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Enhanced potency of a fucose-free monoclonal antibody being developed as an Ebola virus immunoprotectant

Authors :
Larry Zeitlin
Herta Steinkellner
Natasha Bohorova
Do Jin Kim
Michael H. Pauly
Corinne Scully
Andrew Hiatt
Long Ngo
Kevin J. Whaley
Gene G. Olinger
James Pettitt
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 108(51)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

No countermeasures currently exist for the prevention or treatment of the severe sequelae of Filovirus (such as Ebola virus; EBOV) infection. To overcome this limitation in our biodefense preparedness, we have designed monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) which could be used in humans as immunoprotectants for EBOV, starting with a murine mAb (13F6) that recognizes the heavily glycosylated mucin-like domain of the virion-attached glycoprotein (GP). Point mutations were introduced into the variable region of the murine mAb to remove predicted human T-cell epitopes, and the variable regions joined to human constant regions to generate a mAb (h-13F6) appropriate for development for human use. We have evaluated the efficacy of three variants of h-13F6 carrying different glycosylation patterns in a lethal mouse EBOV challenge model. The pattern of glycosylation of the various mAbs was found to correlate to level of protection, with aglycosylated h-13F6 providing the least potent efficacy (ED 50 = 33 μg). A version with typical heterogenous mammalian glycoforms (ED 50 = 11 μg) had similar potency to the original murine mAb. However, h-13F6 carrying complex N -glycosylation lacking core fucose exhibited superior potency (ED 50 = 3 μg). Binding studies using Fcγ receptors revealed enhanced binding of nonfucosylated h-13F6 to mouse and human FcγRIII. Together the results indicate the presence of Fc N -glycans enhances the protective efficacy of h-13F6, and that mAbs manufactured with uniform glycosylation and a higher potency glycoform offer promise as biodefense therapeutics.

Details

ISSN :
10916490
Volume :
108
Issue :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1c52a32f22c956fcaef3df95b44a4836