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Monoclonal antibody therapeutics with up to five specificities: Functional enhancement through fusion of target-specific peptides
Authors:David W LaFleur  Donara Abramyan  Palanisamy Kanakaraj  Rodger G Smith  Rutul R Shah  Geping Wang  Xiao-Tao Yao  Spandana Kankanala  Ernie Boyd  Liubov Zaritskaya  Viktoriya Nam  Bridget A Puffer  Pete Buasen  Shashi Kaithamana  Andrew F Burnette  Rajesh Krishnamurthy  Dimki Patel  Viktor V Roschke  Peter A Kiener  David M Hilbert  Carlos F Barbas III
Institution:1.Zyngenia, Inc.; Gaithersburg, MD USA;2.The Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology and the Departments of Molecular Biology and Chemistry; The Scripps Research Institute; La Jolla, CA USA
Abstract:The recognition that few human diseases are thoroughly addressed by mono-specific, monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) continues to drive the development of antibody therapeutics with additional specificities and enhanced activity. Historically, efforts to engineer additional antigen recognition into molecules have relied predominantly on the reformatting of immunoglobulin domains. In this report we describe a series of fully functional mAbs to which additional specificities have been imparted through the recombinant fusion of relatively short polypeptides sequences. The sequences are selected for binding to a particular target from combinatorial libraries that express linear, disulfide-constrained, or domain-based structures. The potential for fusion of peptides to the N- and C- termini of both the heavy and light chains affords the bivalent expression of up to four different peptides. The resulting molecules, called zybodies, can gain up to four additional specificities, while retaining the original functionality and specificity of the scaffold antibody. We explore the use of two clinically significant oncology antibodies, trastuzumab and cetuximab, as zybody scaffolds and demonstrate functional enhancements in each case. The affect of fusion position on both peptide and scaffold function is explored, and penta-specific zybodies are demonstrated to simultaneously engage five targets (ErbB2, EGFR, IGF-1R, Ang2 and integrin αvβ3). Bispecific, trastuzumab-based zybodies targeting ErbB2 and Ang2 are shown to exhibit superior efficacy to trastuzumab in an angiogenesis-dependent xenograft tumor model. A cetuximab-based bispecific zybody that targeting EGFR and ErbB3 simultaneously disrupted multiple intracellular signaling pathways; inhibited tumor cell proliferation; and showed efficacy superior to that of cetuximab in a xenograft tumor model.
Keywords:antibody engineering  multi-specific antibody
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