Denosumab, a Fully Human Monoclonal Antibody to RANKL, Inhibits Bone Resorption and Increases BMD in Knock-In Mice That Express Chimeric (Murine/Human) RANKL

Paul J. Kostenuik(Amgen (United States)), Hung Q. Nguyen(Amgen (United States)), James McCabe(Amgen (United States)), Kelly Warmington(Amgen (United States)), C. Kurahara(Amgen (United States)), Ning Sun(Amgen (United States)), Ching Chen(Amgen (United States)), Luke Li(Amgen (United States)), Russ Cattley(Amgen (United States)), Gwyneth Van(Amgen (United States)), Shelia Scully(Amgen (United States)), Robin Elliott(Amgen (United States)), Mario Grisanti(Amgen (United States)), Sean Morony(Amgen (United States)), Hong Tan(Amgen (United States)), Frank Asuncion(Amgen (United States)), Xiaodong Li(Amgen (United States)), Michael S. Ominsky(Amgen (United States)), Marina Stolina(Amgen (United States)), Denise Dwyer(Amgen (United States)), William C. Dougall(Amgen (United States)), Nessa Hawkins(Amgen (United States)), William J. Boyle(Amgen (United States)), W. Scott Simonet(Amgen (United States)), John K. Sullivan(Amgen (United States))
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research
November 18, 2008
Cited by 435

Abstract

RANKL is a TNF family member that mediates osteoclast formation, activation, and survival by activating RANK. The proresorptive effects of RANKL are prevented by binding to its soluble inhibitor osteoprotegerin (OPG). Recombinant human OPG-Fc recognizes RANKL from multiple species and reduced bone resorption and increased bone volume, density, and strength in a number of rodent models of bone disease. The clinical development of OPG-Fc was discontinued in favor of denosumab, a fully human monoclonal antibody that specifically inhibits primate RANKL. Direct binding assays showed that denosumab bound to human RANKL but not to murine RANKL, human TRAIL, or other human TNF family members. Denosumab did not suppress bone resorption in normal mice or rats but did prevent the resorptive response in mice challenged with a human RANKL fragment encoded primarily by the fifth exon of the RANKL gene. To create mice that were responsive to denosumab, knock-in technology was used to replace exon 5 from murine RANKL with its human ortholog. The resulting "huRANKL" mice exclusively express chimeric (human/murine) RANKL that was measurable with a human RANKL assay and that maintained bone resorption at slightly reduced levels versus wildtype controls. In young huRANKL mice, denosumab and OPG-Fc each reduced trabecular osteoclast surfaces by 95% and increased bone density and volume. In adult huRANKL mice, denosumab reduced bone resorption, increased cortical and cancellous bone mass, and improved trabecular microarchitecture. These huRANKL mice have potential utility for characterizing the activity of denosumab in a variety of murine bone disease models.


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