In vitro and in vivo evaluation of cysteine and site specific conjugated herceptin antibody-drug conjugates

Antibody drug conjugates (ADCs) are monoclonal antibodies designed to deliver a cytotoxic drug selectively to antigen expressing cells. Several components of an ADC including the selection of the antibody, the linker, the cytotoxic drug payload and the site of attachment used to attach the drug to t...

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Published inPloS one Vol. 9; no. 1; p. e83865
Main Authors Jackson, Dowdy, Atkinson, John, Guevara, Claudia I, Zhang, Chunying, Kery, Vladimir, Moon, Sung-Ju, Virata, Cyrus, Yang, Peng, Lowe, Christine, Pinkstaff, Jason, Cho, Ho, Knudsen, Nick, Manibusan, Anthony, Tian, Feng, Sun, Ying, Lu, Yingchun, Sellers, Aaron, Jia, Xiao-Chi, Joseph, Ingrid, Anand, Banmeet, Morrison, Kendall, Pereira, Daniel S, Stover, David
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 14.01.2014
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Summary:Antibody drug conjugates (ADCs) are monoclonal antibodies designed to deliver a cytotoxic drug selectively to antigen expressing cells. Several components of an ADC including the selection of the antibody, the linker, the cytotoxic drug payload and the site of attachment used to attach the drug to the antibody are critical to the activity and development of the ADC. The cytotoxic drugs or payloads used to make ADCs are typically conjugated to the antibody through cysteine or lysine residues. This results in ADCs that have a heterogeneous number of drugs per antibody. The number of drugs per antibody commonly referred to as the drug to antibody ratio (DAR), can vary between 0 and 8 drugs for a IgG1 antibody. Antibodies with 0 drugs are ineffective and compete with the ADC for binding to the antigen expressing cells. Antibodies with 8 drugs per antibody have reduced in vivo stability, which may contribute to non target related toxicities. In these studies we incorporated a non-natural amino acid, para acetyl phenylalanine, at two unique sites within an antibody against Her2/neu. We covalently attached a cytotoxic drug to these sites to form an ADC which contains two drugs per antibody. We report the results from the first direct preclinical comparison of a site specific non-natural amino acid anti-Her2 ADC and a cysteine conjugated anti-Her2 ADC. We report that the site specific non-natural amino acid anti-Her2 ADCs have superior in vitro serum stability and preclinical toxicology profile in rats as compared to the cysteine conjugated anti-Her2 ADCs. We also demonstrate that the site specific non-natural amino acid anti-Her2 ADCs maintain their in vitro potency and in vivo efficacy against Her2 expressing human tumor cell lines. Our data suggests that site specific non-natural amino acid ADCs may have a superior therapeutic window than cysteine conjugated ADCs.
Bibliography:Conceived and designed the experiments: JA XCJ IJ. Performed the experiments: CIG CZ SJM CV CL. Analyzed the data: VK PY BA. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: JP HC NK AM FT YS YL AS. Wrote the paper: DJ. Provided scientific guidance, critiques and allocated adequate resources to complete the studies: KM DSP DS.
Competing Interests: The authors have read the journal's policy and have the following conflicts to declare: DJ JA CIG CZ VK SM CV PY CL XJ IJ BA KM DSP DS are Agensys employees. JP HC NK AK are Ambrx employees. DJ JA CIG CZ VK SM CV PY CL XJ IJ BA KM DSP DS are potential stock holders in Astellas Pharma. JP HC NK AK are potential stock holders in Ambrx, Inc.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0083865