| Literature DB >> 27003914 |
Dominik Schumacher1, Christian P R Hackenberger1, Heinrich Leonhardt2, Jonas Helma3.
Abstract
Antibody drug conjugates (ADCs), a promising class of cancer biopharmaceuticals, combine the specificity of therapeutic antibodies with the pharmacological potency of chemical, cytotoxic drugs. Ever since the first ADCs on the market, a plethora of novel ADC technologies has emerged, covering as diverse aspects as antibody engineering, chemical linker optimization and novel conjugation strategies, together aiming at constantly widening the therapeutic window for ADCs. This review primarily focuses on novel chemical and biotechnological strategies for the site-directed attachment of drugs that are currently validated for 2nd generation ADCs to promote conjugate homogeneity and overall stability.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody drug conjugates (ADCs); Sortase A; THIOMAB; Tub-tag; drug-antibody ratio (DAR); formylglycine generating enzyme (FGE); microbial transglutaminase (MTG); monomethyl auristatin E/F (MMAE/MMAF); site-specific conjugation; therapeutic window; tubulin tyrosine ligase (TTL); unnatural amino acids (UAA)
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27003914 PMCID: PMC4891387 DOI: 10.1007/s10875-016-0265-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Immunol ISSN: 0271-9142 Impact factor: 8.317
Fig. 1Novel ADC conjugation technologies for a widened therapeutic window. The antibody-mediated delivery of cytotoxic drugs at tumor sites lowers drug toxicity and enhances efficacy compared to conventional chemotherapeutics. Techniques for the conjugation of 1st generation ADCs are associated with conjugate heterogeneity issues. Thus, ADCs of the next generation are generated via site-directed conjugation approaches to improve the therapeutic activity
Fig. 2Techniques for the production of 2nd generation ADCs. a Re-bridging disulfides by bis-sulfone reagents, dibromomaleimides and dibromopyridazinediones reduces maximum DAR from eight to four. b The π-clamp (shown in orange) mediates site-specific conjugation with perfluoroaromatic reagents to its cysteine. b After removal of the antibody’s glycan by the enzyme PNGase, a transglutaminase is used to form an isopeptide bond between Q295 and an incoming amine-azide-linker. The drug molecule is attached to the azide by a strain promoted azide alkyne click reaction. d The transpeptidase Sortase A catalyzes the reversible formation of an amide-bond between threonine of the sequence LPXTG (shown in green) and a drug derivatives with a N-terminal penta-glycine motive (shown in red). e Formylglycine generating enzyme (FGE) transforms the thiol within the sequence CXPXR (shown in yellow) to an aldehyde. A following Pictet-Spengler type reaction generates stable conjugation-products. f Tub-tag labeling is a versatile and efficient tool to produce novel ADC derivatives. TTL mediates the site-specific attachment of various tyrosine derivatives to the C-terminus of the Tub-tag (shown in blue). In a second step, the cytotoxic drug is conjugated to the tyrosine derivatives using well established bioorthogonal chemistry (SPAAC = strain-promoted azide alkyne cycloaddition; CuAAC = copper-catalyzed azide alkyne cycloaddition)