Rapid identification of highly potent human anti-GPCR antagonist monoclonal antibodies

Complex cellular targets such as G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), ion channels, and other multi-transmembrane proteins represent a significant challenge for therapeutic antibody discovery, primarily because of poor stability of the target protein upon extraction from cell membranes. To assess wh...

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Veröffentlicht in:mAbs 2020-01, Vol.12 (1), p.1755069-1755069
Hauptverfasser: Scott, Martin J, Jowett, Amanda, Orecchia, Martin, Ertl, Peter, Ouro-Gnao, Larissa, Ticehurst, Julia, Gower, David, Yates, John, Poulton, Katie, Harris, Carol, Mullin, Michael J, Smith, Kathrine J, Lewis, Alan P, Barton, Nick, Washburn, Michael L, de Wildt, Ruud
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Complex cellular targets such as G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), ion channels, and other multi-transmembrane proteins represent a significant challenge for therapeutic antibody discovery, primarily because of poor stability of the target protein upon extraction from cell membranes. To assess whether a limited set of membrane-bound antigen formats could be exploited to identify functional antibodies directed against such targets, we selected a GPCR of therapeutic relevance (CCR1) and identified target binders using an yeast-based antibody discovery platform (Adimab ) to expedite hit identification. Initially, we compared two different biotinylated antigen formats overexpressing human CCR1 in a 'scouting' approach using a subset of the antibody library. Binders were isolated using streptavidin-coated beads, expressed as yeast supernatants, and screened using a high-throughput binding assay and flow cytometry on appropriate cell lines. The most suitable antigen was then selected to isolate target binders using the full library diversity. This approach identified a combined total of 183 mAbs with diverse heavy chain sequences. A subset of clones exhibited high potencies in primary cell chemotaxis assays, with IC values in the low nM/high pM range. To assess the feasibility of any further affinity enhancement, full-length hCCR1 protein was purified, complementary-determining region diversified libraries were constructed from a high and lower affinity mAb, and improved binders were isolated by fluorescence-activated cell sorting selections. A significant affinity enhancement was observed for the lower affinity parental mAb, but not the high affinity mAb. These data exemplify a methodology to generate potent human mAbs for challenging targets rapidly using whole cells as antigen and define a route to the identification of affinity-matured variants if required.
ISSN:1942-0862
1942-0870
DOI:10.1080/19420862.2020.1755069