Inhibition of complement pathway activation with Pozelimab, a fully human antibody to complement component C5

Adrianna Latuszek(Regeneron (United States)), Yashu Liu(Regeneron (United States)), Olav Olsen(Regeneron (United States)), Randi Foster(Regeneron (United States)), Marc Cao(Regeneron (United States)), Irena Lovric(Regeneron (United States)), Ming Yuan(Regeneron (United States)), Nina Liu(Regeneron (United States)), Henry Chen(Regeneron (United States)), Qian Zhang(Regeneron (United States)), Hui Xiao(Regeneron (United States)), Carola Springer(Regeneron (United States)), George K. Ehrlich(Regeneron (United States)), Vishal Kamat(Regeneron (United States)), Ashique Rafique(Regeneron (United States)), Ying Hu(Regeneron (United States)), Pamela Krueger(Regeneron (United States)), Tammy Huang(Regeneron (United States)), William Poueymirou(Regeneron (United States)), Robert Babb(Regeneron (United States)), Michael Rosconi(Regeneron (United States)), Marc W. Retter(Regeneron (United States)), Gang Chen(Regeneron (United States)), Lori Morton(Regeneron (United States)), Brian Zambrowicz(Regeneron (United States)), Jingtai Cao(Regeneron (United States)), Carmelo Romano(Regeneron (United States)), William C. Olson(Regeneron (United States))
PLoS ONE
May 8, 2020
Cited by 45Open Access
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Abstract

Complement is a key component of the innate immune system. Inappropriate complement activation underlies the pathophysiology of a variety of diseases. Complement component 5 (C5) is a validated therapeutic target for complement-mediated diseases, but the development of new therapeutics has been limited by a paucity of preclinical models to evaluate the pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) properties of candidate therapies. The present report describes a novel humanized C5 mouse and its utility in evaluating a panel of fully human anti-C5 antibodies. Surprisingly, humanized C5 mice revealed marked differences in clearance rates amongst a panel of anti-C5 antibodies. One antibody, pozelimab (REGN3918), bound C5 and C5 variants with high affinity and potently blocked complement-mediated hemolysis in vitro. In studies conducted in both humanized C5 mice and cynomolgus monkeys, pozelimab demonstrated prolonged PK and durable suppression of hemolytic activity ex vivo. In humanized C5 mice, a switch in dosing from in-house eculizumab to pozelimab was associated with normalization of serum C5 concentrations, sustained suppression of hemolytic activity ex vivo, and no overt toxicity. Our findings demonstrate the value of humanized C5 mice in identifying new therapeutic candidates and treatment options for complement-mediated diseases.


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