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Abstract

Antibody responses during infection and vaccination typically undergo affinity maturation to achieve high-affinity binding for efficient neutralization of pathogens1,2. Similarly, high affinity is routinely the goal for therapeutic antibody generation. However, in contrast to naturally occurring or direct-targeting therapeutic antibodies, immunomodulatory antibodies, which are designed to modulate receptor signalling, have not been widely examined for their affinity-function relationship. Here we examine three separate immunologically important receptors spanning two receptor superfamilies: CD40, 4-1BB and PD-1. We show that low rather than high affinity delivers greater activity through increased clustering. This approach delivered higher immune cell activation, in vivo T cell expansion and antitumour activity in the case of CD40. Moreover, an inert anti-4-1BB monoclonal antibody was transformed into an agonist. Low-affinity variants ofthe clinically important antagonistic anti-PD-1 monoclonal antibody nivolumab also mediated more potent signalling and affected T cell activation. These findings reveal a new paradigm for augmenting agonism across diverse receptor families and shed light on the mechanism of antibody-mediated receptor signalling. Such affinity engineering offers a rational, efficient and highly tuneable solution to deliver antibody-mediated receptor activity across a range of potencies suitable for translation to the treatment of human disease.

Details

Title
Reducing affinity as a strategy to boost immunomodulatory antibody agonism
Author
Yu, Xiaojie 1 ; Orr, Christian M 2 ; Chan, H T Claude 1 ; James, Sonya 1 ; Penfold, Christine A 1 ; Kim, Jinny; Inzhelevskaya, Tatyana; Mockridge, C Ian; Cox, Kerry L; Essex, Jonathan W; Tews, Ivo; Glennie, Martin J; Cragg, Mark S

 Antibody and Vaccine Group, Centre for Cancer immunology, School of Cancer Sciences, University of Southampton Faculty of Medicine, Southampton, UK 
 Diamond Light Source, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus, Didcot, UK 
Pages
539-4,547A-547T
Section
Article
Publication year
2023
Publication date
Feb 16, 2023
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
00280836
e-ISSN
14764687
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2778066871
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Feb 16, 2023