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Evaluation of in vitro Assays to Assess the Modulation of Dendritic Cells Functions by Therapeutic Antibodies and Aggregates

Therapeutic antibodies have the potential to induce immunogenicity leading to the development of anti-drug antibodies (ADA) that consequently may result in reduced serum drug concentrations, a loss of efficacy or potential hypersensitivity reactions. Among other factors, aggregated antibodies have b...

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Autores principales: Morgan, Hannah, Tseng, Su-Yi, Gallais, Yann, Leineweber, Margret, Buchmann, Pascale, Riccardi, Sabrina, Nabhan, Myriam, Lo, Jeannette, Gani, Zaahira, Szely, Natacha, Zhu, Cornelia S., Yang, Ming, Kiessling, Andrea, Vohr, Hans-Werner, Pallardy, Marc, Aswad, Fred, Turbica, Isabelle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6455063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31001248
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.00601
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author Morgan, Hannah
Tseng, Su-Yi
Gallais, Yann
Leineweber, Margret
Buchmann, Pascale
Riccardi, Sabrina
Nabhan, Myriam
Lo, Jeannette
Gani, Zaahira
Szely, Natacha
Zhu, Cornelia S.
Yang, Ming
Kiessling, Andrea
Vohr, Hans-Werner
Pallardy, Marc
Aswad, Fred
Turbica, Isabelle
author_facet Morgan, Hannah
Tseng, Su-Yi
Gallais, Yann
Leineweber, Margret
Buchmann, Pascale
Riccardi, Sabrina
Nabhan, Myriam
Lo, Jeannette
Gani, Zaahira
Szely, Natacha
Zhu, Cornelia S.
Yang, Ming
Kiessling, Andrea
Vohr, Hans-Werner
Pallardy, Marc
Aswad, Fred
Turbica, Isabelle
author_sort Morgan, Hannah
collection PubMed
description Therapeutic antibodies have the potential to induce immunogenicity leading to the development of anti-drug antibodies (ADA) that consequently may result in reduced serum drug concentrations, a loss of efficacy or potential hypersensitivity reactions. Among other factors, aggregated antibodies have been suggested to promote immunogenicity, thus enhancing ADA production. Dendritic cells (DC) are the most efficient antigen-presenting cell population and are crucial for the initiation of T cell responses and the subsequent generation of an adaptive immune response. This work focuses on the development of predictive in vitro assays that can monitor DC maturation, in order to determine whether drug products have direct DC stimulatory capabilities. To this end, four independent laboratories aligned a common protocol to differentiate human monocyte-derived DC (moDC) that were treated with either native or aggregated preparations of infliximab, natalizumab, adalimumab, or rituximab. These drug products were subjected to different forms of physical stress, heat and shear, resulting in aggregation and the formation of subvisible particles. Each partner developed and optimized assays to monitor diverse end-points of moDC maturation: measuring the upregulation of DC activation markers via flow cytometry, analyzing cytokine, and chemokine production via mRNA and protein quantification and identifying cell signaling pathways via quantification of protein phosphorylation. These study results indicated that infliximab, with the highest propensity to form aggregates when heat-stressed, induced a marked activation of moDC as measured by an increase in CD83 and CD86 surface expression, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, IL-12, TNFα, CCL3, and CCL4 transcript upregulation and release of respective proteins, and phosphorylation of the intracellular signaling proteins Syk, ERK1/2, and Akt. In contrast, natalizumab, which does not aggregate under these stress conditions, induced no DC activation in any assay system, whereas adalimumab or rituximab aggregates induced only slight parameter variation. Importantly, the data generated in the different assay systems by each partner site correlated and supported the use of these assays to monitor drug-intrinsic propensities to drive maturation of DC. This moDC assay is also a valuable tool as an in vitro model to assess the intracellular mechanisms that drive DC activation by aggregated therapeutic proteins.
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spelling pubmed-64550632019-04-18 Evaluation of in vitro Assays to Assess the Modulation of Dendritic Cells Functions by Therapeutic Antibodies and Aggregates Morgan, Hannah Tseng, Su-Yi Gallais, Yann Leineweber, Margret Buchmann, Pascale Riccardi, Sabrina Nabhan, Myriam Lo, Jeannette Gani, Zaahira Szely, Natacha Zhu, Cornelia S. Yang, Ming Kiessling, Andrea Vohr, Hans-Werner Pallardy, Marc Aswad, Fred Turbica, Isabelle Front Immunol Immunology Therapeutic antibodies have the potential to induce immunogenicity leading to the development of anti-drug antibodies (ADA) that consequently may result in reduced serum drug concentrations, a loss of efficacy or potential hypersensitivity reactions. Among other factors, aggregated antibodies have been suggested to promote immunogenicity, thus enhancing ADA production. Dendritic cells (DC) are the most efficient antigen-presenting cell population and are crucial for the initiation of T cell responses and the subsequent generation of an adaptive immune response. This work focuses on the development of predictive in vitro assays that can monitor DC maturation, in order to determine whether drug products have direct DC stimulatory capabilities. To this end, four independent laboratories aligned a common protocol to differentiate human monocyte-derived DC (moDC) that were treated with either native or aggregated preparations of infliximab, natalizumab, adalimumab, or rituximab. These drug products were subjected to different forms of physical stress, heat and shear, resulting in aggregation and the formation of subvisible particles. Each partner developed and optimized assays to monitor diverse end-points of moDC maturation: measuring the upregulation of DC activation markers via flow cytometry, analyzing cytokine, and chemokine production via mRNA and protein quantification and identifying cell signaling pathways via quantification of protein phosphorylation. These study results indicated that infliximab, with the highest propensity to form aggregates when heat-stressed, induced a marked activation of moDC as measured by an increase in CD83 and CD86 surface expression, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, IL-12, TNFα, CCL3, and CCL4 transcript upregulation and release of respective proteins, and phosphorylation of the intracellular signaling proteins Syk, ERK1/2, and Akt. In contrast, natalizumab, which does not aggregate under these stress conditions, induced no DC activation in any assay system, whereas adalimumab or rituximab aggregates induced only slight parameter variation. Importantly, the data generated in the different assay systems by each partner site correlated and supported the use of these assays to monitor drug-intrinsic propensities to drive maturation of DC. This moDC assay is also a valuable tool as an in vitro model to assess the intracellular mechanisms that drive DC activation by aggregated therapeutic proteins. Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-03-28 /pmc/articles/PMC6455063/ /pubmed/31001248 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.00601 Text en Copyright © 2019 Morgan, Tseng, Gallais, Leineweber, Buchmann, Riccardi, Nabhan, Lo, Gani, Szely, Zhu, Yang, Kiessling, Vohr, Pallardy, Aswad and Turbica. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Immunology
Morgan, Hannah
Tseng, Su-Yi
Gallais, Yann
Leineweber, Margret
Buchmann, Pascale
Riccardi, Sabrina
Nabhan, Myriam
Lo, Jeannette
Gani, Zaahira
Szely, Natacha
Zhu, Cornelia S.
Yang, Ming
Kiessling, Andrea
Vohr, Hans-Werner
Pallardy, Marc
Aswad, Fred
Turbica, Isabelle
Evaluation of in vitro Assays to Assess the Modulation of Dendritic Cells Functions by Therapeutic Antibodies and Aggregates
title Evaluation of in vitro Assays to Assess the Modulation of Dendritic Cells Functions by Therapeutic Antibodies and Aggregates
title_full Evaluation of in vitro Assays to Assess the Modulation of Dendritic Cells Functions by Therapeutic Antibodies and Aggregates
title_fullStr Evaluation of in vitro Assays to Assess the Modulation of Dendritic Cells Functions by Therapeutic Antibodies and Aggregates
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of in vitro Assays to Assess the Modulation of Dendritic Cells Functions by Therapeutic Antibodies and Aggregates
title_short Evaluation of in vitro Assays to Assess the Modulation of Dendritic Cells Functions by Therapeutic Antibodies and Aggregates
title_sort evaluation of in vitro assays to assess the modulation of dendritic cells functions by therapeutic antibodies and aggregates
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6455063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31001248
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.00601
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