| Literature DB >> 30102763 |
Tyler Lopez1, Chen Chuan1, Aaron Ramirez1, Kuan-Hui E Chen2, Mary Y Lorenson2, Chris Benitez1, Zahid Mustafa1, Henry Pham1, Ramon Sanchez1, Ameae M Walker2, Xin Ge1.
Abstract
Targeting effectual epitopes is essential for therapeutic antibodies to accomplish their desired biological functions. This study developed a competitive dual color fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) to maturate a matrix metalloprotease 14 (MMP-14) inhibitory antibody. Epitope-specific screening was achieved by selection on MMP-14 during competition with N-terminal domain of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-2 (TIMP-2) (nTIMP-2), a native inhibitor of MMP-14 binding strongly to its catalytic cleft. 3A2 variants with high potency, selectivity, and improved affinity and proteolytic stability were isolated from a random mutagenesis library. Binding kinetics indicated that the affinity improvements were mainly from slower dissociation rates. In vitro degradation tests suggested the isolated variants had half lives 6-11-fold longer than the wt. Inhibition kinetics suggested they were competitive inhibitors which showed excellent selectivity toward MMP-14 over highly homologous MMP-9. Alanine scanning revealed that they bound to the vicinity of MMP-14 catalytic cleft especially residues F204 and F260, suggesting that the desired epitope was maintained during maturation. When converted to immunoglobulin G, B3 showed 5.0 nM binding affinity and 6.5 nM inhibition potency with in vivo half-life of 4.6 days in mice. In addition to protease inhibitory antibodies, the competitive FACS described here can be applied for discovery and engineering biosimilars, and in general for other circumstances where epitope-specific modulation is needed.Entities:
Keywords: FACS; MMP; epitope specificity; inhibitory antibody; proteolytic stability
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30102763 PMCID: PMC6202216 DOI: 10.1002/bit.26814
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol Bioeng ISSN: 0006-3592 Impact factor: 4.530