| Literature DB >> 33282736 |
Moritz Bewarder1,2, Maximilian Kiefer1, Clara Moelle1, Lisa Goerens1, Stephan Stilgenbauer1,2, Konstantinos Christofyllakis1, Dominic Kaddu-Mulindwa2, Natalie Fadle1, Evi Regitz1, Frank Neumann1, Markus Hoth3, Klaus-Dieter Preuss1, Michael Pfreundschuh1,2, Lorenz Thurner1,2.
Abstract
Recently, neurabin-I and SAMD14 have been described as the autoantigenic target of approximately 66% of B-cell receptors (BCRs) of primary central nervous system lymphomas (PCNSL). Neurabin-I and SAMD14 share a highly homologous SAM domain that becomes immunogenic after atypical hyper-N-glycosylation (SAMD14 at ASN339 and neurabin-I at ASN1277). This post-translational modification of neurabin-I and SAMD14 seems to lead to a chronic immune reaction with B-cell receptor activation contributing to lymphoma genesis of PCNSLs. The selective tropism of PCNSL to the CNS corresponds well to the neurabin-I and SAMD14 protein expression pattern. When conjugated to Pseudomonas Exotoxin A (ETA´), the PCNSL reactive epitope exerts cytotoxic effects on lymphoma cells expressing a SAMD14/neurabin-I reactive BCR. Thus, the reactive epitopes of SAMD14/neurabin-I might be useful to establish additional therapeutic strategies against PCNSL. To test this possibility, we integrated the PCNSL-reactive epitope of SAMD14/neurabin-I into a heavy-chain-only Fab antibody format in substitution of the variable region. Specific binding of the prokaryotically produced SAMD14/neurabin-I Fab-antibody to lymphoma cells and their internalization were determined by flow cytometry. Since no established EBV-negative PCNSL cell line exists, we used the ABC-DLBCL cell lines OCI-Ly3 and U2932, which were transfected to express a SAMD14/neurabin-I reactive BCR. The SAMD14/neurabin-I Fab antibody bound specifically to DLBCL cells expressing a BCR with reactivity to SAMD14/neurabin-I and not to unmanipulated DLBCL cell lines. Eukaryotically produced full-length IgG antibodies are well established as immunotherapy format. Therefore, the PCNSL-reactive epitope of SAMD14/neurabin-I was cloned into a full-length IgG1 format replacing the variable domains of the light and heavy chains. The IgG1-format SAMD14/neurabin-I construct was found to specifically bind to target lymphoma cells expressing a SAMD14/neurabin-I reactive B cell receptor. In addition, it induced dose-dependent relative cytotoxicity against these lymphoma cells when incubated with PBMCs. Control DLBCL cells are not affected at any tested concentration. When integrated into the Fab-format and IgG1-format, the PCNSL-reactive epitope of SAMD14/neurabin-I functions as B-cell receptor Antigen for Reverse targeting (BAR). In particular, the IgG1-format BAR-body approach represents a very attractive therapeutic format for the treatment of PCNSLs, considering its specificity against SAMD14/neurabin-I reactive BCRs and the well-known pharmacodynamic properties of IgG antibodies.Entities:
Keywords: B-cell receptor antigens; BAR-body; auto-antigens; neurabin-I/SAMD14; primary central nervous system lymphoma
Year: 2020 PMID: 33282736 PMCID: PMC7689012 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2020.580364
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Primers used for heavy-chain-only Fab-format neurabin-I BAR-bodies.
| Heavy-chain-only Fab-format BAR-Body | Name | Sequence (5′-3′) |
|---|---|---|
| A | NRBI AA1204-NcoI-sense | CCA TGG CCA ATT TTA CCT TCA ATG AT |
| NRBI AA1324-BstEII-antisense | GGT GAC CAT TTC CTT GAG TTT CTT | |
| B | NRBI AA1168-NcoI-sense | CCA TGG CCA ACA CAT GGA TTA CAA AA |
| NRBI AA1285-BstEII-antisense | GGT GAC CCC GAA TTC AGA TAC ATA CTG | |
| C | NRBI AA1131-NcoI-sense | CCA TGG CCA ATG ACA GCC GGA AAG GA |
| NRBI AA1251-BstEII-antisense | GGT GAC CCC AGA CTG TCC ATC ATC AAG |
Primers used for the IgG1-format neurabin-I BAR-body.
| IgG1-format BAR-Body | Name | Sequence (5′-3′) |
|---|---|---|
| Heavy chain | NRBI AA1168-MunI-sense | CAA TTG AAC ACA TGG ATT ACA AAA |
| NRBI AA1285-BstEII-antisense | GGT GAC CCC GAA TTC AGA TAC ATA CTG | |
| Light chain | NRBI AA1168-AgeI-sense | ACC GGT AAC ACA TGG ATT ACA AAA |
| NRBI AA-1285-SmaI-antisense | CCC GGG GAA TTC AGA TAC ATA CTG |
Figure 1Western blot of heavy-chain-only Fab-format neurabin-I BAR bodies after expression in TG1 E. coli bacteria. Fab-format neurabin-I BAR-bodies versions A, B [three clones each (1–3)] and C (single clone 4) were produced. All Fab-format BAR bodies had the expected molecular weight of approximately 67 kDa corresponding to 628 amino acids (1,884 base pairs).
Figure 2Identification of a Fab-format BAR-body incorporating neurabin-I with binding capacity to DLBCL cells expressing a neurabin-I reactive BCR. Fab-format BAR bodies were generated in three different versions (version A, version B, and version C; see ). (A) All three versions were tested for binding to OCI-ly3 cells that were not transfected with a patient-derived neurabin-I reactive BCR. No unspecific binding was detected. (B) Clone 2 of version B showed binding to OCI-ly3 cells transfected to express a neurabin-I reactive BCR similar to positive controls consisting of the immunotoxin NRB-I/ETA that has previously been shown to specifically bind to neurabin-I reactive BCRs.
Figure 3Heavy-chain-only Fab-format neurabin-I BAR-body induced specific cytotoxicity as measured by LDH release. MAZ/ETA, an irrelevant antigen (BCR target of the leukemic cells of a CLL patient) linked to pseudomonas exotoxin A, was used as control. All experiments were performed in triplicate. (A) Heavy-chain-only Fab-format neurabin-I BAR-body incubation with OCI-ly3 DLBCL cells at different concentrations (1.25–10 µg/ml) results in no LDH release indicating no unspecific Fab-format BAR-body induced cytotoxicity. (B) Heavy-chain-only Fab-format neurabin-I BAR-body at different concentrations (1.25–10 µg/ml) confers cytotoxicity to OCI-ly3 DLBCL cells transfected with neurabin-I reactive BCRs. Maximum LDH release is reached at approximately 10 µg/ml. (C) Fab-format neurabin-I BAR-bodies mediate specific lysis (calculated as described in the material and methods section) in a dose dependent manner, starting with approximately 30% at 1.25 µg/ml and reaching >90% at 10 µg/ml.
Figure 4Detection of the IgG1-format neurabin-I BAR-body in Western Blot analysis using anti-Flag antibodies (A) and in Coomassie Blue staining (B). Both analyses show the estimated molecular weight of the IgG1-format BAR-body of approximately 150 kD comparable to normal IgG antibodies.
Figure 5U2932 cells (A) and U2932 cells transfected with a neurabin-I reactive BCR (B) were stained with 10 µg/ml IgG1-format neurabin-I BAR-body. Mouse anti-Flag antibody followed by APC-conjugated anti-mouse antibody were used for detection. IgG1-format BAR-bodies incorporating LRPAP1, an irrelevant BCR antigen of mantle cell lymphomas, served as controls (left histograms of A, B).
Figure 6IgG1-format neurabin-I BAR-body induced PBMC-mediated specific cytotoxicity as measured by LDH release. IgG1-format BAR-bodies incorporating LRPAP1, an irrelevant BCR antigen of mantle cell lymphomas, were used as controls. All experiments were performed in triplicate. (A) IgG1-format neurabin-I BAR-body at different concentrations (1.25–10 µg/ml) incubated with U2932 DLBCL cells and PBMCs (E:T ratio of 10:1) results in no LDH release indicating no unspecific IgG1-format BAR-body induced cytotoxicity. (B) IgG1-format neurabin-I BAR-body (concentrations 1.25–10 µg/ml) confers dose-dependent and PBMC-mediated cytotoxicity to U2932 DLBCL cells transfected with neurabin-I reactive BCRs at an effector to target ratio of 10:1.(C) IgG1-format neurabin-I BAR-bodies confer specific lysis to U2932 cells transfected to express a neurabin-I reactive BCR (PBMC-mediated ADCC). LDH release is mediated in a dose-dependent manner, starting from 4% at 1.25 µg/ml going up to 58% at 10 µg/ml.