| Literature DB >> 31585081 |
Henry R Maun1, Janet K Jackman2, David F Choy3, Kelly M Loyet4, Tracy L Staton5, Guiquan Jia3, Amy Dressen6, Jason A Hackney7, Meire Bremer5, Benjamin T Walters4, Rajesh Vij8, Xiaocheng Chen8, Neil N Trivedi9, Ashley Morando4, Michael T Lipari1, Yvonne Franke10, Xiumin Wu11, Juan Zhang11, John Liu11, Ping Wu12, Diana Chang6, Luz D Orozco7, Erin Christensen13, Manda Wong12, Racquel Corpuz12, Julie Q Hang13, Jeff Lutman14, Siddharth Sukumaran14, Yan Wu8, Savita Ubhayakar15, Xiaorong Liang15, Lawrence B Schwartz16, Magda Babina17, Prescott G Woodruff18, John V Fahy18, Rahul Ahuja9, George H Caughey9, Aija Kusi19, Mark S Dennis8, Charles Eigenbrot12, Daniel Kirchhofer1, Cary D Austin20, Lawren C Wu2, James T Koerber8, Wyne P Lee11, Brian L Yaspan6, Kathila R Alatsis19, Joseph R Arron21, Robert A Lazarus22, Tangsheng Yi23.
Abstract
Severe asthma patients with low type 2 inflammation derive less clinical benefit from therapies targeting type 2 cytokines and represent an unmet need. We show that mast cell tryptase is elevated in severe asthma patients independent of type 2 biomarker status. Active β-tryptase allele count correlates with blood tryptase levels, and asthma patients carrying more active alleles benefit less from anti-IgE treatment. We generated a noncompetitive inhibitory antibody against human β-tryptase, which dissociates active tetramers into inactive monomers. A 2.15 Å crystal structure of a β-tryptase/antibody complex coupled with biochemical studies reveal the molecular basis for allosteric destabilization of small and large interfaces required for tetramerization. This anti-tryptase antibody potently blocks tryptase enzymatic activity in a humanized mouse model, reducing IgE-mediated systemic anaphylaxis, and inhibits airway tryptase in Ascaris-sensitized cynomolgus monkeys with favorable pharmacokinetics. These data provide a foundation for developing anti-tryptase as a clinical therapy for severe asthma.Entities:
Keywords: allosteric protease inhibitor; anti-IgE; anti-tryptase; antibody engineering; asthma; mast cell; non-type 2 asthma; serine protease; tryptase; tryptase genetics
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31585081 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2019.09.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582