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Reducing affinity as a strategy to boost immunomodulatory antibody agonism.

Xiaojie YuChristian M OrrH T Claude ChanSonya JamesChristine A PenfoldJinny KimTatyana InzhelevskayaC Ian MockridgeKerry L CoxJonathan W EssexIvo TewsMartin J GlennieMark S Cragg
Published in: Nature (2023)
Antibody responses during infection and vaccination typically undergo affinity maturation to achieve high-affinity binding for efficient neutralization of pathogens 1,2 . Similarly, high affinity is routinely the goal for therapeutic antibody generation. However, in contrast to naturally occurring or direct-targeting therapeutic antibodies, immunomodulatory antibodies, which are designed to modulate receptor signalling, have not been widely examined for their affinity-function relationship. Here we examine three separate immunologically important receptors spanning two receptor superfamilies: CD40, 4-1BB and PD-1. We show that low rather than high affinity delivers greater activity through increased clustering. This approach delivered higher immune cell activation, in vivo T cell expansion and antitumour activity in the case of CD40. Moreover, an inert anti-4-1BB monoclonal antibody was transformed into an agonist. Low-affinity variants of the clinically important antagonistic anti-PD-1 monoclonal antibody nivolumab also mediated more potent signalling and affected T cell activation. These findings reveal a new paradigm for augmenting agonism across diverse receptor families and shed light on the mechanism of antibody-mediated receptor signalling. Such affinity engineering offers a rational, efficient and highly tuneable solution to deliver antibody-mediated receptor activity across a range of potencies suitable for translation to the treatment of human disease.
Keyphrases
  • monoclonal antibody
  • capillary electrophoresis
  • gene expression
  • drug delivery
  • single cell
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • cancer therapy
  • growth factor
  • mass spectrometry
  • multidrug resistant
  • copy number
  • recombinant human