| Literature DB >> 32384086 |
Adrianna Latuszek1, Yashu Liu1, Olav Olsen1, Randi Foster1, Marc Cao1, Irena Lovric1, Ming Yuan1, Nina Liu1, Henry Chen1, Qian Zhang1, Hui Xiao1, Carola Springer1, George Ehrlich1, Vishal Kamat1, Ashique Rafique1, Ying Hu1, Pamela Krueger1, Tammy Huang1, William Poueymirou1, Robert Babb1, Michael P Rosconi1, Marc W Retter1, Gang Chen1, Lori Morton1, Brian Zambrowicz1, Jingtai Cao1, Carmelo Romano1, William C Olson1.
Abstract
Complement is a key component of the innate immune system. Inappropriate complement activation underlies the pathophysiology of a variety of diseases. Complement component 5 (C5) is a validated therapeutic target for complement-mediated diseases, but the development of new therapeutics has been limited by a paucity of preclinical models to evaluate the pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) properties of candidate therapies. The present report describes a novel humanized C5 mouse and its utility in evaluating a panel of fully human anti-C5 antibodies. Surprisingly, humanized C5 mice revealed marked differences in clearance rates amongst a panel of anti-C5 antibodies. One antibody, pozelimab (REGN3918), bound C5 and C5 variants with high affinity and potently blocked complement-mediated hemolysis in vitro. In studies conducted in both humanized C5 mice and cynomolgus monkeys, pozelimab demonstrated prolonged PK and durable suppression of hemolytic activity ex vivo. In humanized C5 mice, a switch in dosing from in-house eculizumab to pozelimab was associated with normalization of serum C5 concentrations, sustained suppression of hemolytic activity ex vivo, and no overt toxicity. Our findings demonstrate the value of humanized C5 mice in identifying new therapeutic candidates and treatment options for complement-mediated diseases.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32384086 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0231892
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240