TNFRSF receptor-specific antibody fusion proteins with targeting controlled FcγR-independent agonistic activity.

Cell Death Dis

Division of Molecular Internal Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine II, University Hospital Würzburg, Auvera Haus Grombühlstraße 12, 97080, Würzburg, Germany.

Published: March 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Antibodies targeting TNFRSF receptors can act as strong agonists when they bind to FcγR, even if they don't typically activate these receptors with soluble ligands.
  • The effectiveness of these antibodies as agonists is mostly not influenced by their isotype, the type of FcγR, or the specific epitope they recognize; instead, it primarily depends on the interaction between the antibody's Fc domain and FcγR.
  • The research also shows that antibody fusion proteins designed to attach directly to cell surfaces (bypassing FcγR) can still be effective agonists, indicating a potential for creating more targeted and effective therapies for diseases associated with TNFRSF receptors.

Article Abstract

Antibodies specific for TNFRSF receptors that bind soluble ligands without getting properly activated generally act as strong agonists upon FcγR binding. Systematic analyses revealed that the FcγR dependency of such antibodies to act as potent agonists is largely independent from isotype, FcγR type, and of the epitope recognized. This suggests that the sole cellular attachment, achieved by Fc domain-FcγR interaction, dominantly determines the agonistic activity of antibodies recognizing TNFRSF receptors poorly responsive to soluble ligands. In accordance with this hypothesis, we demonstrated that antibody fusion proteins harboring domains allowing FcγR-independent cell surface anchoring also act as strong agonist provided they have access to their target. This finding defines a general possibility to generate anti-TNFRSF receptor antibodies with FcγR-independent agonism. Moreover, anti-TNFRSF receptor antibody fusion proteins with an anchoring domain promise superior applicability to conventional systemically active agonists when an anchoring target with localized disease associated expression can be addressed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6399339PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41419-019-1456-xDOI Listing

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