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ABSTRACT: We generated and characterized novel antibody-cytokine fusion proteins ("immunocytokines") based on murine interleukin-7 (IL7), an immunomodulatory protein which has previously shown anti-cancer activity in preclinical models and whose human counterpart is currently being investigated in clinical trials. The sequential fusion of the clinical-stage antibody fragment scFv(F8), specific to a tumor-associated splice isoform of fibronectin, yielded an immunocytokine (termed "F8-mIL7") of insufficient pharmaceutical quality and in vivo tumor targeting performance, with a striking dose dependence on tumor targeting selectivity. By contrast, a novel immunocytokine design (termed "F8-mIL7-F8"), in which two scFv moieties were fused at the N- and C-terminus of murine IL7, yielded a protein of excellent pharmaceutical quality and with improved tumor-targeting performance [tumor: blood ratio=16:1, 24h after injection]. Both F8-mIL7 and F8-mIL7-F8 could induce tumor growth retardation in immunocompetent mice, but were not able to eradicate F9 tumors. The combination of F8-mIL7-F8 with paclitaxel led to improved therapeutic results, which were significantly better compared to those obtained with saline treatment. The study indicates how the engineering of novel immunocytokine formats may help generate fusion proteins of acceptable pharmaceutical quality, for those immunomodulatory proteins which do not lend themselves to a direct fusion with antibody fragments.
Journal of biotechnology 06/2011; 154(1):84-92. · 2.88 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) can routinely be isolated from phage display libraries against virtually any protein available in sufficient purity and quantity, but library design can influence epitope coverage on the target antigen. Here we describe the construction of a novel synthetic human antibody phage display library that incorporates hydrophilic or charged residues at position 52 of the CDR2 loop of the variable heavy chain domain, instead of the serine residue found in the corresponding germline gene. The novel library was used to isolate human mAbs to various antigens, including the alternatively-spliced EDA domain of fibronectin, a marker of tumor angiogenesis. In particular, the mAb 2H7 was proven to bind to a novel epitope on EDA, which does not overlap with the one recognized by the clinical-stage F8 antibody. F8 and 2H7 were used for the construction of chelating recombinant antibodies (CRAbs), whose tumor-targeting properties were assessed in vivo in biodistribution studies in mice bearing F9 teratocarcinoma, revealing a preferential accumulation at the tumor site.
mAbs 05/2011; 3(3):264-72.
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ABSTRACT: The antibody-based targeted delivery of bioactive molecules to tumour vasculature is an attractive avenue to concentrate therapeutic agents at cancer sites, while sparing normal organs. L19, F8 and F16 are three fully human monoclonal antibodies, specific to splice isoforms of fibronectin and tenascin-C, which bind to sites of active tissue remodeling and which are currently in Phase I and II clinical trials as radio-immunoconjugates and immunocytokines in patients with cancer and arthritis.In this article, we report the first comparative analysis of expression patterns for the extra domains EDB and EDA of fibronectin and A1 of tenascin-C in both primary and metastatic head and neck cancer lesions.
We performed a comparative immunofluorescence analysis with the L19, F8 and F16 antibodies in 40 freshly frozen human head and neck cancer specimens.
On average, F8 and F16 exhibited similar staining intensities, which were typically stronger than L19. Interestingly, some specimens exhibited striking differences in staining by the three antibodies.
These results suggests that an individualized treatment procedure (e.g., choice of L19, F8 or F16 based on immuno-PET or immunofluorescence procedure) may represent the most logical avenue for offering the best possible antibody to any given patient.
Head & Neck Oncology 01/2011; 3:25. · 3.13 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Proinflammatory cytokines have been used for several years in patients with advanced cancer but their administration is typically associated with severe toxicity hampering their application to therapeutically active regimens. This problem can be overcome by using immunocytokines (cytokines fused to antibody or antibody fragments) which selectively deliver the active cytokine to the tumor environment. Preclinical and recent clinical results confirmed that this approach is a very promising avenue to go. We designed an immunocytokine consisting of the scFv(F8) specific to extra-domain A of fibronectin and the very potent human cytokine interleukin-12 (IL12). The heterodimeric nature of IL12 allows the engineering of various immunocytokine formats, based on different combinations of the two subunits (p35 and p40) together with the scFv. In comparison to monomeric or homodimeric cytokines, the construction of a heterodimeric immunocytokine poses many challenges, e.g. gene dosing, stable high-yield expression as well as good manufacture practice (GMP) purification and characterization. In this paper, we describe the successful construction, characterization and production of the heterodimeric immunocytokine F8-IL12. The positive outcome of this feasibility study leads now to GMP production of F8-IL12, which will soon enter clinical trials.
Protein Engineering Design and Selection 08/2010; 23(8):653-61. · 2.94 Impact Factor
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Samu Melkko,
Luca Mannocci,
Christoph E Dumelin, Alessandra Villa,
Roberto Sommavilla,
Yixin Zhang,
Markus G Grütter,
Nadine Keller,
Lutz Jermutus,
Ronald H Jackson,
Jörg Scheuermann,
Dario Neri
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ABSTRACT: Bcl-xL is an antiapoptotic member of the Bcl-2 protein family and an attractive target for the development of anticancer agents. Here we describe the isolation of binders to Bcl-xL from a DNA-encoded chemical library using affinity-capture selections and massively parallel high-throughput sequencing of >30,000 sequence tags of library members. The most potent binder identified, compound 19/93 [(R)-3-(amido indomethacin)-4-(naphthalen-1-yl)butanoic acid], bound to Bcl-xL with a dissociation constant (K(d)) of 930 nM and was able to compete with a Bak-derived BH3 peptide, an antagonist of Bcl-xL function.
ChemMedChem 03/2010; 5(4):584-90. · 3.15 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Antibody fragments can recognize their cognate antigen with high affinity and can be produced at high yields, but generally display rapid blood clearance profiles. For pharmaceutical applications, the serum half-life of antibody fragments is often extended by chemical modification with polymers or by genetic fusion to albumin or albumin-binding polypeptides. Here, we report that the site-specific chemical modification of a C-terminal cysteine residue in scFv antibody fragments with a small organic molecule capable of high-affinity binding to serum albumin substantially extends serum half-life in rodents. The strategy was implemented using the antibody fragment F8, specific to the alternatively spliced EDA domain of fibronectin, a tumor-associated antigen. The unmodified and chemically modified scFv-F8 antibody fragments were studied by biodistribution analysis in tumor-bearing mice, exhibiting a dramatic increase in tumor uptake for the albumin-binding antibody derivative. The data presented in this paper indicate that the chemical modification of the antibody fragment with the 2-(3-maleimidopropanamido)-6-(4-(4-iodophenyl)butanamido)hexanoate albumin-binding moiety may represent a general strategy for the extension of the serum half-life of antibody fragments and for the improvement of their in vivo targeting performance.
Bioconjugate Chemistry 11/2009; 20(12):2286-92. · 4.93 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The antibody-mediated delivery of therapeutic agents to sites of angiogenesis is an attractive strategy for anticancer therapy, but is largely unexplored in hematologic malignancies. In the present study, we show that the extra domain B (EDB) of fibronectin, a marker of angiogenesis, is expressed in B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) and that the human monoclonal anti-EDB antibody L19 can selectively localize to the lymphoma-associated subendothelial extracellular matrix. In vivo, the preferential accumulation of the antibody at the tumor site was confirmed by quantitative biodistribution analyses with radioiodinated antibody preparations. The fusion protein L19-IL2, which mediates the delivery of interleukin-2 (IL-2) to the neovasculature, displayed a superior antilymphoma activity compared with unconjugated IL-2 in localized and systemic xenograft models of NHL. When coadministered with rituximab, L19-IL2 induced complete remissions of established localized lymphomas and provided long-lasting protection from disseminated lymphoma. The combined use of rituximab and L19-IL2, which dramatically increases the infiltration of immune effector cells in lymphomas, may deserve clinical investigations, facilitated by the fact that L19-IL2 is currently being studied in phase II clinical trials in patients with solid tumors.
Blood 12/2008; 113(10):2275-83. · 9.90 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The alternatively spliced extra-domain B of fibronectin is one of the best characterized markers of tumor angiogenesis. Similarly, the extra-domain A (EDA), which can also be inserted in the fibronectin transcript by a mechanism of alternative splicing, has been shown to preferentially accumulate around new blood vessels in certain tumors, but this antigen has not been investigated so far as a target for antibody-based biomolecular intervention. We here describe the generation of 3 human monoclonal antibodies (named F8, B7 and D5), which recognize the same epitope of EDA, but which differ in terms of their dissociation constant to the human antigen (K(D) = 3.1, 16 and 17 nM, measured for monomeric preparations of the F8, B7 and D5 antibodies, respectively, in recombinant scFv format). When the 3 antibody fragments were cloned and expressed with a 5 amino acid linker, the 3 resulting homodimeric antibody preparations displayed comparable tumor: organ ratios in quantitative biodistribution studies, performed in immunocompetent 129SvEv mice, bearing subcutaneous syngeneic F9 murine tumors. The percent injected dose per gram (%ID/g) values in tumors 24 hr after intravenous injection were 9.3, 10.2 and 13 for F8, B7 and D5, respectively. The F8 antibody may serve as useful building block for the development of antibody-based targeted anti-cancer therapeutics. Preclinical and clinical investigations are facilitated by the fact that F8 recognizes the human and mouse antigen with comparable affinity, and by the observation that EDA over-expression is detectable not only in solid tumors, but also in hematological malignancies.
International Journal of Cancer 07/2008; 122(11):2405-13. · 5.44 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: One of the most promising new avenues for the development of more selective and efficacious cancer therapies relies on the antibody-mediated targeted delivery of bioactive agents (e.g., cytokines) to the tumor environment. The identification of quantitative differences in the expression of accessible vascular proteins in metastatic lesions and host organs facilitate the development of antibody-based strategies, which should be highly efficient and selective, considering the fact that an over-exuberant neovasculature is a characteristic feature of aggressive cancers, and that tumor blood vessels are readily accessible for i.v. administered therapeutic agents. Metastasis is the main cause of death in cancer. The availability of metastasis-specific antigens accessible from the bloodstream will allow a selective delivery of therapeutic agents to metastatic lesions using antibodies as vehicles. Using a combination of vascular biotinylation of 129Sv mice bearing F9 liver metastases and mass spectrometry, we have identified 435 accessible proteins in metastasis and host organ specimens, of which 117 were exclusively detected in metastases. In particular, we found that the alternatively spliced extra-domain A (EDA) of fibronectin is strongly expressed in the neovasculature of liver metastases, while being undetectable in most normal organs. A human antibody to EDA was used to show EDA expression in the neovasculature of metastases and primary tumors of human cancer patients and to target mouse liver metastases and subcutaneous tumors in vivo. Human antibody fragments specific to the EDA domain of fibronectin promise to serve as general vehicles for the efficient and selective delivery of imaging agents or therapeutic molecules to metastatic sites.
Cancer Research 12/2007; 67(22):10948-57. · 7.86 Impact Factor