Cargando…

Complement Activation by an Anti-Dengue/Zika Antibody with Impaired Fcγ Receptor Binding Provides Strong Efficacy and Abrogates Risk of Antibody-Dependent Enhancement

To combat infectious diseases, vaccines are considered the best prophylactic strategy for a wide range of the population, but even when vaccines are effective, the administration of therapeutic antibodies against viruses could provide further treatment options, particularly for vulnerable groups who...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sampei, Zenjiro, Koo, Christine Xing’er, Teo, Frannie Jiuyi, Toh, Ying Xiu, Fukuzawa, Taku, Gan, Siok Wan, Nambu, Takeru, Ho, Adrian, Honda, Kiyofumi, Igawa, Tomoyuki, Ahmed, Fariyal, Wang, Cheng-I, Fink, Katja, Nezu, Junichi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10204484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37218902
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antib12020036
_version_ 1785045844890746880
author Sampei, Zenjiro
Koo, Christine Xing’er
Teo, Frannie Jiuyi
Toh, Ying Xiu
Fukuzawa, Taku
Gan, Siok Wan
Nambu, Takeru
Ho, Adrian
Honda, Kiyofumi
Igawa, Tomoyuki
Ahmed, Fariyal
Wang, Cheng-I
Fink, Katja
Nezu, Junichi
author_facet Sampei, Zenjiro
Koo, Christine Xing’er
Teo, Frannie Jiuyi
Toh, Ying Xiu
Fukuzawa, Taku
Gan, Siok Wan
Nambu, Takeru
Ho, Adrian
Honda, Kiyofumi
Igawa, Tomoyuki
Ahmed, Fariyal
Wang, Cheng-I
Fink, Katja
Nezu, Junichi
author_sort Sampei, Zenjiro
collection PubMed
description To combat infectious diseases, vaccines are considered the best prophylactic strategy for a wide range of the population, but even when vaccines are effective, the administration of therapeutic antibodies against viruses could provide further treatment options, particularly for vulnerable groups whose immunity against the viruses is compromised. Therapeutic antibodies against dengue are ideally engineered to abrogate binding to Fcγ receptors (FcγRs), which can induce antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE). However, the Fc effector functions of neutralizing antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 have recently been reported to improve post-exposure therapy, while they are dispensable when administered as prophylaxis. Hence, in this report, we investigated the influence of Fc engineering on anti-virus efficacy using the anti-dengue/Zika human antibody SIgN-3C and found it affected the viremia clearance efficacy against dengue in a mouse model. Furthermore, we demonstrated that complement activation through antibody binding to C1q could play a role in anti-dengue efficacy. We also generated a novel Fc variant, which displayed the ability for complement activation but showed very low FcγR binding and an undetectable level of the risk of ADE in a cell-based assay. This Fc engineering approach could make effective and safe anti-virus antibodies against dengue, Zika and other viruses.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10204484
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-102044842023-05-24 Complement Activation by an Anti-Dengue/Zika Antibody with Impaired Fcγ Receptor Binding Provides Strong Efficacy and Abrogates Risk of Antibody-Dependent Enhancement Sampei, Zenjiro Koo, Christine Xing’er Teo, Frannie Jiuyi Toh, Ying Xiu Fukuzawa, Taku Gan, Siok Wan Nambu, Takeru Ho, Adrian Honda, Kiyofumi Igawa, Tomoyuki Ahmed, Fariyal Wang, Cheng-I Fink, Katja Nezu, Junichi Antibodies (Basel) Article To combat infectious diseases, vaccines are considered the best prophylactic strategy for a wide range of the population, but even when vaccines are effective, the administration of therapeutic antibodies against viruses could provide further treatment options, particularly for vulnerable groups whose immunity against the viruses is compromised. Therapeutic antibodies against dengue are ideally engineered to abrogate binding to Fcγ receptors (FcγRs), which can induce antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE). However, the Fc effector functions of neutralizing antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 have recently been reported to improve post-exposure therapy, while they are dispensable when administered as prophylaxis. Hence, in this report, we investigated the influence of Fc engineering on anti-virus efficacy using the anti-dengue/Zika human antibody SIgN-3C and found it affected the viremia clearance efficacy against dengue in a mouse model. Furthermore, we demonstrated that complement activation through antibody binding to C1q could play a role in anti-dengue efficacy. We also generated a novel Fc variant, which displayed the ability for complement activation but showed very low FcγR binding and an undetectable level of the risk of ADE in a cell-based assay. This Fc engineering approach could make effective and safe anti-virus antibodies against dengue, Zika and other viruses. MDPI 2023-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10204484/ /pubmed/37218902 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antib12020036 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Sampei, Zenjiro
Koo, Christine Xing’er
Teo, Frannie Jiuyi
Toh, Ying Xiu
Fukuzawa, Taku
Gan, Siok Wan
Nambu, Takeru
Ho, Adrian
Honda, Kiyofumi
Igawa, Tomoyuki
Ahmed, Fariyal
Wang, Cheng-I
Fink, Katja
Nezu, Junichi
Complement Activation by an Anti-Dengue/Zika Antibody with Impaired Fcγ Receptor Binding Provides Strong Efficacy and Abrogates Risk of Antibody-Dependent Enhancement
title Complement Activation by an Anti-Dengue/Zika Antibody with Impaired Fcγ Receptor Binding Provides Strong Efficacy and Abrogates Risk of Antibody-Dependent Enhancement
title_full Complement Activation by an Anti-Dengue/Zika Antibody with Impaired Fcγ Receptor Binding Provides Strong Efficacy and Abrogates Risk of Antibody-Dependent Enhancement
title_fullStr Complement Activation by an Anti-Dengue/Zika Antibody with Impaired Fcγ Receptor Binding Provides Strong Efficacy and Abrogates Risk of Antibody-Dependent Enhancement
title_full_unstemmed Complement Activation by an Anti-Dengue/Zika Antibody with Impaired Fcγ Receptor Binding Provides Strong Efficacy and Abrogates Risk of Antibody-Dependent Enhancement
title_short Complement Activation by an Anti-Dengue/Zika Antibody with Impaired Fcγ Receptor Binding Provides Strong Efficacy and Abrogates Risk of Antibody-Dependent Enhancement
title_sort complement activation by an anti-dengue/zika antibody with impaired fcγ receptor binding provides strong efficacy and abrogates risk of antibody-dependent enhancement
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10204484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37218902
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antib12020036
work_keys_str_mv AT sampeizenjiro complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT koochristinexinger complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT teofranniejiuyi complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT tohyingxiu complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT fukuzawataku complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT gansiokwan complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT nambutakeru complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT hoadrian complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT hondakiyofumi complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT igawatomoyuki complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT ahmedfariyal complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT wangchengi complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT finkkatja complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement
AT nezujunichi complementactivationbyanantidenguezikaantibodywithimpairedfcgreceptorbindingprovidesstrongefficacyandabrogatesriskofantibodydependentenhancement