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An anti-HER2 biparatopic antibody that induces unique HER2 clustering and complement-dependent cytotoxicity.

Nina E WeisserMario SanchesEric Escobar-CabreraJason O'TooleElizabeth WhalenPeter W Y ChanGrant WickmanLibin AbrahamKate ChoiBryant HarbourneAntonios SamiotakisAndrea Hernández RojasGesa VolkersJodi WongClaire E AtkinsonJason BaardsnesLiam J WorrallDuncan BrowmanEmma E SmithPriya BaichooChi Wing ChengJoy GuediaSohyeong KangAbhishek MukhopadhyayLisa NewhookAnders OhrnPrajwal RaghunathaMatteo Zago-SchmittJoseph D SchragJoel SmithPatricia ZwierzchowskiJoshua M ScurllVincent FungSonia BlackNatalie C J StrynadkaMichael R GoldLeonard G PrestaGordon NgSurjit Dixit
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) is a receptor tyrosine kinase that plays an oncogenic role in breast, gastric and other solid tumors. However, anti-HER2 therapies are only currently approved for the treatment of breast and gastric/gastric esophageal junction cancers and treatment resistance remains a problem. Here, we engineer an anti-HER2 IgG1 bispecific, biparatopic antibody (Ab), zanidatamab, with unique and enhanced functionalities compared to both trastuzumab and the combination of trastuzumab plus pertuzumab (tras + pert). Zanidatamab binds adjacent HER2 molecules in trans and initiates distinct HER2 reorganization, as shown by polarized cell surface HER2 caps and large HER2 clusters, not observed with trastuzumab or tras + pert. Moreover, zanidatamab, but not trastuzumab nor tras + pert, elicit potent complement-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) against high HER2-expressing tumor cells in vitro. Zanidatamab also mediates HER2 internalization and downregulation, inhibition of both cell signaling and tumor growth, antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) and phagocytosis (ADCP), and also shows superior in vivo antitumor activity compared to tras + pert in a HER2-expressing xenograft model. Collectively, we show that zanidatamab has multiple and distinct mechanisms of action derived from the structural effects of biparatopic HER2 engagement.
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