Disulfide-stabilized diabody antiCD19/antiCD3 exceeds its parental antibody in tumor-targeting activity

Background A diabody is a bispecific antibody that is capable of recruiting a polyclonal T cell to antibody target-expressing tumor cells. However, the two chains of diabodies tend to dissociate because they are integrated non-covalently. Therefore, it is necessary to remodel the diabody to increase...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cellular oncology (Dordrecht) 2012-12, Vol.35 (6), p.423-434
Hauptverfasser: Wei, Li, DongMei, Fan, Ming, Yang, RuiZan, Shi, Yan, Yan, Linlin, Jiang, Cihui, Yan, Shuangjing, Li, Min, Wang, Jianxiang, Wang, DongSheng, Xiong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background A diabody is a bispecific antibody that is capable of recruiting a polyclonal T cell to antibody target-expressing tumor cells. However, the two chains of diabodies tend to dissociate because they are integrated non-covalently. Therefore, it is necessary to remodel the diabody to increase its stability in order to enhance the antitumor activity. Methods We constructed an antiCD3×antiCD19 diabody with one binding site for the T cell antigen receptor (TCRCD3) and the other for the B cell-specific antigen (CD19) by recombinant gene engineering technology. Cysteine residues were introduced into the V domains of the anti-CD3 segment. The stability and cytotoxicity of the two diabodies were compared in vitro and vivo. Results The disulfide-stabilized (ds) diabodies produced by Escherichia coli were secreted with high yields in a fully active form without a decrease in affinity. Compared with the parental diabody, the disulfide-stabilized (ds) diabody proved more stable in vitro and in vivo without reducing binding affinity. Both were able to effectively eliminate human lymphoma Raji cells by redirecting T lymphocytes in vitro and in vivo, but the ds diabody was more effective in inhibiting the growth of xenografts transplanted in BALB/C nude mice. Conclusion The antiCD3×antiCD19 ds diabody is more suitable for a controlled polyclonal T cell therapy of human CD19-positive B cell malignancies than its parental diabody.
ISSN:2211-3428
2211-3436
DOI:10.1007/s13402-012-0101-9