Back to Search Start Over

Conjugation of a peptide to an antibody engineered with free cysteines dramatically improves half-life and activity

Authors :
Jian Shen Qi
Thai Dinh
Timothy Tat
James Littrell
Ronald V. Swanson
Raul C. Camacho
Mary MacDonald
Ellen Chi
Lijuan Kang
Derek Steiner
Katharine D'Aquino
Jiali Li
Wenying Jian
Yue-Mei Zhang
James N. Leonard
Li Ying Wang
Yuanping Wang
Suzanne Edavettal
Michael J. Hunter
Wenyu Li
Case Martin A
Joseph Gunnet
Raymond J. Patch
Seohee You
Judy Connor
Wilson Edwards
Zhang Rui
James C. Lanter
Source :
mAbs, article-version (VoR) Version of Record
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2020.

Abstract

The long circulating half-life and inherently bivalent architecture of IgGs provide an ideal vehicle for presenting otherwise short-lived G-protein-coupled receptor agonists in a format that enables avidity-driven enhancement of potency. Here, we describe the site-specific conjugation of a dual agonist peptide (an oxyntomodulin variant engineered for potency and in vivo stability) to the complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) of an immunologically silent IgG4. A cysteine-containing heavy chain CDR3 variant was identified that provided clean conjugation to a bromoacetylated peptide without interference from any of the endogenous mAb cysteine residues. The resulting mAb-peptide homodimer has high potency at both target receptors (glucagon receptor, GCGR, and glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor, GLP-1R) driven by an increase in receptor avidity provided by the spatially defined presentation of the peptides. Interestingly, the avidity effects are different at the two target receptors. A single dose of the long-acting peptide conjugate robustly inhibited food intake and decreased body weight in insulin resistant diet-induced obese mice, in addition to ameliorating glucose intolerance. Inhibition of food intake and decrease in body weight was also seen in overweight cynomolgus monkeys. The weight loss resulting from dosing with the bivalently conjugated dual agonist was significantly greater than for the monomeric analog, clearly demonstrating translation of the measured in vitro avidity to in vivo pharmacology.

Details

ISSN :
19420870 and 19420862
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
mAbs
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e2c0ad01619c709ccaefd8edf1de67f3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/19420862.2020.1794687