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Rise and Fall of an Anti-MUC1 Specific Antibody

BACKGROUND: So far, human antibodies with good affinity and specificity for MUC1, a transmembrane protein overexpressed on breast cancers and ovarian carcinomas, and thus a promising target for therapy, were very difficult to generate. RESULTS: A human scFv antibody was isolated from an immune libra...

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Autores principales: Thie, Holger, Toleikis, Lars, Li, Jiandong, von Wasielewski, Reinhard, Bastert, Gunther, Schirrmann, Thomas, Esteves, Isabel Tourais, Behrens, Christian K., Fournes, Bénédict, Fournier, Nathalie, de Romeuf, Christophe, Hust, Michael, Dübel, Stefan
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3021526/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21264246
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015921
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author Thie, Holger
Toleikis, Lars
Li, Jiandong
von Wasielewski, Reinhard
Bastert, Gunther
Schirrmann, Thomas
Esteves, Isabel Tourais
Behrens, Christian K.
Fournes, Bénédict
Fournier, Nathalie
de Romeuf, Christophe
Hust, Michael
Dübel, Stefan
author_facet Thie, Holger
Toleikis, Lars
Li, Jiandong
von Wasielewski, Reinhard
Bastert, Gunther
Schirrmann, Thomas
Esteves, Isabel Tourais
Behrens, Christian K.
Fournes, Bénédict
Fournier, Nathalie
de Romeuf, Christophe
Hust, Michael
Dübel, Stefan
author_sort Thie, Holger
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: So far, human antibodies with good affinity and specificity for MUC1, a transmembrane protein overexpressed on breast cancers and ovarian carcinomas, and thus a promising target for therapy, were very difficult to generate. RESULTS: A human scFv antibody was isolated from an immune library derived from breast cancer patients immunised with MUC1. The anti-MUC1 scFv reacted with tumour cells in more than 80% of 228 tissue sections of mamma carcinoma samples, while showing very low reactivity with a large panel of non-tumour tissues. By mutagenesis and phage display, affinity of scFvs was increased up to 500fold to 5,7×10(−10) M. Half-life in serum was improved from below 1 day to more than 4 weeks and was correlated with the dimerisation tendency of the individual scFvs. The scFv bound to T47D and MCF-7 mammalian cancer cell lines were recloned into the scFv-Fc and IgG format resulting in decrease of affinity of one binder. The IgG variants with the highest affinity were tested in mouse xenograft models using MCF-7 and OVCAR tumour cells. However, the experiments showed no significant decrease in tumour growth or increase in the survival rates. To study the reasons for the failure of the xenograft experiments, ADCC was analysed in vitro using MCF-7 and OVCAR3 target cells, revealing a low ADCC, possibly due to internalisation, as detected for MCF-7 cells. CONCLUSIONS: Antibody phage display starting with immune libraries and followed by affinity maturation is a powerful strategy to generate high affinity human antibodies to difficult targets, in this case shown by the creation of a highly specific antibody with subnanomolar affinity to a very small epitope consisting of four amino acids. Despite these “best in class” binding parameters, the therapeutic success of this antibody was prevented by the target biology.
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spelling pubmed-30215262011-01-24 Rise and Fall of an Anti-MUC1 Specific Antibody Thie, Holger Toleikis, Lars Li, Jiandong von Wasielewski, Reinhard Bastert, Gunther Schirrmann, Thomas Esteves, Isabel Tourais Behrens, Christian K. Fournes, Bénédict Fournier, Nathalie de Romeuf, Christophe Hust, Michael Dübel, Stefan PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: So far, human antibodies with good affinity and specificity for MUC1, a transmembrane protein overexpressed on breast cancers and ovarian carcinomas, and thus a promising target for therapy, were very difficult to generate. RESULTS: A human scFv antibody was isolated from an immune library derived from breast cancer patients immunised with MUC1. The anti-MUC1 scFv reacted with tumour cells in more than 80% of 228 tissue sections of mamma carcinoma samples, while showing very low reactivity with a large panel of non-tumour tissues. By mutagenesis and phage display, affinity of scFvs was increased up to 500fold to 5,7×10(−10) M. Half-life in serum was improved from below 1 day to more than 4 weeks and was correlated with the dimerisation tendency of the individual scFvs. The scFv bound to T47D and MCF-7 mammalian cancer cell lines were recloned into the scFv-Fc and IgG format resulting in decrease of affinity of one binder. The IgG variants with the highest affinity were tested in mouse xenograft models using MCF-7 and OVCAR tumour cells. However, the experiments showed no significant decrease in tumour growth or increase in the survival rates. To study the reasons for the failure of the xenograft experiments, ADCC was analysed in vitro using MCF-7 and OVCAR3 target cells, revealing a low ADCC, possibly due to internalisation, as detected for MCF-7 cells. CONCLUSIONS: Antibody phage display starting with immune libraries and followed by affinity maturation is a powerful strategy to generate high affinity human antibodies to difficult targets, in this case shown by the creation of a highly specific antibody with subnanomolar affinity to a very small epitope consisting of four amino acids. Despite these “best in class” binding parameters, the therapeutic success of this antibody was prevented by the target biology. Public Library of Science 2011-01-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3021526/ /pubmed/21264246 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015921 Text en Thie et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Thie, Holger
Toleikis, Lars
Li, Jiandong
von Wasielewski, Reinhard
Bastert, Gunther
Schirrmann, Thomas
Esteves, Isabel Tourais
Behrens, Christian K.
Fournes, Bénédict
Fournier, Nathalie
de Romeuf, Christophe
Hust, Michael
Dübel, Stefan
Rise and Fall of an Anti-MUC1 Specific Antibody
title Rise and Fall of an Anti-MUC1 Specific Antibody
title_full Rise and Fall of an Anti-MUC1 Specific Antibody
title_fullStr Rise and Fall of an Anti-MUC1 Specific Antibody
title_full_unstemmed Rise and Fall of an Anti-MUC1 Specific Antibody
title_short Rise and Fall of an Anti-MUC1 Specific Antibody
title_sort rise and fall of an anti-muc1 specific antibody
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3021526/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21264246
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015921
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