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CDR-restricted engineering of native human scFvs creates highly stable and soluble bifunctional antibodies for subcutaneous delivery.
Fennell, Brian J; McDonnell, Barry; Tam, Amy Sze Pui; Chang, Lijun; Steven, John; Broadbent, Ian D; Gao, Huilan; Kieras, Elizabeth; Alley, Jennifer; Luxenberg, Deborah; Edmonds, Jason; Fitz, Lori J; Miao, Wenyan; Whitters, Matthew J; Medley, Quintus G; Guo, Yongjing J; Darmanin-Sheehan, Alfredo; Autin, Bénédicte; Shúilleabháin, Deirdre Ní; Cummins, Emma; King, Amy; Krebs, Mark R H; Grace, Christopher; Hickling, Timothy P; Boisvert, Angela; Zhong, Xiaotian; McKenna, Matthew; Francis, Christopher; Olland, Stephane; Bloom, Laird; Paulsen, Janet; Somers, Will; Jensen, Allan; Lin, Laura; Finlay, William J J; Cunningham, Orla.
Affiliation
  • Fennell BJ; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Dublin, Ireland.
  • McDonnell B; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Dublin, Ireland.
  • Tam AS; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Chang L; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies, Foresterhill; Aberdeen, UK.
  • Steven J; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies, Foresterhill; Aberdeen, UK.
  • Broadbent ID; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies, Foresterhill; Aberdeen, UK.
  • Gao H; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Kieras E; Pfizer; Immunoscience; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Alley J; Pfizer; Immunoscience; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Luxenberg D; Pfizer; Immunoscience; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Edmonds J; Pfizer; Immunoscience; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Fitz LJ; Pfizer; Immunoscience; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Miao W; Pfizer; Immunoscience; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Whitters MJ; Pfizer; Immunoscience; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Medley QG; Pfizer; Immunoscience; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Guo YJ; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Darmanin-Sheehan A; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Dublin, Ireland.
  • Autin B; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Dublin, Ireland.
  • Shúilleabháin DN; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Dublin, Ireland.
  • Cummins E; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Dublin, Ireland.
  • King A; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Krebs MR; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Grace C; Pfizer; Pharmacokinetics, Dynamics, and Metabolism; Sandwich, UK.
  • Hickling TP; Pfizer; Pharmacokinetics, Dynamics, and Metabolism; Sandwich, UK.
  • Boisvert A; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Zhong X; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • McKenna M; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Francis C; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Olland S; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Bloom L; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Paulsen J; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Somers W; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Jensen A; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Lin L; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Cambridge, MA USA.
  • Finlay WJ; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Dublin, Ireland.
  • Cunningham O; Pfizer; Global Biotherapeutics Technologies; Dublin, Ireland.
MAbs ; 5(6): 882-95, 2013.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23995618
ABSTRACT
While myriad molecular formats for bispecific antibodies have been examined to date, the simplest structures are often based on the scFv. Issues with stability and manufacturability in scFv-based bispecific molecules, however, have been a significant hindrance to their development, particularly for high-concentration, stable formulations that allow subcutaneous delivery. Our aim was to generate a tetravalent bispecific molecule targeting two inflammatory mediators for synergistic immune modulation. We focused on an scFv-Fc-scFv format, with a flexible (A4T)3 linker coupling an additional scFv to the C-terminus of an scFv-Fc. While one of the lead scFvs isolated directly from a naïve library was well-behaved and sufficiently potent, the parental anti-CXCL13 scFv 3B4 required optimization for affinity, stability, and cynomolgus ortholog cross-reactivity. To achieve this, we eschewed framework-based stabilizing mutations in favor of complementarity-determining region (CDR) mutagenesis and re-selection for simultaneous improvements in both affinity and thermal stability. Phage-displayed 3B4 CDR-mutant libraries were used in an aggressive "hammer-hug" selection strategy that incorporated thermal challenge, functional, and biophysical screening. This approach identified leads with improved stability and>18-fold, and 4,100-fold higher affinity for both human and cynomolgus CXCL13, respectively. Improvements were exclusively mediated through only 4 mutations in VL-CDR3. Lead scFvs were reformatted into scFv-Fc-scFvs and their biophysical properties ranked. Our final candidate could be formulated in a standard biopharmaceutical platform buffer at 100 mg/ml with<2% high molecular weight species present after 7 weeks at 4 °C and viscosity<15 cP. This workflow has facilitated the identification of a truly manufacturable scFv-based bispecific therapeutic suitable for subcutaneous administration.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Protein Engineering / Antibodies, Bispecific / Complementarity Determining Regions / Single-Chain Antibodies Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Animals / Female / Humans Language: En Journal: MAbs Year: 2013 Document type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Protein Engineering / Antibodies, Bispecific / Complementarity Determining Regions / Single-Chain Antibodies Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Animals / Female / Humans Language: En Journal: MAbs Year: 2013 Document type: Article