[HTML][HTML] Fully human antagonistic antibodies against CCR4 potently inhibit cell signaling and chemotaxis

UB Hagemann, L Gunnarsson, S Géraudie… - PLoS …, 2014 - journals.plos.org
UB Hagemann, L Gunnarsson, S Géraudie, U Scheffler, RA Griep, H Reiersen, AR Duncan…
PLoS One, 2014journals.plos.org
Background CC chemokine receptor 4 (CCR4) represents a potentially important target for
cancer immunotherapy due to its expression on tumor infiltrating immune cells including
regulatory T cells (Tregs) and on tumor cells in several cancer types and its role in
metastasis. Methodology Using phage display, human antibody library, affinity maturation
and a cell-based antibody selection strategy, the antibody variants against human CCR4
were generated. These antibodies effectively competed with ligand binding, were able to …
Background
CC chemokine receptor 4 (CCR4) represents a potentially important target for cancer immunotherapy due to its expression on tumor infiltrating immune cells including regulatory T cells (Tregs) and on tumor cells in several cancer types and its role in metastasis.
Methodology
Using phage display, human antibody library, affinity maturation and a cell-based antibody selection strategy, the antibody variants against human CCR4 were generated. These antibodies effectively competed with ligand binding, were able to block ligand-induced signaling and cell migration, and demonstrated efficient killing of CCR4-positive tumor cells via ADCC and phagocytosis. In a mouse model of human T-cell lymphoma, significant survival benefit was demonstrated for animals treated with the newly selected anti-CCR4 antibodies.
Significance
For the first time, successful generation of anti- G-protein coupled chemokine receptor (GPCR) antibodies using human non-immune library and phage display on GPCR-expressing cells was demonstrated. The generated anti-CCR4 antibodies possess a dual mode of action (inhibition of ligand-induced signaling and antibody-directed tumor cell killing). The data demonstrate that the anti-tumor activity in vivo is mediated, at least in part, through Fc-receptor dependent effector mechanisms, such as ADCC and phagocytosis. Anti-CC chemokine receptor 4 antibodies inhibiting receptor signaling have potential as immunomodulatory antibodies for cancer.
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