| Literature DB >> 33122192 |
James E Stefano1, Dana M Lord1, Yanfeng Zhou2, Julie Jaworski1, Joern Hopke1, Tara Travaline1, Ningning Zhang1, Karen Wong1, Amanda Lennon1, Timothy He3, Eva Bric-Furlong1, Cornishia Cherrie1, Tristan Magnay1, Elisabeth Remy4, William Brondyk1, Huawei Qiu1, Katarina Radošević1.
Abstract
The dimeric ectonucleotidase CD73 catalyzes the hydrolysis of AMP at the cell surface to form adenosine, a potent suppressor of the immune response. Blocking CD73 activity in the tumor microenvironment can have a beneficial effect on tumor eradication and is a promising approach for cancer therapy. Biparatopic antibodies binding different regions of CD73 may be a means to antagonize its enzymatic activity. A panel of biparatopic antibodies representing the pairwise combination of 11 parental monoclonal antibodies against CD73 was generated by Fab-arm exchange. Nine variants vastly exceeded the potency of their parental antibodies with ≥90% inhibition of activity and subnanomolar EC50 values. Pairing the Fabs of parents with nonoverlapping epitopes was both sufficient and necessary whereas monovalent antibodies were poor inhibitors. Some parental antibodies yielded potent biparatopics with multiple partners, one of which (TB19) producing the most potent. The structure of the TB19 Fab with CD73 reveals that it blocks alignment of the N- and C-terminal CD73 domains necessary for catalysis. A separate structure of CD73 with a Fab (TB38) which complements TB19 in a particularly potent biparatopic shows its binding to a nonoverlapping site on the CD73 N-terminal domain. Structural modeling demonstrates a TB19/TB38 biparatopic antibody would be unable to bind the CD73 dimer in a bivalent manner, implicating crosslinking of separate CD73 dimers in its mechanism of action. This ability of a biparatopic antibody to both crosslink CD73 dimers and fix them in an inactive conformation thus represents a highly effective mechanism for the inhibition of CD73 activity.Entities:
Keywords: CD73; aggregation; antibody engineering; enzyme mechanism; enzyme structure; protein complex; protein crosslinking; structure-function
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33122192 PMCID: PMC7939394 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA120.012395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157