AI Article Synopsis

  • Therapeutic antibodies targeting TNF-α often trigger immune responses in humans, leading to reduced effectiveness of the treatment due to lower serum levels of the antibodies.
  • The higher immunogenicity may be caused by the TNF-α protein forming a homotrimer, which facilitates the creation of immune complexes that enhance their binding to immune cell receptors.
  • To lower immunogenicity, researchers developed a modified antibody (AF-M2637) that binds TNF-α in a way that prevents the formation of these larger immune complexes, showing promise by not provoking an immune response in mice.

Article Abstract

Therapeutic Abs directed toward TNF-α display significant immunogenicity in humans, frequently leading to lower serum concentrations of the Ab that are associated with lower treatment efficacy. The enhanced incidence of immunogenicity observed with this class of therapeutics may be mediated by the expression of TNF-α as a homotrimer, both as a soluble serum protein and as a membrane-associated protein (mTNF-α) on the surface of dendritic cells. The TNF-α homotrimer enables the formation of polyvalent Ab-TNF-α immune complexes (ICs) that enhance binding to FcR and neonatal FcR. Polyvalent ICs and Ab bound to mTNF-α on the surface of dendritic cells can internalize, traffic to the lysosomes, and be processed for presentation by MHC molecules. To diminish immunogenicity caused by trafficking of ICs and mTNF-α to the lysosomes, we engineered a monovalent format of adalimumab with pH-sensitive binding to TNF-α. The engineered variant, termed AF-M2637, did not cross-link TNF-α trimers and consequently formed small, nonprecipitating ICs only. AF-M2637 bound TNF-α with high affinity at pH 7.4 (EC = 1.1 nM) and displayed a significantly faster dissociation rate than adalimumab at pH 6.0. No immune response to AF-M2637 was detected in mice following a single i.v. dose. In contrast, rapid immunization was detected following the injection of a single i.v. dose of adalimumab, monovalent adalimumab, or the bivalent form of the pH-sensitive variant. These data suggest that ICs and mTNF-α both contribute to the immunogenicity of adalimumab in mice and provide a general strategy for engineering less immunogenic therapeutic TNF-α Abs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10580234PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.2101180DOI Listing

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