Abstract

Administration of therapeutic antibodies can elicit adverse immune responses in patients through the generation of anti-drug antibodies that, in turn, reduce the efficacy of the therapeutic. Removal of foreign amino acid content by humanization can lower the immunogenic risk of the therapeutic mAb. We previously developed the ultra-humanization technology “Augmented Binary Substitution” (ABS) which enables single-step CDR germlining of antibodies. The application of ABS to a chicken anti-pTau antibody generated an ultra-humanized variant, anti-pTau C21-ABS, with increased human amino acid content in the CDRs and reduced in-silico predicted immunogenicity risk. Here, we report the high-resolution crystal structure of anti-pTau C21-ABS Fab in complex with the pTau peptide (7KQK). This study examines how ultra-humanization, via CDR germlining, is facilitated while maintaining near-identical antigen affinity (within 1.6-fold). The co-complex structure reveals that the ABS molecule targets the same antigenic epitope, accommodated by structurally-similar changes in the paratope. These findings confirm that ABS enables the germlining of amino acids within CDRs by exploiting CDR plasticity, to reduce non-human amino acid CDR content, with few alterations to the overall mechanism of binding.

Details

Title
Crystal structure of ultra-humanized anti-pTau Fab reveals how germline substitutions humanize CDRs without loss of binding’
Author
Brinth, Alette R 1 ; Svenson, Kristine 2 ; Mosyak Lidia 2 ; Cunningham, Orla 3 ; Hickling, Timothy 4 ; Lambert, Matthew 1 

 Pfizer Worldwide R&D, BioMedicine Design, Dublin, Ireland 
 Pfizer Worldwide R&D, BioMedicine Design, Cambridge, USA 
 Ultrahuman Ltd. Kreston Reeves LLP Innovation Hs, Sandwich, UK 
 Pfizer Worldwide R&D, BioMedicine Design, Andover, USA 
Publication year
2022
Publication date
2022
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
e-ISSN
20452322
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2668568626
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2022. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.