Granzyme B-H22(scFv), a human immunotoxin targeting CD64 in acute myeloid leukemia of monocytic subtypes.

Mol Cancer Ther

Fraunhofer IME, Department of Pharmaceutical Product Development, Forckenbeckstr. 6, 52074 Aachen, Germany.

Published: September 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • AML subtypes M4 and M5 have higher levels of CD64, a receptor for IgG, making it a target for delivering toxic agents like granzyme B, a cytotoxic enzyme from T cells.
  • Researchers fused granzyme B with a humanized antibody fragment (H22) targeting CD64 to create a fusion protein (Gb-H22(scFv)) that maintains its protective immunogenic properties while being effective against AML cells.
  • The fusion protein was shown to induce apoptosis specifically in CD64+ AML cells, demonstrating its potential as a treatment with a targeted cytotoxic effect.

Article Abstract

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) cells of subtypes M4 and M5 show enhanced expression of CD64 (FcgammaRI), the high-affinity receptor for IgG, which is normally expressed at high levels only on activated cells of the myeloid lineage. CD64 is therefore a prime target for the specific delivery of cytotoxic agents. A promising toxin candidate is granzyme B, a human serine protease originating from cytotoxic granules of CD8+ T lymphocytes and natural killer cells. After evaluating the sensitivity of the AML-related cell line U937 toward cytosolic granzyme B, we genetically fused granzyme B to H22, a humanized single-chain antibody fragment (scFv) specific for CD64, to obtain Gb-H22(scFv), a fusion protein lacking the immunogenic properties of nonhuman immunofusions. Gb-H22(scFv) was successfully expressed in human 293T cells, secreted, and purified from cell culture supernatants. The purified protein bound specifically to CD64+ U937 cells. Despite linkage to the binding domain, the proteolytic activity of functional Gb-H22(scFv) was identical to that of free granzyme B. Target cell-specific cytotoxicity was observed with a half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) between 1.7 and 17 nmol/L. In addition, the induction of apoptosis in U937 cells was confirmed by Annexin A5 staining and the detection of activated caspase-3 in the cytosol. Finally, apoptosis was observed in primary CD64+ AML cells, whereas CD64(-) AML cells were unaffected. This is the first report of a completely human granzyme B-based immunotoxin directed against CD64, with activity against an AML-related cell line and primary AML cells.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-08-0554DOI Listing

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