 mL with de- ionised water and then dialysed against de-ionised water for 3 d (Visking dialysis tubing, Medicell International Ltd, MWCO 3500) followed by freeze-drying to afford a solid product.

In an alternative procedure, glucosamine hydrochloride (18.0 mg) was added with triethylamine (23 pu) in DMSO (0.2 mL) to a stirred dendrimer (150 mg) and N- hydroxysuccinimide (9.6 mg) solution in DMSO (0.7 mL) that had been activated with 1, 3- dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (17.1 mg) for 1 h. This alternative procedure also afforded a solid product after dialysis and freeze-drying. Glucosamine conjugation to the dendrimer gen. 3.5 was confrmed and quantified by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry in deuterium oxide. The mol% glucosamine conjugation was calculated to be 3.8 0.4.

Examples A 4: Toxicitv of compounds in human cell lines: The compounds synthesised were evaluated for their toxicity in the following cell lines:- the human T-cell line (Sup-Tl), a human T-cell line transformed with HTLV-1 (C8166), the human monocytic cell line (U937), the brain cell line transfected with human CD4 and the human chemokine receptor CCR5 (U87-CD4-CCR5), and the murine melanoma cell line (B16F10).

Dendrimers, glucosamine, glucosamine 6-sulfate and dendrimer conjugates were incubated with each cell line. Sup-Tl, C8166, U937, U87-CD4-CCR5 and B16F10 cells were seeded at a density of 2 x 105 cell/ml and B16F10 cells were seeded at 1 x 105 cell/ml in 96 well microtiter plates in medium containing RPMI 1640,20 mM L-glutamine, penicillin [250 IU/ml], streptomycin [250 llg/ml] and 10 % fetal calf serum. The conjugates or controls were incubated for 67 h with the cells at concentrations ranging from 0-5, 000 ug/ml. An MTT assay was then used to determine cell viability and the results were expressed as a percentage of that for cells grown in the absence of any compound.

Dextran and poly (L-lysine) were used as negative and positive controls respectively.

Glucosamine and glucosamine 6-sulfate showed no toxicity at concentrations up to 1,000 llg/ml. Higher concentrations of these compounds could not be evaluated because glucosamine interferes with the MTT assay above his concentration. Dendrimers gen 3.5 and dendrimers gen 2.5 showed no toxicity up to concentrations of 5,000 llg/ml. The dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine conjugate showed ICso values ranging from 1,825 to 3,000 , ug/ml in the different cell lines The dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate conjugate had IC5o values ranging from 246-307 llg/ml (Table 3).

Examples A 5: Toxicitv of compounds against primary human cells in vitro : The dendrimers and the dendrimer conjugates were incubated with freshly isolated, human peripheral blood mononuclear (PBMN) cells and with freshly isolated human monocyte- derived-macrophages (MDM).

Human PBMN cells and human MDMs were separated from buffy coat residues within 24 h of collection by density gradient centrifugation. The cells were then washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), re-suspended in lymphocyte growth medium (RPMI

1640,20 mM L-glutamine, penicillin [250 IU/ml], streptomycin [250 llg/ml] and 15 % foetal calf serum) containing human recombinant interleukin 2 (IL-2,20 IU/ml) for 3 days and then plated in a 96 well plate at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml. To separate MDMs, the remaining cells were re-suspended in macrophage-growth medium (RPMI 1640,20 mM L- glutamine, penicillin [250 IU/ml], streptomycin [250 Rg/ml] and 10 % human serum) and plated in a plastic dish for 2 h. MDMs were then scraped, washed and plated in a 96 well plate at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml. The monocytes were allowed to differentiate to MDMs by a further 3 days of adherence. The compounds were then added to PBMN cells or to MDMs (1 x 106 cells/ml) and incubated for 67 h. Cell viability was assessed using the MTT assay at 72 h.

Dendrimer gen 3.5 and glucosamine 6-sulfate were not toxic to PBMN cells or to MDMs up to the maximum concentration of 1,000 Rg/ml that was evaluated. The IC50 value for dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was 340-360 llg/ml in primary cells as determined using an MTT assay. The ICso value for the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate construct, the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6-disulfate construct, and the dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate conjugate was 230-260 Rg/ml in primary cells as determined using an MTT assay.

Examples A 6: The effect of the dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine and the dendrimer gen 3.5 sulfated glucosamine conjugates on the release of MIP-lß from sinsle donor, human PBMN cells, MDMs and peritoneal macrophages : Recent studies have shown that macrophage inflammatory protein-1ß (MIP-1ß) is the earliest pro-inflammatory chemokine that is released by cells of macrophage origin after they have been exposed to an inflammatory stimulus (Wang Z-M, Liu C & Dziarski R.

Chemokines are the main pro-inflammatory mediators in human monocytes activated by Staphylococcus aureus, peptidoglycan, and endotoxin. (2000) J. Biological Chemistry 275; 20260-20267). All the polymers that have been studied to date, irrespective of whether they have been derived from a natural source or have been synthetically made have shown a significant ability to induce the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines from immune cells. We therefore exposed single donor human PBMN cells, single donor human MDMs, and single donor human peritoneal macrophages to the compounds synthesised in order to determine whether they induced any pro-inflammatory responses from these cells.

Cells were isolated as previously described within 4 hours of collection and then plated at 1x106 cells/ml. Dendrimer gen 3.5, dendrimer gen 3.5 glucosamine, dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine 6-sulfate, dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6-disulfate, and dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate were then added to the cells at a concentration of 50 to 200 Rg/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 36 h later and assayed for MIP-lp.

No release of MIP-1 (3 above that seen in the control wells occurred with: a) PBMN cells and dendrimer gen 3.5, dendrimer gen 3.5 glucosamine, or dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate at 50 tg/ml (Figure 8 (i)). b) MDMs and dendrimer gen 3.5, dendrimer gen 3.5 glucosamine, or dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine 6-sulfate at 50 pg/ml (Figure 8 (ii) and Figure 8 (iii)). c) MDMs and dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6-disulfate, and dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate at 50 llg/ml (Figure 9). d) Peritoneal macrophages after 36 h (Figure 10 (i) and Figure 10 (ii) ) and after 72 h (Figure 10 (iii) ) of culture with dendrimer gen 3.5, dendrimer gen 3.5 glucosamine, or dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate with each molecule at 25 ug/ml. e) Peritoneal macrophages after 36 h of culture with dendrimer gen 3.5, dendrimer gen 3. 5 glucosamine or dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate with each molecule at 50 , ug/ml (Figure 11 (i) and Figure 11 (ii) respectively). f) Peritoneal macrophages after 36 h of culture with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6- disulfate or dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate with each molecule at 50 Fg/ml (Figure 12 (i) and Figure 12 (ii) respectively). g) Peritoneal macrophages after 36 h of culture with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6- disulfate or dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate with each molecule at 100 g/ml (Figure 13 (i) and Figure 13 (ii) ) and at 200 llg/ml (Figure 13 (iii) and Figure 13 (iv)).

Therefore, in conclusion, it is important to note that dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine, dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate, dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6-disulfate, and dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate did not affect the release of chemokines or cytokines from immune cells (ie: primary human peripheral blood mononuclear cells, human monocyte derived macrophages or human peritoneal macrophages) that were in their

normal resting state. This is the first time that a glycodendrimer has been shown not to affect human primary cells in their normal resting state. Therefore when administered as a medicine, these molecules will only have a drug mediated effect on diseased human cells.

These two compounds will not interfere with the routine homeostatic control under which normal human cells operate on a day-to-day basis.

EXAMPLES B: EXPERIMENTS WITH LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDE (LPS) : The effect of the dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine conjugate on the release of chemokines and, in turn, cytokines by LPS from single donor human PBMN cells : PBMN cells were isolated from fresh blood from single donors by density gradient centrifugation. The cells were re-suspended in growth medium (RPMI 1640,20 mM L- glutamine, penicillin [250 IU/ml], streptomycin [250 µg/ml] and 10 % endotoxin free human serum) and the cell density adjusted to 2 x 106 cells/ml. Aliquots of the cell suspension were transferred to a 12-well tissue culture plate and incubated for 15 min at 37°C. To these PBMN cells, LPS was added (usually at 5 ng/ml) either before or after the addition of the endotoxin free dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine. In the first set of experiments, the LPS (Salmonella minnesota, Sigma. Catalogue number L9764) was added 30 min to 24 h after the dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine conjugate. In the second set of experiments, the LPS was added 30 min, 1 h, 2 h, 3 h or 4 h before the dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine. The concentration of dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine added was 150-200 tg/ml. The cells were then maintained at 37°C with 5% C02. Cell free supernatants were collected at regular time points up to a maximum of 96 h later and assayed for macrophage inflammatory protein-la (MIP-la), macrophage inflammatory protein-1 (3 (MIP-1 [3), Interleukin-8 (IL-8), Tumor Necrosis Factor-a (TNF-a), Interleukin-lp (IL-1p) and Interleukin-6 (IL-6).

Experiment B 1: Single donor MDMs were prepared as described and cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine up to a concentration of 150 µg/ml for 72 h. No reduction in cell viability was seen when compared to MDMs cultured in media alone over a period of 72 h (Figure 14 (i)).

Single donor, human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were also prepared as follows. Umbilical cords were obtained from placentas from the maternity wards of Hammersmith and Queen Charlotte's Hospitals within 4 h of delivery. Excess blood was

removed from the cord by massaging the outside. The cord was then sprayed with 70% alcohol and wiped. The ends were cut with sharp scissors and the umbilical vein identified.

14 gauge cannulas with luer lock ends were inserted into each end of the umbilical vein and tied in place. The vein was then flushed through with HBSS (Sigma, Poole, Dorset) using a 20 ml syringe attached to a cannula. Endothelial cells were dislodged from the vein using a solution of 20 mg/ml collagenase A (Sigma) in HBSS (20 ml) and filter sterilised using a 20 pm membrane. Using a second 20 ml syringe, this solution was introduced into the umbilical vein and carefully agitated by gently applying pressure to each syringe in turn. The cord was then incubated in a water bath at 37°C for 20 min with a second agitation for 10 min. The collagenase A solution was removed from the cord and added to 20 ml of media containing 20% FCS to quench the enzyme and a further 20 ml of media flushed through the vein to remove any remaining endothelial cells. Cells were pelleted by centrifugation (400g/5 min), resuspended in 5 ml growth media [MEM alpha (Sigma)] containing 20% FCS, L-glutamine (2 mM), 200 IU/ml penicillin, 200 Lg/ml streptomycin and 50 ug/ml clinical grade heparin (Leo Laboratories, Bucks). They were then transferred to collagen coated 25 cm2 tissue culture flasks and incubated at 37°C with 5% C02. After 48 h incubation, 5, ug/ml endothelial cell growth supplement (ECGS-Sigma) was added.

Cultures were examined daily using an inverted microscope. When confluent, growth medium was aspirated and replaced with an equal volume of HBSS at 37°C. Cells were then removed by trypsinisation. The HBSS was aspirated and replaced with 2 ml trypsin (0.5 mg/ml) /EDTA (0.2 mg/ml) solution in HBSS (Life Technologies, Paisley, UK) and incubated at 37°C for 5-10 min until all cells had been removed from the bottom of the flask. Cells were then split to a ratio of 1: 2 to 1: 3 with fresh growth media containing ECGS (5 pg/ml) and transferred to the appropriate flask or tissue culture plate depending upon the assay being performed.

The HUVECs were cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine up to a concentration of 100 pg/ml for 72 h. No reduction in cell viability was seen when compared to HUVECs cultured in media alone over a period of 72 h (Figure 14 (ii)).

Experiment B 2: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and resuspended in RPMI, L- glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml.

The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture. plates and then cultured for 15 min

at 37°C in 5% CO2. LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested at regular intervals for up to 21 h and assayed for MIP-lß as shown in Figure 15.

Experiment B 3: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated from one individual, resuspended in RPMI, L-glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml. The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% C02. Dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was then added at 100 ug/ml.

The cells were cultured for 30 min at 37°C in 5% C02 and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml.

Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MlP-lß as shown in Figure 16 (i). A significant reduction in MIP-lp release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was present.

It has been confirmed that dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine and dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine 6-sulfate are not mediating their activity by binding to the endotoxin used in these experiments.

Experiment B 4: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and resuspended in RPMI, L- glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml.

The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% C02. Dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was then added at 100 ug/ml. The cells were cultured for 1 hour at 37°C in 5% COa and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-lß as shown in Figure 16 (ii). A significant reduction in MIP-lp release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine was present.

Experiment B 5: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and resuspended in RPMI, L- glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml.

The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% CO2. Dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was then added at 100, ug/ml. The cells were cultured for 24 hours at 37°C in 5% COa and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-lß as shown in Figure 16 (iii). A significant reduction in MIP-lp release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine was present.

Experiment B 6: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and resuspended in RPMI, L- glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml.

The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% CO2. Dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was then added at 100 pg/ml. The cells were cultured for periods ranging from 30 minutes to 24 hours at 37°C in 5% CO2 and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-lß as shown in Figure 16 (iv). A significant reduction in MIP-1p release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was present at all time points studied.

Experiment B 7: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and resuspended in RPMI, L- glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml.

The cells were plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and then cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% COx. LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested at regular intervals for up to 21 h and assayed for TNF-a as shown in Figure 17.

Experiment B 8: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and resuspended in RPMI, L- glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml.

The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% CO2. Dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was then added at 100 llg/ml. The cells were cultured for 30 min at 37°C in 5% C02 and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-la as shown in Figure 18 (i), MIP-1 (3 as shown in Figure 18 (ii), IL-8 as shown in Figure 18 (iii), TNF-a as shown in Figure 18 (iv), IL-1, as shown in Figure 18 (v), and IL-6 as shown in Figure 18 (vi). For all of the chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines studied, a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was present.

Experiment B 9: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and resuspended in RPMI, L- glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml.

The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% CO2. Dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was then added at 200 p. g/ml. The cells were cultured for 30 min at 37°C in 5% C02 and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-la as shown in Figure

19 (i), MIP-lß as shown in Figure 19 (ii), IL-8 as shown in Figure 19 (iii), TNF-a as shown in Figure 19 (iv), IL-lß as shown in Figure 19 (v), and IL-6 as shown in Figure 19 (vi). For all of the chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines studied, a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was present.

Also tested was a dendrimer gen 3.5 construct that had been made in aqueous solution by reacting the dendrimer gen 3.5 with the EDC linker but then omitting the addition of glucosamine or glucosamine sulphate. This dendrimer gen 3.5-EDC construct did not reduce the release of chemokines (MIP-lß) or TNF-a from peripheral blood mononuclear cells when they were challenged with lipopolysaccharide at 5 ng/ml. This means that the reduction in chemokine and cytokine release that was seen with the dendrimer-glucosamine construct was not due to side reactions of the dendrimer itself with the EDC linker group.

In further experiments, the dendrimer gen 3.5 that was conjugated to glucosamine using DMSO as the reaction solvent was also evaluated. This dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine construct did not reduce the release of chemokines (MIP-1 (3) or cytokines (TNF-a) from peripheral blood mononuclear cells when they were challenged with lipopolysaccharide at 5 ng/ml. Therefore, the synthesis of the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine in an aqueous solution was an important component of the process for making biologically active molecules.

Experiment B 10: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and resuspended in RPMI, L- glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml.

The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% CO2. Dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was then added at 200 gghnl. The cells were cultured for 1 hour at 37°C in 5% C02 and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-lp as shown in Figure 20 (i) and TNF-a as shown in Figure 20 (ii). For all of the chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines studied, a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine was present.

Experiment B 11: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and resuspended in RPMI, L- glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml.

The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% CO2. LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml and the cells were cultured for 30 min, or 1 hour, or 2 hours, or 3 hours, or 4 hours at 37°C in 5% C02 before adding dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine at 100 ug/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h after the addition of the LPS and assayed for MIP-la as shown in Figure 21 (i), MIP-lp as shown in Figure 21 (ii), IL-8 as shown in Figure 21 (iii), TNF-a as shown in Figure 21 (iv), EL-1p as shown in Figure 21 (v), and IL-6 as shown in Figure 21 (vi). For all of the chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines studied, a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was present.

Experiment B 12: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and resuspended in RPMI, L- glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml.

The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% CO2. Dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine in which the loading of glucosamine on the generation 3.5 dendrimer was 3 % (rather than the 7 % loading used in all the other experiments described) was then added at a concentration of 150 ug/ml or 300 ug/ml. The cells were cultured for 30 min at 37°C in 5% C02 and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 22 h later and assayed for MIP-lp as shown in Figure 22 (i), or for TNF-a as shown in Figure 22 (ii). For all of the chemokines and pro- inflammatory cytokines studied, a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was present.

EXAMPLES C-EXPERIMENTS WITH THE MIXING OF HUMAN CELLS FROM DIFFERENT DONORS: The effect of the dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine conjugate on the release of chemokines and, in turn, cytokines after the mixing of human PBMN cells from several donors: Experiment C 13: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated from 3 individuals and the cell density adjusted to 1 x 106 cells/ml. The cells from all 3 donors were then mixed together for 72 h in a 12-well tissue culture plate. The dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was then added at 50 llg/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 1 day, 3 days and 4 days later and assayed for MIP-lß and TNF-a. A significant reduction in MIP-lß and TNF-a release into

the culture supernatant was seen at all 3 time points assayed as shown in Figure 23 (i) and 23 (ii) respectively.

Experiment C 14: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated from 2 individuals and the cell density adjusted to 1 x 106 cells/ml. The cells were cultured separately for 24 h and then mixed together for 72 h in a 12-well tissue culture plate. The dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was then added at 50 Rg/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 1 day, 3 days and 4 days later and assayed for MIP-1 (3. A significant reduction in MIP-lp release into the culture supernatant was seen at all 3 time points assayed as shown in Figure 23 (iii).

Experiment C 15 : Single donor PBMN cells were isolated from 2 individuals and the cell density adjusted to 1 x 106 cells/ml. The cells were mixed together and dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine added at 100) J. g/ml. LPS was added immediately afterwards at 10 ng/ml and cell free culture supernatants harvested at regular intervals for up to 48 h. A significant reduction in MIP-lp release into the culture supernatant was seen from 24 h onwards as shown in Figure 24 (i).

Experiment C 16: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated from 2 individuals and the cell density adjusted to 1 x 106 cells/ml. The cells were mixed together and dendrimer gen 3. 5- glucosamine added at 100 g/ml. LPS was added 24 hours later at a concentration of 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested at regular intervals for up to 96 h. A significant reduction in MIP-lp release into the culture supernatant was seen from 24 h onwards as shown in Figure 24 (ii).

EXAMPLES D: CYTOKINE AND CHEMOKINE ASSAYS: Quantitation of MIP-113 and other chemokines and cytokines in tissue culture supernatants : Levels of MIP-1B were measured in cell free culture supernatants using a commercially available enzyme immuno-assay (EIA; Quantikine, R&D Systems). Dendrimers gen 3.5- glucosamine conjugates were first confirmed not to interfere with the assay by mixing rhMIP- 1B at a final concentration of 125 pg/ml with the dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine conjugate at a final concentration of 200 ug/ml irt growth medium. The solutions were incubated for 4 h at 37°C and then run as samples in the EIA. There was no interference of the dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine with the MIP-1 p assay (Table 4a).

There was no interference of the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine with the MIP-la, IL-8, IL-1B and IL-6 assays (Table 4a). In the case of TNF-a a low level interference was seen and this has been corrected for in the results shown in the figures (Table 4b).

EXAMPLES E: OTHER BIOLOGICAL DATA: Examples El : Preliminary animal toxicologv : Anionic dendrimers gen. 3.5 are not toxic to mice at 90 mg/kg. Four Wistar rats were injected intravenously with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine at a concentration of 30 mg/kg. This is equivalent to 6 mg/200g rat. All animals were healthy at 24 h. They were then killed and examined. No gross pathology was seen in any of the organs.

Examples E 2: Antieoagulant activity : The anticoagulant activity of each compound (ie: dendrimer gen 3.5, dendrimer gen 3.5 glucosamine, dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate, dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6-disulfate, and dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate) was determined using the following in vitro assays :- kaolin partial thromboplastin time, prothrombin time, thrombin time and a Factor Xa assay. No anticoagulant activity was seen at the maximum concentration of 200 ug/ml that was analysed for all of the compounds tested. For dendrimer gen 3.5 glucosamine, this was also confirmed at a concentration of 300, ug/ml.

The results are shown in Table 5. This is the first time that a sulphated polysaccharide has been made which has biological activity but no anticoagulant activity.

Examples E 3: Anti-HIV-1 activity ofdendnmer-sulfated slucosamine constructs : The anti-HIV-1 activity of dendrimers gen 3.5 glucosamine and the sulfated glucosamine conjugates synthesised was determined using C8166 cells and the HIV-l. IIIb virus up to a concentration of 100 Fg/ml. No anti-HIV-1 activity was seen.

EXAMPLES F: BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY OF DENDRIMER SULPHATED GLUCOSOAMINE: Examples F 1: Dendrimer sen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate does not affect the growth characteristics of human PBMN cells, human MDMs or HUVECs at the concentrations used:

The dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate did not affect cell viability or the growth characteristics of PBMN cells (Figure 25 (i) and Figure 25 (ii) ), or of MDMs (Figure 26) when present at a concentration of up to 150 pg/ml in cultures maintained for up to 5 days.

Cell viability was determined by Trypan blue exclusion and an MTT assay. Furthermore, the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate construct was not toxic to HUVECs when added to cultures of these cells up to a concentration of 100 ug/ml for up to 72 hours (Figure 27 (i) and Figure 27 (ii) and Figure 27 (iii)).

Examples F 2 : The effect of dendrimer gen 3. 5-lucosamine 6-sulfate on the release of chemokines and cytokines by LPS from single donor human PBMN cells: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated, resuspended in RPMI, L-glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml. The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% C02.

Dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate was then added at 150 ug/ml or at 200 Zg/ml. The cells were cultured for 30 min at 37°C in 5% C02 and LPS (5 ng/ml) added. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 24 h later and assayed for MIP-lp as shown in Figure 28 (i). A significant reduction in MIP-lp release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6- sulfate was present.

Cell free culture supernatants were also harvested and assayed for TNF-a as shown in Figure 28 (ii). A significant reduction in TNF-a release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine 6-sulfate was present at 150 u. g/ml or at 200 Rg/ml.

Examples F 3: The effect of dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate on the release of chemokines and cytokines after the mixing of human MDMs from four donors: Single donor PBMC cells were isolated from 4 individuals by density gradient centrifugation and then mixed together for 24 h. The cells were re-suspended in growth medium (RPMI 1640,20 mM L-glutamine, penicillin [250 IU/ml], streptomycin [250 pglml] and 10 % human serum) and the cell density adjusted to 2 x 106 cells/ml. To separate MDMs, the cells were plated in a plastic dish for 2 h and the MDMs then scraped, washed, and resuspended in growth medium. They were then re-plated at a density of 1x106 cells/ml and left in culture for 72 hours before adding either dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine or dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate at a concentration of 25 llg/ml. Cell free culture

supernatants were harvested 36 h later and assayed for MIP-lß as shown in Figure 29. A significant reduction in MIP-lß release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was present as well as when dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate was present.

Examples F 4: Endothelial microtubule formation assay to determine the anti- angiogenic activity of compounds : Kubota et al. reported that human umbilical vein endothelial cells undergo morphological differentiation with tube formation when cultured on a reconstituted gel composed of basement membrane proteins (Matrigel ; Beckton-Dickinson) (Kubota, Y. , H. K. Kleinman, G. R. Martin, and T. J. Lawley. 1988. Role of laminin and basement membrane in the morphological differentiation of human endothelial cells into capillary-like structures. J.

Cell. Biol. 107: 1589-1598). This has parallels with the in vivo situation where endothelial cells line the lumen of blood vessels and are in contact with the extracellular matrix of basement membranes that are composed of collagen IV, heparan sulphate proteoglycan and the glycoproteins laminin and nidogen/entactin.

Due to the ability of basement membranes to stimulate differentiation, cells plated onto the gel attach rapidly. Within one to two hours, elongated processes are observed. After eight hours, the endothelial cell cultures show abundant networks of branching and anastomosing of cords of cells. By eighteen hours, the endothelial cells have formed an interconnected network of anastomosing cells which, by low power light microscopy, have a honeycomb appearance. The tube like structures formed by endothelial cells on Matrigel persist for several days. The formation of the tube structures is not dependent on extracellular growth factors or the presence of heparin in the culture media. Tube formation also seems to be relatively specific for endothelial cells because neither human dermal fibroblasts nor human smooth muscle cells form tubes when cultured on Matrigel.

Ultrastructural EM studies have confirmed that the anastomosing cytoplasmic extensions of the morphologically differentiated endothelial cells contain a lumen that is completely encircled by one or two endothelial cells in cross section. The lumen contains various amounts of degenerated cytoplasm, suggesting that very rapid remodelling of the cell takes place during tube formation. Viability studies of endothelial cells cultured on Matrigel do not indicate that cell death plays an important role in tube formation. Moreover, these differentiated cells retain the characteristic Weibel-Palade bodies of endothelial cells.

The endothelial microtubule formation assay was performed by isolating human umbilical vein endothelial cells from umbilical cords within 6 h of delivery by caesarean section. The umbilical vein was cannulated and 0.1% collagenase in phosphate buffered saline was introduced and incubated for 20 minutes. The endothelial cells liberated by the collagenase were obtained by washing the umbilical vein with Medium 199. The cells were washed three times with Medium 199 and then cultured in tissue culture flasks coated with fibronectin. Growth media consisted of Medium 199 with 20% foetal bovine serum, 30 gel endothelial cell growth supplement, 10 IU/ml heparin, 100 IU/ml penicillin, 100 llg/ml streptomycin and 2 mM L-glutamine. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells were passaged at confluence after treatment with trypsin-EDTA. All cells were used at passages 3 to 6.

Aliquots of Matrigel were dispensed into 35 mm diameter tissue culture dishes on ice and then incubated at 37°C for 10 min to allow the gel to set. Dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate was prepared in HUVEC growth medium and added to the dishes at several different concentrations. HUVEC's at passage 3 to 6 were harvested using trypsin and suspended in growth medium at a density of 2-3 x105 cells/ml. One ml aliquots of the cell suspension were added to the plates containing the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6- sulfate and incubated at 37°C, 5% C02. At various time points from 8-24 hours, the plates were examined and scored using a published scheme from 0-4, where 0 = all adherent cells remain single, and 4 = all adherent cells involved in tubular structures. New vessel formation was quantified blind by three different observers at 18 h. The within-observer and between-observer variability was <10% (n = 4). The results are shown in Table 6 and photographs of the assay in Figures 30 to 32. Dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate significantly reduced the level of tube formation at 12 pg/ml and abolished it completely at 75 pg/ml to 100 wg/ml.

The in vitro model of migration and microvessel formation used for testing dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate fulfilled the two hallmarks of angiogenesis ; ie: endothelial cell proliferation and capillary sprouting. Our in vitro observations show that dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate inhibits new vessel formation by normal endothelial cells and that this prevents new blood vessel formation ; ie: angiogenesis.

Examples F 5: In vitro angiogenesis assay: Blood vessels (approximately 1-2 mm diameter) were excised from the apical surface of human placentas within 6 h of an elective Caesarian birth. The use of the placentas was approved by the Ethics Committee of Hammersmith Hospitals Trust, London. The blood vessels were placed in Hank's balanced salt solution and cut into 1-2 mm fragments using fine dissecting forceps and iridectomy scissors. Residual clots were removed and the blood vessels then soaked in Hank's balanced salt solution.

The effect of each compound on new blood vessel formation was determined by culturing the blood vessels within a fibrin clot in 24-well tissue culture plates. Thirty p1 of bovine thrombin (50 NIH U/ml in 0.15 M sodium chloride) was added to each well followed by 1 ml/well of 3 mg/ml bovine fibrinogen in Medium 199. The thrombin and fibrinogen were rapidly mixed and a blood vessel fragment placed in the centre of the well. Fibrin gel formation occurred rapidly and left the vessel suspended within the gel. One ml/well of Medium 199 supplemented with 20% foetal calf serum, 250 IU/ml penicillin and 250 U/ml streptomycin was then added to each well. s-amino-n-caproic acid was also added (300 , ug/ml) for the first 4 days and twice weekly thereafter (50 ug/ml) in order to prevent dissolution of the fibrin clot. The vessels were cultured at 37°C in a humidified incubator for 25 days with the media being changed twice weekly.

The degree of new vessel formation was quantified blind twice a week by three different observers using a visual analogue scale in which 0 = no growth, 1 = very little new vessel formation, 2 = significant new vessel formation and 3 = dense new vessel formation. An angiogenesis score was derived from the counts undertaken for each well by dividing the total score by the maximum score possible and then expressing the result as a percentage. On 2 separate occasions, each compound was tested in quadruplicate replicate wells. Experiments in which blood vessels were cultured in MCDB 131 (i. e.: serum free media) showed that serum factors were not necessary for new blood vessel formation. Some of the fibrin clots were fixed overnight in 10% formalin, paraffin embedded, sectioned for histology and then stained for the endothelial cell markers Factor VIII and CD31.

Over the 28 day course of the assay, a complex arcade of microvessels emerged from the cut section of the blood vessel embedded within a fibrin clot. Very little growth of new vessels was seen from those areas of the vessel which had not been sectioned. The first

blood vessels appeared by day 4 and were usually blunt-ended. Over the next 18 days, they went on to branch and give rise to complex arcades of vessels. Growth was rapid for the first 2 weeks and then slowed considerably. These new vessels were lined by endothelial cells as shown by positive immunohistochemistry for Factor VIII and CD31.

In six experiments performed, there was a reduction in the number of new vessels that were formed when dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate was present at 25 ag/ml (Figure 33).

The inhibition of new vessel formation was more marked and significant (p<0.05) when the dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate was present at 50 pg/ml. This effect was first seen at day 18 with the difference persisting and becoming greater until day 28. The experiment was terminated on day 32.

EXAMPLE G: MODEL SYSTEM FOR A MIXED LYMPHOCYTE REACTION: The present invention also provides a model system for the mixed lymphocyte reaction that can be used to evaluate compounds that inhibit the complex process of allograft organ rejection. The results from these experiments are shown in Figure 23 (i), Figure 23 (ii), Figure 23 (iii), Figure 24 (i), and Figure 24 (ii). Using our experimental model system, we have evaluated the anti-inflammatory activity of dendrimer gen. 3. 5-glucosamine and by dendrimer gen. 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate. Our results show that the mixed lymphocyte reaction can be successfully inhibited by dendrimer gen. 3.5-glucosamine as well as by dendrimer gen. 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate, and that they could therefore be of therapeutic use in preventing the inflammatory response seen when rejection of a syngeneic, autologous, allogeneic or or xenogenic organ transplant occurs. It may also be effective in maintaining the counter inflammatory environment that is required to prevent the rejection of the transplanted organ, as well as the development of graft-versus-host disease.

The mixed lymphocyte reaction can be used to test the responsiveness of recipient lymphocytes to antigens expressed on donor cells. Low recipient anti-donor mixed lymphocyte reaction responses are associated with excellent transplant survival. The test is especially important in bone marrow transplantation, because it also assesses whether the donor bone marrow cells can respond to recipient antigens and cause graft-versus-host disease.

EXAMPLE H: THE BIOLOGICAL ACTIVITY OF DENDRIMER GEN 3.5 GLUCOSAMINE ON CELLS OF DENDRITIC CELL ORIGIN: Immature monocyte derived dendritic cells were prepared as follows. Freshly isolated PBMN cells from a single donor were obtained and the monocytes isolated by adhesion to gelatin coated flasks for 1 hour. The isolated monocytes were cultured for 5 days in RPMI containing penicillin and streptomycin and L-glutamine and 10% autologous heat inactivated human serum with Interleukin-4 (1,000 IU/ml) and GM-CSF (150 IU/ml).

These cells were confirmed to be immature monocyte derived dendritic cells because of the following phenotype on FACS analysis: CD3-, CD4-, CD14-, CD16-, CD25-, CD80-, CD83-and HLA-DR+. Tissue derived, human peritoneal dendritic cells were isolated using the Milteny Biotech CDlc isolation kit. These cells were confirmed to be immature tissue derived dendritic cells because of the following phenotype on FACS analysis: CD3-, CD4-, CD14-, CD16-, CD25-, CD80-, CD83-and HLA-DR+. The blood-or tissue-derived human dendritic cells (i. e stimulator cells) were then irradiated to prevent their proliferation by exposing them to 30 Gy y irradiation.

For the mixed lymphocyte reaction, responder cells were prepared from single donor PBMN cells by first allowing them to adhere to plastic for 1.5 hours. The non-adherent fraction from these PBMN cells is rich in T cells and they were used as the responder cells.

The cells were cultured in RPMI and penicillin and streptomycin and L-glutamine and 10% heat inactivated human serum. The irradiated stimulator cells were mixed with the responder lymphocytes. The allogeneic mixed lymphocyte reaction was incubated at 37°C for 5 days and it was then pulsed with [3H] thymidine (1 pCu/well) and incubated at 37°C for another 18 hours. The cells were then harvested and the [3H] thymidine incorporated measured.

Experiment HI : Lipopolysaccharide leads to the immunological stimulation of immature dendritic cells.

Monocyte derived dendritic cells were prepared as described and plated at 1 x 105/well.

Dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine (200, ug/ml) was added for 1 hour followed by LPS (5 ng/ml). Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-1p as shown in Figure 35 (i) and for TNF-a as shown in Figure 35 (ii). For the chemokine and the cytokine studied, a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine was present.

Experiment H2: Lipopolysaccharide leads to the maturation of immature dendritic cells as demonstrated by their increased expression of cell surface CD25, CD80, CD83 and CD86. The ability of dendrimer gen. 3.5-glucosamine to interfere with this LPS induced maturation of dendritic cells was determined. Immature monocyte derived dendritic cells were prepared as described and plated at 1 x 106/well. Dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine (200 pg/ml) was added for 1 hour followed by LPS (5 ng/ml). The cells were cultured for 21 hours and then harvested for FACS analysis. As shown in Figure 36, dendrimer gen. 3. 5-glucosamine significantly reduced LPS induced upregulation of CD25 on the dendritic cells.

Experiment H3: Co-culture of dendritic cells and T lymphocytes leads to a mixed lymphocyte reaction as measured by [3H] thymidine uptake. Additional proliferation occurs if lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is also added. Gamma irradiated purified monocyte derived dendritic cells were incubated in round-bottomed 96 well culture plates in triplicate in aliquots ranging from 64,000 to 32 dendritic cells/well in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 330 ug/ml L-glutamine, 200 IU/ml penicillin, 200 ug/ml streptomycin and 10% heat inactivated human serum with dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine (200 p. g/ml) for 1 hour at 37°C with 5% CO2. The control wells contained media only. Allogeneic peripheral blood lymphocytes (100,000/well) were then added. Other control wells contained only the peripheral blood lymphocytes. The total volume per well was 250 p1. The plates were incubated for 5 days at 37°C with 5% CO2.

In addition, prior to adding the peripheral blood lymphocytes, the plates (with and without dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine) were incubated with lipopolysaccharide at a concentration of 5 ng/ml for 21 hours. The cells were then washed three times. Dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine was then added back at a concentration of 200 ug/ml. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were added at 100,000 cells/well and the plates incubated for 5 days at 37°C with 5% C02. To these cultures, [3H]-Thymidine (1 plCi/well) was then added for a further 18 hours and the cells cultured. After this time, the cells were harvested and proliferation measured using a liquid scintillation counter. The counts per minute (cpm) for the peripheral blood lymphocyte control well were subtracted from the actual cpm of each experiment in order to determine the mean cpm of [3H]-Thymidine incorporation. Figure 37 shows the results from three experiments. In each case, the proliferation caused by the

mixed lymphocyte reaction as well as the proliferation caused by LPS at 5 ng/ml was significantly inhibited.

Experiment H4: Gamma irradiated purified monocyte derived dendritic cells were incubated in round- bottomed 96 well culture plates in triplicate in aliquots ranging from 64,000 to 32 dendritic cells per well in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 330 yg/ml L-glutamine, 200 IU/ml penicillin, 200 ug/ml streptomycin and 10% heat inactivated human serum with dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine (200 pg/ml) for 1 hour at 37°C with 5% CO2. The control wells contained media only. Allogeneic peripheral blood lymphocytes (100, 000/well) were then added. Other control wells contained only peripheral blood lymphocytes. The total volume per well was 250 p1. The plates were incubated for 5 days at 37°C with 5% C02. In addition, prior to adding the peripheral blood lymphocytes, the plates (with and without dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine) were incubated with lipopolysaccharide at a concentration of 20 ng/ml for 21 hours. The cells were then washed three times. Dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine was then added back at a concentration of 200 g/ml. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were added at 100,000 cells/well and the plates incubated for 5 days at 37°C with 5% CO2. To these cultures, [3H]-Thymidine (1, uCi/well) was then added for a further 18 hours and the cells cultured. After this time, the cells were harvested and proliferation measured using a liquid scintillation counter. The counts per minute (cpm) for the peripheral blood lymphocyte control well were subtracted from the actual cpm of each experiment in order to determine the mean cpm of [3H]-Thymidine incorporation. Figure 38 shows the results from two experiments. In each case, the proliferation caused by the mixed lymphocyte reaction as well as the proliferation caused by LPS at 20 ng/ml was significantly inhibited.

Experiment H5: The ability of dendrimer gen. 3.5-glucosamine to reduce proliferation was determined.

Gamma irradiated isolated, purified peritoneal dendritic cells were incubated in round bottomed 96-well tissue culture plates in triplicate in aliquots ranging from 64,000 to 32 dendritic cells/well in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 330, ug/ml L-glutamine, 200 IU/ml penicillin, 200 All streptomycin and 10% heat inactivated human serum with dendrimer gen. 3. S glucosamine (200 llg/ml) for 1 hour at 37°C with 5% C02. The control wells contained media only. Allogeneic peripheral blood lymphocytes (100,000/well) were then

added. Other control wells contained only the peripheral blood lymphocytes. The total volume per well was 250 pi. The plates were incubated for 5 days at 37°C with 5% CO2.

In addition, prior to adding the peripheral blood lymphocytes, the plates (with and without dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine) were incubated with lipopolysaccharide at a concentration of 5 ng/ml for 21 hours. The cells were then washed three times. Dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine was then added back at a concentration of 200 pg/ml. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were added at 100,000 cells/well and the plates incubated for 5 days at 37°C with 5% C02. To these cultures, [3H]-Thymidine (1, uCi/well) was then added for a further 18 hours and the cells cultured. After this time, the cells were harvested and proliferation measured using a liquid scintillation counter. The counts per minute (cpm) for the peripheral blood lymphocyte control well were subtracted from the actual cpm of each experiment in order to determine the mean cpm of [3H]-Thymidine incorporation. Figure 39 shows the results from three experiments. In each case, the proliferation caused by the mixed lymphocyte reaction as well as the proliferation caused by LPS at 5 ng/ml was significantly inhibited.

Experiment H6: Gamma irradiated isolated, purified peritoneal derived dendritic cells were incubated in round bottomed 96-well culture plates in triplicate in aliquots ranging from 64,000 to 32 dendritic cells/well in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 330, ug/ml bglutamine, 200 IU/ml penicillin, 200 yg/ml streptomycin and 10% heat inactivated human serum with dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine (200 pg/ml) for 1 hour at 37°C with 5% C02. The control wells contained media only. Allogeneic peripheral blood lymphocytes (100,000/well) were then added. Other control wells contained only peripheral blood lymphocytes. The total volume per well was 250 p. l. The plates were incubated for 5 days at 37°C with 5% C02. In addition, prior to adding the peripheral blood lymphocytes, the plates (with and without dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine) were incubated with lipopolysaccharide at a concentration of 20 ng/ml for 21 hours. The cells were then washed three times. Dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine was then added back at a concentration of 200 llg/ml. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were added at 100,000 cells/well and the plates incubated for 5 days at 37°C with 5% C02. To these cultures, H]-Thymidine (1 pCi/well) was then added for a further 18 hours and the cells cultured. After this time, the cells were harvested and proliferation measured using a liquid scintillation counter. The counts per minute (cpm) for

the peripheral blood lymphocyte control well were subtracted from the actual cpm of each experiment in order to determine the mean cpm of [3H]-Thymidine incorporation. Figure 40 shows the results from two experiments. In each case, the proliferation caused by the mixed lymphocyte reaction as well as the proliferation caused by LPS at 20 ng/ml was significantly inhibited.

Experiment H7: In this experiment, the effect of dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine on the release of IL-2 and y-interferon during the mixed lymphocyte reaction in the presence of lipopolysaccharide was determined. Gamma irradiated purified monocyte derived dendritic cells or gamma irradiated isolated, purified peritoneal dendritic cells were incubated in round bottomed 96- well culture plates in duplicate in aliquots ranging from 32,000 to 2,000 dendritic cells/well in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 330 Itg/ml L-glutamine, 200 IU/ml penicillin, 200, ug/ml streptomycin and 10% heat-inactivated human serum. Dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine (200 ug/ml) was added for 1 hour at 37°C and 5% C02. Lipopolysaccharide (20 ng/ml) was then added for 21 hours. The cells were then washed three times with media and the dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine (200 llg/ml) replaced. Allogeneic lymphocytes (100,000/well) were then added and this was defined as day 0. The plates were incubated at 37°C and 5% COa and cell free culture supernatants were collected at day 3 and day 5 for the measurement of interleukin-2 and wy-interferon (EIA; R&D Systems).

Figure 41 (i) shows the results for gamma irradiated purified monocyte derived dendritic cells, and Figure 41 (ii) shows the results for gamma irradiated isolated, purified peritoneal dendritic cells. With each cell type, the dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine caused a significant reduction in the release of interleukin-2 and of y-interferon.

EXAMPLE J: EXPERIMENTS WITH SUPERANTIGEN TOXINS: Bacterial superantigens are amongst the most lethal of toxins. Superantigens produced by Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pyogenes trigger an excessive cellular immune response that can lead to lethal toxic shock. The family of superantigens includes staphylococcal enterotoxins SEA-SEE (among which SEB is most prominent), toxic shock syndrome toxin 1 (TSST-1) and the streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxins and SPEA and SPEC. In the case of SEB, it can activate 30-40% of T cells to divide and produce cytokines. Toxicity results from the massive induction of chemokines and cytokines from

cells of the immune system. The aim of the experiments that are described was to try and block these lethal effect of the superantigen toxin with dendrimer gen. 3.5-glucosamine at the beginning of this cascade; i. e. before activation of T cells can take place. The clinical rationale for doing this is that patients who produce higher levels of inflammatory cytokines in response to streptococcal superantigen toxins develop significantly more severe clinical manifestations of the disease than do patients who produce lower levels of these inflammatory cytokines in response to superantigen toxins (A. Norrby-Teglund et al.

European Journal of Immunology, 2000; 30: 3247-3255).

Experiment J1 : Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and resuspended in RPMI, L- glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml.

The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% C02. Dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was then added at 200, ug/ml. The cells were cultured for 30 min at 37°C in 5% CO2 and the superantigen SEB was then added at 100 ng/ml. Prior to using the SEB, it was confirmed that the SEB did not contain any LPS using the limulus assay. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-1, B as shown in Figure 42 (i) and for TNF-a as shown in Figure 42 (ii). For both the chemokine and the cytokine a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was present.

Figure legends: (All results are expressed as the mean sem. ) Figures la and lb : Structures of PAMAM anionic dendrimers gen 2.5 (a) and PAMAM anionic dendrimers gen 3.5 (b).

Dendrimers gen 2.5 : MWt = 6,011 Daltons; 32 carboxylic surface groups.

Dendrimers gen 3.5 : MWt = 12, 419 Daltons; 64 carboxylic surface groups.

Figure 2: Schematic representation of the conjugation of glucosamine or sulfated glucosamine to PAMAM anionic dendrimers.

1 represents glucosamine (R= H, Rl=H, R2=H) or glucosamine 6-sulfate (R=S03H, Ri=H, R2=H) or glucosamine 3,6-disulfate (R=S03H, Rl= S03H, R2=H) or glucosamine 3,4, 6- trisulfate (R=S03H, Rl=SO3H, R2= S03H).

2 represents PAMAM anionic dendrimers gen 2.5 (x equal 32) or PAMAM anionic dendrimers gen 3.5 (x equal 64).

3 represents 1-ethyl-3- (3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide hydrochloride used as the condensing agent. y molecules of glucosamine or sulfated glucosamine bound to the dendrimers.

Figure 3: Gel filtration of dendrimers gen 3.5-glucosamine mixture.

At the end of the reaction time 0.5 ml of the mixture (closed circles) was passed through a PD-10 column and the fractions collected read using a p-counter. Free glucosamine (open triangles), passed through a PD-10 column and the fractions collected read using a, B- counter. Similar results were obtained for dendrimer gen 2.5-glucosamine.

Figure 4: FT-IR spectra of dendrimers gen 3.5 (a), glucosamine (b), and dendrimers gen 3.5-glucosamine (c).

Figure 5: Schematic representation of dendrimers gen 3. 5-glucosamine.

Figure 6: FT-IR spectra of dendrimers gen 3.5 (a), glucosamine 6-sulfate (b), and dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate (c).

Figure 7 i : Stability of the dendrimers gen 3.5-glucosamine during storage.

Dendrimers gen 3. 5-glucosamine was stored as an aqueous solution. An aliquot of the aqueous solution was taken at day 0 (open triangles), day 7 (filled circles), day 15 (filled squares), day 90 (filled triangles) passed through a PD-10 column and the fractions collected read using a (3-counter. Free glucosamine (open squares) passed through the PD- 10 column and the fractions collected were read using a p-counter.

Figure 7 (H) : Stability of the dendrimers gen 2.5-glucosamine during storage.

Dendrimers gen 2.5-glucosamine was stored as an aqueous solution. An aliquot of the aqueous solution was taken at day 0 (filled triangles) and day 30 (filled circles), passed through a PD-10 column and the fractions collected read using a ß-counter. Free glucosamine (open squares) passed through the PD-10 column and the fractions collected were read using a (3-counter.

Figure re 8(i): No release of M1P-1 (3 above that seen in the control wells occurred with PBMN cells and dendrimer gen 3.5, dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine, or dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6- sulfate at 50 pg/ml.

Figure Sdi) and Sdii) : No release of MIP-lp above that seen in the control wells occurred with MDMs and dendrimer gen 3.5, dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine, or dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6- sulfate at 50 µg/ml.

Figure 9: No release of MCP-lp above that seen in the control wells occurred with MDMs and dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 3,6-disulfate, or dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 3,4, 6- trisulfate at 50 p. g/ml.

Figure 10(i) and (ii): No release of MIP-lp above that seen in the control wells occurred with peritoneal macrophages after 36 h of culture with dendrimer gen 3.5, dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine, or dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate with each molecule at 25 µg/ml.

Figure IO (iii) : No release of MIP-lp above that seen in the control wells occurred with peritoneal macrophages after 72 h of culture with dendrimer gen 3.5, dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine, or dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate with each molecule at 25 µg/ml.

Figure @re 11(i) and (ii): No release of MIP-1 (3 above that seen in the control wells occurred with peritoneal macrophages after 36 h of culture with dendrimer gen 3.5, dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine, or dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate with each molecule at 50 pg/ml.

Figure 12(i) and (ii ! : No release of MIP-lp above that seen in the control wells occurred with peritoneal macrophages after 36 h of culture with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6-disulfate, or dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate with each molecule at 50 llg/ml.

Figure 13 (i) and and (ii): No release of MIP-lß above that seen in the control wells occurred with peritoneal macrophages after 36 h of culture with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6-disulfate, or dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate with each molecule at 100 ug/ml.

Figure 13 (iii) and (iv) : No release of MIP-1ß above that seen in the control wells occurred with peritoneal macrophages after 36 h of culture with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6-disulfate, or dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,4, 6-trisulfate with each molecule at 200 ug/ml.

Figure I4 (i) : The dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was cultured with MDMs for 72 h up to a concentration of 150 llg/ml. No reduction in cell count or viability (as determined by Trypan blue and MTT assay) was found.

Figure 14 (ii) : The dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was cultured with HUVECs for 72 h up to a concentration of 100 pg/ml. No reduction in cell count or viability (as determined by Trypan blue and MTT assay) was found.

Figure 15: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and cultured with LPS at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested at regular intervals for up to 21 h and assayed for MIP-lß.

Figure 16 (i) Single donor PBMN cells were cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine (100 ug/ml) for 30 min and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-1 ß. A significant reduction in MIP-1 ß release was seen.

Figure 16 (ii) Single donor PBMN cells were cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine (100 Rg/ml) for 1 h and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-lß. A significant reduction in MIP-lß release was seen.

Figure 16(iii): Single donor PBMN cells were cultured with dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine (100 µg/ml) for 24 hours and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-lß. A significant reduction in MIP-1 (3 release was seen.

Figure 16 (ive Single donor PBMN cells were cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine (100 Rg/ml) for periods of 30 minutes or 1 hour or 3 hours or 6 hours or 24 hours and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-1ß.

A significant reduction in MIP-1 ß release was seen at all of the time points studied.

Figure 17: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and cultured with LPS at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested at regular intervals for up to 21 h and assayed for TNF-a.

Figures 18 (T) to (vi) : Single donor PBMN cells were cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine (100 µg/ml) for 30 min and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-la as shown in Figure 18 (i), MIP-1ß as shown in Figure 18 (ii), IL-8 as shown in Figure 18 (iii), TNF-a as shown in Figure 18 (iv), IL-1 (3 as shown in Figure 18 (v), and IL-6 as shown in Figure 18 (vi). For all of the chemokines and pro-

inflammatory cytokines studied, a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was present.

Figures 19 il to fvi) : Single donor PBMN cells were cultured with dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine (200 ug/ml) and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-la as shown in Figure 19 (i), MIP-1ß as shown in Figure 19 (ii), IL-8 as shown in Figure 19 (iii), TNF-a as shown in Figure 19 (iv), IL-lp as shown in Figure 19 (v), and IL-6 as shown in Figure 19 (vi). For all of the chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines studied, a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine was present.

Figures 20(i) and Cil) : Single donor PBMN cells were cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine (200 llg/ml) for 1 hour and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 25 h later and assayed for MIP-1 [3 as shown in Figure 20 (i) and TNF-a as shown in Figure 20 (ii). For all of the chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines studied, a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was present.

Figure 21: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated and resuspended in RPMI, L-glutamine, penicillin, streptomycin and 10% human serum at a density of 1 x 106 cells/ml. The cells were then plated (1 ml) in 12 well tissue culture plates and cultured for 15 min at 37°C in 5% C02. LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml and the cells were cultured for 30 min, or 1 hour, or 2 hours, or 3 hours, or 4 hours at 37°C in 5% C02 before adding dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine at 100 pg/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h after the addition of the LPS and assayed for MIP-la as shown in Figure 21 (i), MIP-1ß as shown in Figure 21 (ii), IL-8 as shown in Figure 21 (iii), TNF-α as shown in Figure 21 (iv), IL-1 (3 as shown in Figure 21 (v), and IL-6 as shown in Figure 21 (vi). For all of the chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines studied, a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine was present.

Figure 22: Single donor PBMN cells were cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine in which the loading of glucosamine was 3% (rather than the 7% used in all other experiments) at a concentration of 150, ug/ml or 300 pg/ml. The cells were cultured for 30 min at 37°C in 5% COa and LPS was then added at 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 22 h later and assayed for MIP-1ß as shown in Figure 22 (i), or for TNF-a as shown in Figure 22 (ii). For all of the chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines studied, a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was present.

Figure 23: Single donor PBMN cells were isolated from 3 individuals and mixed together for 72 h.

Dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was then added at 50-100 yg/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 1 day, 3 days and 4 days later and assayed for MIP-lp and TNF-a. A significant reduction in MIP-1 (3 and TNF-a release into the culture supernatant was seen at all 3 time points assayed as shown in Figure 23 (i) and 23 (ii).

Single donor PBMN cells were isolated from 2 individuals and then cultured separately for 24 h. They were then mixed together for 72 h. The dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was then added at 50 ug/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 1 day, 3 days and 4 days later and assayed for MIP-lß. A significant reduction in MIP-1ß release into the culture supernatant was seen at all 3 time points assayed as shown in Figure 23 (iii).

Figure 24 : Single donor PBMN cells were isolated from 2 individuals and mixed together. Dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was then added at 100 llg/ml followed immediately by LPS (10 ng/ml).

Cell free culture supernatants were harvested at regular intervals for up to 50 h. A significant reduction in MIP-1ß release into the culture supernatant was seen from 24 h onwards as shown in Figure 24 (i).

Single donor PBMN cells were isolated from 2 individuals and mixed together. Dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was added at 100 pg/ml. Twenty-four hours later, LPS was added at a concentration of 5 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested at regular intervals

for up to 100 h. A significant reduction in MIP-lp release into the culture supernatant was seen from 24 h onwards as shown in Figure 24 (ii).

Figure 25 : The dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate did not affect the cell viability or the growth characteristics of PBMN cells when present at a concentration of 50 . g/ml (Figure 25 (i) ) or 150 µg/ml (Figure 25 (ii) ) in cultures maintained for up to 5 days. Cell viability was determined by Trypan blue exclusion and an MTT assay.

Figure 26: The dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate did not affect cell viability or growth characteristics of MDMs when present up to a concentration of 150 llg/ml in cultures maintained for up to 5 days. Cell viability was determined by Trypan blue exclusion and an MTT assay.

Figure 27 Ci) and (ii) & (in) : The dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate construct was also not toxic to HUVECs when added to cultures of these cells up to a concentration of 100 gg/ml for up to 72 hours.

Figure 28 : PBMN cells were cultured with dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate (150 llg/ml or 200 pglml) for 30 min and LPS (5 ng/ml) was then added. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 24 h later for MIP-1 (3 (Figure 28 (i) ) and for TNF-α (Figure 28 (ii) ). A significant reduction in both the chemokine and the pro-inflammatory cytokine was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate was present at 150 ug/ml and at 200 llg/ml.

Figure 29: PBMN cells were isolated from 4 individuals and then mixed together for 24 h. MDMs were separated by adherence to plastic and then cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine or dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate at 125 ug/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 36 h later and assayed for MIP-lß. A significant reduction in MIP-1ß was seen.

Figures 30-32: Endothelial microtubule formation by HUVECs on Matrigel (x 40 magnification). A visual analogue scale was used to determine the extent of tube formation and scored on a scale from 0 (all cells remain single) to 4 (all cells involved in tubular structures) as previously described (Bauer J, Margolis M, Schreiner C, Edgell C-J, Azizkhan J, Lazarowski E, & Juliano RL. (1992) In vitro model of angiogenesis using a human endothelium derived permanent cell line: contributions of induced gene expression, G-proteins and integrins. J.

Cellular Physiology 153: 437-449; Liaw, L & Schwarz SM. (1993) Microtubule disruption stimulates DNA synthesis in bovine endothelial cells and potentiates cellular response to basic fibroblast growth factor. American Journal of Pathology 143: 937-948).

Figure 30: Control well, Figure 31 : Dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate at 12. 5 ug/ml, Figure 32 : Dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine 6-sulfate at 50 ug/ml.

Figure 33: Dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate (O) reduced the rate of new vessel formation in an in vitro angiogenesis assay when compared to media alone (A). The results shown are for dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate at a final concentration of 50, ug/ml. The degree of new vessel formation was quantified blind twice a week using a visual analog scale in which 0 = no growth, 1 = minimal new vessel formation, 2 = significant new vessel formation, and 3 = dense new vessel formation. An angiogenesis score was derived from each count by dividing the total score (i. e. the sum of all the wells) by the maximum possible score and then expressing the result as a percentage. A significant reduction in new vessel formation was seen by day 18 (p<0.05). This graph is representative of 2 experiments performed in quadruplicate. New vessel formation was quantified blind by 3 different observers twice a week with a within-observer and between-observer variability of <10%.

Figure 34 : Cartoon describing the pathogenesis of medical disorders in which chemokines and angiogenesis play an important role. It identifies the new targets at which dendrimer gen

3.5-glucosamine and dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate can act either alone or in synergy to produce a clinically useful therapeutic effect.

Figure 35: Single donor PBMN cells were cultured with dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine (200 Rg/ml) for 30 min and the superantigen toxin SEB was then added at 100 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-1 (3 as shown in Figure 35 (i) and for TNF-of as shown in Figure 35 (ii). For the chemokine and the cytokine studied, a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine was present.

Figure 36: Immature monocyte derived dendritic cells were prepared and plated at 1 x 106/well.

Dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine (200 ug/ml) was added for 1 hour followed by LPS (5 ng/ml). The cells were cultured for 21 hours and then harvested for FACS analysis. As shown in Figure 36, dendrimer gen. 3.5-glucosamine significantly reduced LPS induced upregulation of CD25 on the dendritic cells.

Figure 37: Gamma irradiated purified monocyte derived dendritic cells were incubated in triplicate in aliquots ranging from 64,000 to 32 dendritic cells per well with dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine (200 pg/ml) for 1 hour at 37°C. Allogeneic peripheral blood lymphocytes (100,000/well) were then added. The plates were incubated for 5 days. In addition, prior to adding the peripheral blood lymphocytes, the plates (with and without dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine) were incubated with LPS at a concentration of 5 ng/ml for 21 hours. The cells were then washed three times. Dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine was then added back at a concentration of 200 Lg/ml. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were added at 100,000 cells/well and the plates incubated for 5 days. To these cultures, [3H]-Thymidine (1 , uCi/well) was then added for a further 18 hours and the cells cultured. After this time, the cells were harvested and proliferation measured using a liquid scintillation counter. Figure 37 shows the results from three experiments. In each case, the proliferation caused by the mixed lymphocyte reaction as well as the proliferation caused by LPS at 5 ng/ml was significantly inhibited.

Figure 38: Gamma irradiated purified monocyte derived dendritic cells were incubated in triplicate in aliquots ranging from 64,000 to 32 dendritic cells per well. Allogeneic peripheral blood lymphocytes (100,000/well) were then added and the plates incubated for 5 days. In addition, prior to adding the peripheral blood lymphocytes, the plates (with and without dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine) were incubated with lipopolysaccharide at a concentration of 20 ng/ml for 21 hours. The cells were then washed three times. Dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine was then added back at a concentration of 200 llg/ml. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were added at 100,000 cells/well and the plates incubated for 5 days. To these cultures, [3H]-Thymidine (1 pCi/well) was then added for a further 18 hours and the cells cultured. After this time, the cells were harvested and proliferation measured. Figure 38 shows the results from two experiments. In each case, the proliferation caused by the mixed lymphocyte reaction as well as the proliferation caused by LPS at 20 ng/ml was significantly inhibited.

Figure 39: Gamma irradiated isolated, purified peritoneal dendritic cells were incubated in triplicate in aliquots ranging from 64,000 to 32 dendritic cells/well with dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine (200 ug/ml) for 1 hour. Allogeneic peripheral blood lymphocytes (100,000/well) were then added and the plates incubated for 5 days. In addition, prior to adding the peripheral blood lymphocytes, the plates (with and without dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine) were incubated with lipopolysaccharide at a concentration of 5 ng/ml for 21 hours. The cells were then washed three times. Dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine was then added back at a concentration of 200 llglml. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were added at 100,000 cells/well and the plates incubated for 5 days. To these cultures, [3H]-Thymidine (1 IlCi/well) was then added for a further 18 hours and the cells cultured. After this time, the cells were harvested and proliferation measured. Figure 39 shows the results from three experiments. In each case, the proliferation caused by the mixed lymphocyte reaction as well as the proliferation caused by LPS at 5 ng/ml was significantly inhibited.

Figure 40 : Gamma irradiated isolated, purified peritoneal derived dendritic cells were incubated in triplicate in aliquots ranging from 64,000 to 32 dendritic cells/well with dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine (200 jj. g/ml) for 1 hour at 37°C. Allogeneic peripheral blood lymphocytes

(100,000/well) were then added. The plates were incubated for 5 days at 37°C. In addition, prior to adding the peripheral blood lymphocytes, the-plates (with and without dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine) were incubated with lipopolysaccharide at a concentration of 20 ng/ml for 21 hours. The cells were then washed three times. Dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine was then added back at a concentration of 200 pg/ml. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were added at 100,000 cells/well and the plates incubated for 5 days. To these cultures, [3H]-Thymidine (1, uCi/well) was then added for a further 18 hours and the cells cultured. After this time, the cells were harvested and proliferation measured. Figure 40 shows the results from two experiments. In each case, the proliferation caused by the mixed lymphocyte reaction as well as the proliferation caused by LPS at 20 ng/ml was significantly inhibited.

Figure 41 : Gamma irradiated purified monocyte derived dendritic cells or gamma irradiated isolated, purified peritoneal dendritic cells were incubated in aliquots ranging from 32,000 to 2,000 dendritic cells/well with dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine (200 ug/ml) for 1 hour at 37°C and 5% CO2. Lipopolysaccharide (20 ng/ml) was then added for 21 hours. The cells were then washed three times with media and the dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine (200 llg/ml) replaced. Allogeneic lymphocytes (100,000/well) were then added and this was defined as day 0. The plates were incubated at 37°C and 5% C02 and cell free culture supernatants were collected at day 3 and day 5 for the measurement of interleukin-2 and'y-interferon.

Figure 41 (i) shows that dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine caused a significant reduction in the release of interleukin-2 and y-interferon from gamma irradiated purified monocyte derived dendritic cells. Figure 41 (ii) shows that dendrimer gen. 3.5 glucosamine caused a significant reduction in the release of interleukin-2 and-y-interferon from gamma irradiated isolated, purified peritoneal dendritic cells.

Figure 42: Single donor PBMN cells were suspended at 1 x 106 cells/ml and dendrimer gen 3.5- glucosamine added at 200 pg/ml. The cells were cultured for 30 min and the superantigen SEB added at 100 ng/ml. Cell free culture supernatants were harvested 21 h later and assayed for MIP-lp as shown in Figure 42 (i) and for TNF-a as shown in Figure 42 (ii). For both the chemokine and the cytokine a significant reduction in their release was seen when dendrimer gen 3. 5-glucosamine was present.

Table 1:<BR> This table shows the reproducibility of the synthesis of the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine conjugate with a 7 % loading of glucosamine that<BR> was used for most of the experiments described. Results are also shown for the dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine conjugate with a 3 % loading of<BR> glucosamine that was used for Experiment B 12, Figure 22. Unbound mmol glucosamine % converted glucosamine Yield (%) used in reaction carboxylic groups content (wt %) 3 % glucosamine loading 0.25 3.18 ~ 0.46 2.3 63 7 % glucosamine loading 0.5 7.89 ~ 0.27 3.1 60 7 % glucosamine loading 0.5 7.24 ~ 0.51 2.8 60 The total amount of glucosamine boudn to the dendrimers was determined using a ß-counter (data shown as mean ~ SD of 3 replicates). The<BR> unbound glucosamine content was determined using ß-counter followed by gel filtration (PD-10 column) of the purified conjugate.

Table 2:<BR> Characterisation of the different batches of dendrimer gen 3.5-sulfated glucosamine conjugates prepared. Sulphur content (% mm S) Yield(%) 3.5-G6S (batch 1) 1.76 53 3.5-G6S (batch 2) 2.79 85 3.5-G3,6S (batch 1) 5.18 70 3.5-G3,6S (batch 2) 5.78 68 3.5-G3,4,6S (batch 1) 7.65 81 3.5-G3,4,6S (batch 2) 7.93 70 The amount of sulfated sugar bound to the dendrimer gen 3.5 was determined by sulphur analysis.<BR> <P>'3.5-G6S' stands for dendrimers gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-suflate,<BR> '3.5-G3,6S' stands for dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 3,6-disulfate,<BR> '3.5-G3,4,6S' stands for dendrimer gne 3.5-glucosamine 3,4,6-trisulfate.

Table 3:<BR> Toxicity of dendrimers gen 3.5-glucosamine and dendrimers gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate conjugates in several human cell lines and in a<BR> murine melaroma cell line. Sup-T1 C8166 U937 U87-CD4-B16F10 CCR5 DG 3. 5-G 1825 227 3000 t 100 2837 t 107 2077 237 2894 96 DG 3. 5-G6S 307 29 279 7 271 19 256 21 246 17 Dendrimers gen 3. 5 > 5000 > 5000 > 5000 > 5000 > 5000 G > 1000 > 1000 > 1000 > 1000 > 1000 G6S > 1000 > 1000 > 1000 > 1000 > 1000 G6S > 1000 > 1000 Dextran > 5000 > 5000 > 5000 > 5000 > 5000 Poly (L-lysine) 251 281 281 280 281 The toxicity of the conjugates and reference controls was analysed against the human cell lines Sup-T1, C8166, U937, and U87-CD4-CCR5, and<BR> the murine melanoma cell line (B16F10).<BR> <P>The IC50 values (µg/ml) ~ SEM (n = 16) were determined using the MTT assay.<BR> <P>'DG 3.5-G' stands for dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine.<BR> <P>'DG 3.5-G6S' stands for dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-suflate.<BR> <P>'G' stands for glucosamine.<BR> <P>'G6S' stands for glucosamine 6-sulfate.

Table 4a: Interaction of chemokines and cytokines with dendrimers gen 3.5-glucosamine conjugates: Standard Standard Standard + concentration Reading Dendrimer gen 3.5- (pg/ml) (pg/ml) glucosamine (pg/ml) MIP-1α 125 99.86 103.94 MIP-1ß 125 112.17 100.36 TNF-α 125 123.44 63.77 IL-1ß 31.2 28.23 23.80 IL-6 25 26.17 21.69 IL-8 250 298.30 280.15 There was no interference of the dendrimer gen 3.5 glucosamine with the MIP-1α, MIP-1ß, IL-1ß, IL-6 or IL-8 assays.

Table 4b: Interaction of TNF-α with dendrimers gen 3.5-glucosamine conjugates:<BR> In the case of TNF-α assay, a significant degree of interference by dendrimer gne 3.5 glucosamine was seen as illustrated below. TNF-α standard TNF-α standard TNF-α standard + dendrimer gen 3.5 (pg/ml) (EIA optical density) glucosamine (EIA optical density) 15.60 0.062 0.044 31.25 0.096 0.058 62.50 0.169 0.090 125.00 0.273 0.161 250.00 0.514 0.326 500.00 0.935 0.596 A correction factor has therefore been applied to all of the TNF-α data shown as it relates to dendrimer gen 3.5 glucosamine.

Table 5: Anticogulant activity of dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine and dendrimer gen 3.5-sulfated glucosamine conjugates:<BR> The compounds were dissolved in phosphate-buffered saline solution (PBS) and tested, or dissolved in RPMI + 15% FCS and tested, or mixed<BR> 50 : 50 with human plasma/veronal buffer and tested. The anti-Xa activity was expressed as units of heparin/ml (HEP(Xa) (V/ml)). dissolved in Conc PT APTT TT Fibrinogen Anti-Xa (Rg/ml) (sec) (sec) (sec) (sec) (V/ml) Control PBS 16. 0 40 13. 5 1. 30 0 RPMI/FCS 16. 7 40 13. 8 1. 30 0 Plasma/veronal buffer 16. 5 41 13. 7 1. 30 0 D gen. 3. 5-G PBS 200 15. 8 42 13. 8 1. 29 0 RPMI/FCS 200 15. 5 41 13. 5 1. 30 0 Plasma/veronal buffer 300 15. 6 42 13. 7 1. 31 0 D gen. 3. 5-G6S PBS 50 15. 8 43 14. 0 1. 33 0 RPMI/FCS 50 16. 0 42 13. 8 1. 30 0 D gen. 3. 5-G3, 6S D gen. 3. 5-G3, 6S PBS 200 15. 8 43 14. 2 1. 36 0 Table 6: Endothelial microtubule formation with dendrimer gen, 3.5 glucosamine 6-sulfate and 3,6 disulfate:<BR> Compound Tube formation score (n = 4)<BR> control 4<BR> dendrimers gen 3.5 (100 µg/ml) 4<BR> glucosamine (100 µg/ml) 4<BR> glucosamine 6-suflate (100 µg/ml) 4<BR> glucosamine 3,6-disulfate (100 µg/ml) 4<BR> dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamine 6-sulfate<BR> 0 µg/ml 4<BR> 0.25 µg/ml 4<BR> 0.5 µg/ml 4<BR> 0.8 µg/ml 3<BR> 1.6 µg/ml 3<BR> 3.125 µg/ml 3<BR> 6.25 µg/ml 3<BR> 12 µg/ml 2<BR> 25 µg/ml 2<BR> 50 µg/ml 1<BR> 100 µg/ml 0<BR> dendrimer gen 3.5-glucosamien 3,6-disulfate<BR> 0 µg/ml 4<BR> 6.25 µg/ml 4<BR> 12 µg/ml 4<BR> 25 µg/ml 4<BR> 50 µg/ml 3<BR> 100 µg/ml 2

Statement as to US Government sponsored research: This invention was made, in part, with US Government funds from the National Institutes of Health (grant number: 1-R21-A144694-01). The US Government has certain rights in the invention.