Lin WY, Gong Q, Seshasayee D, Lin Z, Ou Q, Ye S, Suto E, Shu J, Lee WP, Lee CWV, Fuh G, Leabman M, Iyer S, Howell K, Gelzleichter T, Beyer J, Danilenko D, Yeh S, DeForge LE, Ebens A, Thompson JS, Ambrose C, Balazs M, Starovasnik MA, Martin F. Anti-BR3 antibodies: a new class of B-cell immunotherapy combining cellular depletion and survival blockade.
Blood 2007;
110:3959-67. [PMID:
17687108 DOI:
10.1182/blood-2007-04-088088]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 50] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/21/2022] Open
Abstract
Removal of pathogenic B lymphocytes by depletion of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) or deprivation of B-cell survival factors has demonstrated clinical benefit in both oncologic and immunologic diseases. Partial clinical responses and emerging data demonstrating incomplete B-cell depletion after immunotherapy fuels the need for improved therapeutic modalities. Lessons from the first generation of therapeutics directed against B-cell-specific antigens (CD20, CD22) are being applied to develop novel antibodies with additional functional attributes. We describe the generation of a novel class of B-cell-directed therapy (anti-BR3 mAbs) that combines the depleting capacity of a therapeutic mAb and blockade of B-cell-activating factor (BAFF)-BR3 B-cell survival. In mice, treatment with antagonistic anti-BR3 antibodies results in quantitatively greater reduction in some B-cell subsets and qualitatively different effects on bone marrow plasma cells compared with BR3-Fc BAFF blockade or with anti-CD20 treatment. Comparative analysis of BR3-Fc and anti-BR3 mAb reveals a lower B-cell dependence for BAFF-mediated survival in nonhuman primates than in mice. This novel class of B-cell-targeted therapies shows species characteristics in mice and primates that will guide translation to treatment of human disease.
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