Beyond CDR-grafting: Structure-guided humanization of framework and CDR regions of an anti-myostatin antibody |
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Authors: | James R. Apgar Michelle Mader Rita Agostinelli Susan Benard Peter Bialek Mark Johnson |
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Affiliation: | 1. Biomedicine Design, Pfizer Inc., Cambridge, MA, USA;2. Rare Disease Research Unit, Pfizer Inc., Cambridge, MA, USA |
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Abstract: | Antibodies are an important class of biotherapeutics that offer specificity to their antigen, long half-life, effector function interaction and good manufacturability. The immunogenicity of non-human-derived antibodies, which can be a major limitation to development, has been partially overcome by humanization through complementarity-determining region (CDR) grafting onto human acceptor frameworks. The retention of foreign content in the CDR regions, however, is still a potential immunogenic liability. Here, we describe the humanization of an anti-myostatin antibody utilizing a 2-step process of traditional CDR-grafting onto a human acceptor framework, followed by a structure-guided approach to further reduce the murine content of CDR-grafted antibodies. To accomplish this, we solved the co-crystal structures of myostatin with the chimeric (Protein Databank (PDB) id 5F3B) and CDR-grafted anti-myostatin antibody (PDB id 5F3H), allowing us to computationally predict the structurally important CDR residues as well as those making significant contacts with the antigen. Structure-based rational design enabled further germlining of the CDR-grafted antibody, reducing the murine content of the antibody without affecting antigen binding. The overall “humanness” was increased for both the light and heavy chain variable regions. |
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Keywords: | Antibody antibody engineering complementarity-determining region humanization in silico design immunogenicity myostatin X-ray crystallography |
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