AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent advancements in treating chronic inflammatory diseases like inflammatory bowel disease and rheumatoid arthritis have been achieved with anti-TNF-α biologics, but challenges such as acquired resistance still exist.
  • Researchers have isolated a new class of super-neutralizing biologics derived from shark VNAR domains that effectively block TNF-α at very low concentrations.
  • These reformatted VNARs show promise in improving treatment efficacy, restoring intestinal barrier function, and may offer better delivery options compared to existing therapies like Humira.

Article Abstract

The management of chronic inflammatory diseases, such as inflammatory bowel disease, psoriasis, and rheumatoid arthritis has significantly improved over the last decade with the clinical availability of anti-TNF-α biologics. Despite this undoubted treatment success, a combination of acquired resistance together with an increased risk of systemic complications, means that a significant number of patients either fail to find a suitable targeted therapy or frustratingly discover that an approach that did work is no longer efficacious. Here, we report the isolation and characterization of a new class of super-neutralizing anti-TNF-α biologics formats, the building blocks of which were originally derived as variable new antigen receptor (VNAR) domains from an immunized nurse shark. These parental small, stable VNAR monomers recognize and neutralize tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, in cell-based assays, at nanomolar concentrations. However, the simple, single-chain molecular architecture of VNARs allows for easy and multiple reformatting options. Through reformatting, we achieved a 50,000-fold enhancement in efficacy with super-neutralizing fusion proteins able to block TNF-α induced cytotoxicity in the 2-5 pM range while retaining other functionality through the addition of fusion proteins known to extend serum half-life . In an intestinal epithelial barrier dysfunction efficacy model, the lead VNAR domains, restored barrier function and prevented paracellular flux with comparable efficacy to adalimumab (Humira). In addition, all multivalent VNAR constructs restored trans-epithelial electrical resistance (TEER) to approximately 94% of the untreated control. Reformatted VNAR domains should be considered as a new class of biologic agents for the treatment of hTNF-α driven diseases; either used systemically with appropriate half-life extension or alternatively where site-specific delivery of small and stable neutralizers may provide improvements to current therapy options.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5743654PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2017.01780DOI Listing

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