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Antitumor Activities in Mouse Xenograft Models of Canine Fibroblastic Tumor by Defucosylated Anti-Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Monoclonal Antibody.

Nohara GotoHiroyuki SuzukiTomokazu OhishiAkiko HarakawaGuanjie LiMasaki SaitoJunko TakeiTomohiro TanakaTeizo AsanoMasato SanoManabu KawadaMika K KanekoYukinari Kato
Published in: Monoclonal antibodies in immunodiagnosis and immunotherapy (2022)
The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is involved in tumor malignancy through gene amplification and/or protein overexpression. An anti-human EGFR (hEGFR) monoclonal antibody (clone EMab-134), which explicitly detects hEGFR and dog EGFR (dEGFR), was previously developed. The defucosylated mouse IgG 2a version of EMab-134 (134-mG 2a -f) exhibits antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) and complement-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) in dEGFR-overexpressed CHO-K1 (CHO/dEGFR) cells and antitumor activities in mouse xenografts of CHO/dEGFR cells. In this study, it was shown that 134-mG 2a -f reacts with a canine fibroblastic tumor cell line (A-72) using flow cytometry and immunocytochemistry. Furthermore, 134-mG 2a -f exerted ADCC and CDC on A-72 cell line. The administration of 134-mG 2a -f significantly inhibited the A-72 xenograft growth. These results suggest that 134-mG 2a -f exerts antitumor effects on dEGFR-expressing canine fibroblastic tumors.
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