Cargando…

High-content Analysis of Antibody Phage-display Library Selection Outputs Identifies Tumor Selective Macropinocytosis-dependent Rapidly Internalizing Antibodies

Many forms of antibody-based targeted therapeutics, including antibody drug conjugates, utilize the internalizing function of the targeting antibody to gain intracellular entry into tumor cells. Ideal antibodies for developing such therapeutics should be capable of both tumor-selective binding and e...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ha, Kevin D., Bidlingmaier, Scott M., Zhang, Yafeng, Su, Yang, Liu, Bin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4256486/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25149096
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M114.039768
_version_ 1782347593180774400
author Ha, Kevin D.
Bidlingmaier, Scott M.
Zhang, Yafeng
Su, Yang
Liu, Bin
author_facet Ha, Kevin D.
Bidlingmaier, Scott M.
Zhang, Yafeng
Su, Yang
Liu, Bin
author_sort Ha, Kevin D.
collection PubMed
description Many forms of antibody-based targeted therapeutics, including antibody drug conjugates, utilize the internalizing function of the targeting antibody to gain intracellular entry into tumor cells. Ideal antibodies for developing such therapeutics should be capable of both tumor-selective binding and efficient endocytosis. The macropinocytosis pathway is capable of both rapid and bulk endocytosis, and recent studies have demonstrated that it is selectively up-regulated by cancer cells. We hypothesize that receptor-dependent macropinocytosis can be achieved using tumor-targeting antibodies that internalize via the macropinocytosis pathway, improving potency and selectivity of the antibody-based targeted therapeutic. Although phage antibody display libraries have been utilized to find antibodies that bind and internalize to target cells, no methods have been described to screen for antibodies that internalize specifically via macropinocytosis. We hereby describe a novel screening strategy to identify phage antibodies that bind and rapidly enter tumor cells via macropinocytosis. We utilized an automated microscopic imaging-based, High Content Analysis platform to identify novel internalizing phage antibodies that colocalize with macropinocytic markers from antibody libraries that we have generated previously by laser capture microdissection-based selection, which are enriched for internalizing antibodies binding to tumor cells in situ residing in their tissue microenvironment (Ruan, W., Sassoon, A., An, F., Simko, J. P., and Liu, B. (2006) Identification of clinically significant tumor antigens by selecting phage antibody library on tumor cells in situ using laser capture microdissection. Mol. Cell. Proteomics. 5, 2364–2373). Full-length human IgG molecules derived from macropinocytosing phage antibodies retained the ability to internalize via macropinocytosis, validating our screening strategy. The target antigen for a cross-species binding antibody with a highly active macropinocytosis activity was identified as ephrin type-A receptor 2. Antibody-toxin conjugates created using this macropinocytosing IgG were capable of potent and receptor-dependent killing of a panel of EphA2-positive tumor cell lines in vitro. These studies identify novel methods to screen for and validate antibodies capable of receptor-dependent macropinocytosis, allowing further exploration of this highly efficient and tumor-selective internalization pathway for targeted therapy development.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4256486
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-42564862014-12-08 High-content Analysis of Antibody Phage-display Library Selection Outputs Identifies Tumor Selective Macropinocytosis-dependent Rapidly Internalizing Antibodies Ha, Kevin D. Bidlingmaier, Scott M. Zhang, Yafeng Su, Yang Liu, Bin Mol Cell Proteomics Research Many forms of antibody-based targeted therapeutics, including antibody drug conjugates, utilize the internalizing function of the targeting antibody to gain intracellular entry into tumor cells. Ideal antibodies for developing such therapeutics should be capable of both tumor-selective binding and efficient endocytosis. The macropinocytosis pathway is capable of both rapid and bulk endocytosis, and recent studies have demonstrated that it is selectively up-regulated by cancer cells. We hypothesize that receptor-dependent macropinocytosis can be achieved using tumor-targeting antibodies that internalize via the macropinocytosis pathway, improving potency and selectivity of the antibody-based targeted therapeutic. Although phage antibody display libraries have been utilized to find antibodies that bind and internalize to target cells, no methods have been described to screen for antibodies that internalize specifically via macropinocytosis. We hereby describe a novel screening strategy to identify phage antibodies that bind and rapidly enter tumor cells via macropinocytosis. We utilized an automated microscopic imaging-based, High Content Analysis platform to identify novel internalizing phage antibodies that colocalize with macropinocytic markers from antibody libraries that we have generated previously by laser capture microdissection-based selection, which are enriched for internalizing antibodies binding to tumor cells in situ residing in their tissue microenvironment (Ruan, W., Sassoon, A., An, F., Simko, J. P., and Liu, B. (2006) Identification of clinically significant tumor antigens by selecting phage antibody library on tumor cells in situ using laser capture microdissection. Mol. Cell. Proteomics. 5, 2364–2373). Full-length human IgG molecules derived from macropinocytosing phage antibodies retained the ability to internalize via macropinocytosis, validating our screening strategy. The target antigen for a cross-species binding antibody with a highly active macropinocytosis activity was identified as ephrin type-A receptor 2. Antibody-toxin conjugates created using this macropinocytosing IgG were capable of potent and receptor-dependent killing of a panel of EphA2-positive tumor cell lines in vitro. These studies identify novel methods to screen for and validate antibodies capable of receptor-dependent macropinocytosis, allowing further exploration of this highly efficient and tumor-selective internalization pathway for targeted therapy development. The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2014-12 2014-08-22 /pmc/articles/PMC4256486/ /pubmed/25149096 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M114.039768 Text en © 2014 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Author's Choice—Final version full access.
spellingShingle Research
Ha, Kevin D.
Bidlingmaier, Scott M.
Zhang, Yafeng
Su, Yang
Liu, Bin
High-content Analysis of Antibody Phage-display Library Selection Outputs Identifies Tumor Selective Macropinocytosis-dependent Rapidly Internalizing Antibodies
title High-content Analysis of Antibody Phage-display Library Selection Outputs Identifies Tumor Selective Macropinocytosis-dependent Rapidly Internalizing Antibodies
title_full High-content Analysis of Antibody Phage-display Library Selection Outputs Identifies Tumor Selective Macropinocytosis-dependent Rapidly Internalizing Antibodies
title_fullStr High-content Analysis of Antibody Phage-display Library Selection Outputs Identifies Tumor Selective Macropinocytosis-dependent Rapidly Internalizing Antibodies
title_full_unstemmed High-content Analysis of Antibody Phage-display Library Selection Outputs Identifies Tumor Selective Macropinocytosis-dependent Rapidly Internalizing Antibodies
title_short High-content Analysis of Antibody Phage-display Library Selection Outputs Identifies Tumor Selective Macropinocytosis-dependent Rapidly Internalizing Antibodies
title_sort high-content analysis of antibody phage-display library selection outputs identifies tumor selective macropinocytosis-dependent rapidly internalizing antibodies
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4256486/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25149096
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M114.039768
work_keys_str_mv AT hakevind highcontentanalysisofantibodyphagedisplaylibraryselectionoutputsidentifiestumorselectivemacropinocytosisdependentrapidlyinternalizingantibodies
AT bidlingmaierscottm highcontentanalysisofantibodyphagedisplaylibraryselectionoutputsidentifiestumorselectivemacropinocytosisdependentrapidlyinternalizingantibodies
AT zhangyafeng highcontentanalysisofantibodyphagedisplaylibraryselectionoutputsidentifiestumorselectivemacropinocytosisdependentrapidlyinternalizingantibodies
AT suyang highcontentanalysisofantibodyphagedisplaylibraryselectionoutputsidentifiestumorselectivemacropinocytosisdependentrapidlyinternalizingantibodies
AT liubin highcontentanalysisofantibodyphagedisplaylibraryselectionoutputsidentifiestumorselectivemacropinocytosisdependentrapidlyinternalizingantibodies