A Fibrin-Specific Monoclonal Antibody from a Designed Phage Display Library Inhibits Clot Formation and Localizes to Tumors In Vivo |
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Authors: | Alessia Putelli Jonathan D. Kiefer Matthias Zadory Mattia Matasci Dario Neri |
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Affiliation: | 1 Department of Chemistry and Applied Biosciences, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Vladimir-Prelog-Weg 2, CH-8093 Zürich, Switzerland;2 Philochem AG, Libernstrasse 3, CH-8112 Otelfingen, Switzerland |
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Abstract: | Fibrin formation from fibrinogen is a rare process in the healthy organism but is a pathological feature of thrombotic events, cancer and a wide range of inflammatory conditions. We have designed and constructed an antibody phage display library (containing 13 billion clones) for the selective recognition of the N-terminal peptide of fibrin alpha chain. The key structural feature for selective fibrin binding was a K94E mutation in the VH domain. From this library, an antibody was isolated (termed AP2), which recognizes the five N-terminal amino acids of fibrin with high affinity (Kd = 44 nM), but does not bind to fibrinogen. The AP2 antibody could be expressed in various formats (scFv, small immune protein and IgG) and inhibited fibrin clot formation in a concentration-dependent manner. Moreover, the AP2 antibody stained the fibrin-rich provisional stroma in solid tumors but did not exhibit any detectable staining toward normal tissues. Using a radioiodinated antibody preparation and quantitative biodistribution studies in tumor-bearing mice, AP2 was shown to selectively localize to fibrin-rich F9 murine teratocarcinomas, but not to SKRC-52 human kidney cancer xenografts. Collectively, the experiments indicate that the AP2 antibody recognizes fibrin in vitro and in vivo. The antibody may facilitate the development of fibrin-specific therapeutic agents. |
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Keywords: | CDR, complementarity-determining region SIP, small immune protein CHO, Chinese hamster ovary PEI, polyethyleneimine RT, room temperature |
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