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Human IgG1 antibodies suppress angiogenesis in a target-independent manner.

Authors :
Bogdanovich S
Kim Y
Mizutani T
Yasuma R
Tudisco L
Cicatiello V
Bastos-Carvalho A
Kerur N
Hirano Y
Baffi JZ
Tarallo V
Li S
Yasuma T
Arpitha P
Fowler BJ
Wright CB
Apicella I
Greco A
Brunetti A
Ruvo M
Sandomenico A
Nozaki M
Ijima R
Kaneko H
Ogura Y
Terasaki H
Ambati BK
Leusen JH
Langdon WY
Clark MR
Armour KL
Bruhns P
Verbeek JS
Gelfand BD
De Falco S
Ambati J
Source :
Signal transduction and targeted therapy [Signal Transduct Target Ther] 2016; Vol. 1. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Jan 28.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Aberrant angiogenesis is implicated in diseases affecting nearly 10% of the world's population. The most widely used anti-angiogenic drug is bevacizumab, a humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody that targets human VEGFA. Although bevacizumab does not recognize mouse Vegfa, it inhibits angiogenesis in mice. Here we show bevacizumab suppressed angiogenesis in three mouse models not via Vegfa blockade but rather Fc-mediated signaling through FcγRI (CD64) and c-Cbl, impairing macrophage migration. Other approved humanized or human IgG1 antibodies without mouse targets (adalimumab, alemtuzumab, ofatumumab, omalizumab, palivizumab and tocilizumab), mouse IgG2a, and overexpression of human IgG1-Fc or mouse IgG2a-Fc, also inhibited angiogenesis in wild-type and FcγR humanized mice. This anti-angiogenic effect was abolished by Fcgr1 ablation or knockdown, Fc cleavage, IgG-Fc inhibition, disruption of Fc-FcγR interaction, or elimination of FcRγ-initated signaling. Furthermore, bevacizumab's Fc region potentiated its anti-angiogenic activity in humanized VEGFA mice. Finally, mice deficient in FcγRI exhibited increased developmental and pathological angiogenesis. These findings reveal an unexpected anti-angiogenic function for FcγRI and a potentially concerning off-target effect of hIgG1 therapies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2095-9907
Volume :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Signal transduction and targeted therapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26918197
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/sigtrans.2015.1