Chemical generation of bispecific antibodies

Venkata Ramana Doppalapudi(Pfizer (United States)), Jie Huang(Pfizer (United States)), Dingguo Liu(Pfizer (United States)), Ping Jin(Pfizer (United States)), Bin Liu(Pfizer (United States)), Lingna Li(Pfizer (United States)), Joel Desharnais(Pfizer (United States)), Cheyenne van Hagen(Pfizer (United States)), Nancy J. Levin(Pfizer (United States)), Michael J. Shields(Pfizer (United States)), Michelle Burke Parish(Pfizer (United States)), Robert Murphy(Pfizer (United States)), Joselyn Del Rosario(Pfizer (United States)), Bryan Oates(Pfizer (United States)), Jing-Yu Lai(Pfizer (United States)), Marla J. Matin(Pfizer (United States)), Zemeda Ainekulu(Pfizer (United States)), Abhijit Bhat(Pfizer (United States)), Curt W. Bradshaw(Pfizer (United States)), Gary Woodnutt(Pfizer (United States)), Richard A. Lerner(Scripps Research Institute), Rodney W. Lappe(Pfizer (United States))
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
December 13, 2010
Cited by 125Open Access
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Abstract

Bispecific antibodies (BsAbs) are regarded as promising therapeutic agents due to their ability to simultaneously bind two different antigens. Several bispecific modalities have been developed, but their utility is limited due to problems with stability and manufacturing complexity. Here we report a versatile technology, based on a scaffold antibody and pharmacophore peptide heterodimers, that enables rapid generation and chemical optimization of bispecific antibodies, which are termed bispecific CovX-Bodies. Two different peptides are joined together using a branched azetidinone linker and fused to the scaffold antibody under mild conditions in a site-specific manner. Whereas the pharmacophores are responsible for functional activities, the antibody scaffold imparts long half-life and Ig-like distribution. The pharmacophores can be chemically optimized or replaced with other pharmacophores to generate optimized or unique bispecific antibodies. As a prototype, we developed a bispecific antibody that binds both vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and angiopoietin-2 (Ang2) simultaneously, inhibits their function, shows efficacy in tumor xenograft studies, and greatly augments the antitumor effects of standard chemotherapy. This unique antiangiogenic bispecific antibody is in phase-1 clinical trials.


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