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Journal ArticleDOI

Bispecific antibodies and trispecific immunocytokines for targeting the immune system against cancer: preparing for the future.

Philippe Fournier, +1 more
- 01 Feb 2013 - 
- Vol. 27, Iss: 1, pp 35-53
TLDR
The present review discusses the pros and cons for the use of the Fc fragment during the development of bsAbs using either cell-fusion or recombinant DNA technologies, and creates very promising perspectives for a new generation of efficient and safe cancer therapeutics that should confer long-lasting anti-tumor immunity.
Abstract
Monoclonal anti-tumor antibodies (mAbs) that are clinically effective usually recruit, via their constant fragment (Fc) domain, Fc receptor (FcR)-positive accessory cells of the immune system and engage these additionally against the tumor. Since T cells are FcR negative, these important cells are not getting involved. In contrast to mAbs, bispecific antibodies (bsAbs) can be designed in such a way that they involve T cells. bsAbs are artificially designed molecules that bind simultaneously to two different antigens, one on the tumor cell, the other one on an immune effector cell such as CD3 on T cells. Such dual antibody constructs can cross-link tumor cells and T cells. Many such bsAb molecules at the surface of tumor cells can thus build a bridge to T cells and aggregate their CD3 molecules, thereby activating them for cytotoxic activity. BsAbs can also contain a third binding site, for instance a Fc domain or a cytokine that would bind to its respective cytokine receptor. The present review discusses the pros and cons for the use of the Fc fragment during the development of bsAbs using either cell-fusion or recombinant DNA technologies. The recombinant antibody technology allows the generation of very efficient bsAbs containing no Fc domain such as the bi-specific T-cell engager (BiTE). The strong antitumor activity of these molecules makes them very interesting new cancer therapeutics. Over the last decade, we have developed another concept, namely to combine bsAbs and multivalent immunocytokines with a tumor cell vaccine. The latter are patient-derived tumor cells modified by infection with a virus. The virus—Newcastle Disease Virus (NDV)—introduces, at the surface of the tumor cells, viral molecules that can serve as general anchors for the bsAbs. Our strategy aims at redirecting, in an Fc-independent fashion, activities of T cells and accessory cells against autologous tumor antigens. It creates very promising perspectives for a new generation of efficient and safe cancer therapeutics that should confer long-lasting anti-tumor immunity.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

From chemotherapy to biological therapy: A review of novel concepts to reduce the side effects of systemic cancer treatment (Review)

TL;DR: The present review focused on immunotherapy, with the aim of reducing side effects and increasing long-lasting efficacy in cancer therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Expression of recombinant Antibodies

TL;DR: This review focuses on current antibody production systems including their usability for different applications, and recent developments of glycosylation-engineered yeast, insect cell lines, and transgenic plants are promising to obtain antibodies with “human-like” post-translational modifications.
Journal ArticleDOI

New targets for mucosal healing and therapy in inflammatory bowel diseases.

TL;DR: New approaches for achieving mucosal healing and blockade of T-cell homing via the integrins α4β7 and the addressin mucosal vascular addressin cell adhesion molecule 1 (MAdCAM-1) emerges as a promising new approach for IBD therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

EpCAM is overexpressed in local and metastatic prostate cancer, suppressed by chemotherapy and modulated by MET-associated miRNA-200c/205

TL;DR: It is confirmed that EpCAM overexpression is an early event during prostate cancer progression and associates with epithelial cells rather than mesenchymal, chemoresistant cells along with processes of EMT and MET.
Journal ArticleDOI

Induction of a long-lasting anti-tumor immunity by a trifunctional bispecific antibody

P. Ruf, +1 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the trifunctional bsAb BiLu is able to kill tumor cells very efficiently without any additional costimulation of effector cells in vitro and in vivo, and induces a long-lasting protective immunity against the targeted syngeneic mouse tumors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Continuous cultures of fused cells secreting antibody of predefined specificity

TL;DR: The derivation of a number of tissue culture cell lines which secrete anti-sheep red blood cell (SRBC) antibodies is described here, made by fusion of a mouse myeloma and mouse spleen cells from an immunised donor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibitory Fc receptors modulate in vivo cytotoxicity against tumor targets.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that Fc-receptor-dependent mechanisms contribute substantially to the action of cytotoxic antibodies against tumors and indicate that an optimal antibody against tumors would bind preferentially to activation Fc receptors and minimally to the inhibitory partner FcγRIIB.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intracellular functions of N-linked glycans.

Ari Helenius, +1 more
- 23 Mar 2001 - 
TL;DR: The division of synthesis and processing between the ER and the Golgi complex represents an evolutionary adaptation that allows efficient exploitation of the potential of oligosaccharides.
Journal ArticleDOI

Depletion of B cells in vivo by a chimeric mouse human monoclonal antibody to CD20

TL;DR: In vitro studies showed the ability of C2B8 to bind human C1q, mediate complement-dependent cell lysis of human B-lymphoid cell lines, and lyse human target cells through antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity and the possibility of using an "immunologically active" chimeric anti-CD20 antibody as an alternative approach in the treatment of B-cell lymphoma.
Journal ArticleDOI

FcRn: the neonatal Fc receptor comes of age

TL;DR: The neonatal Fc receptor for IgG (FcRn) has been well characterized in the transfer of passive humoral immunity from a mother to her fetus and throughout life, FcRm protects IgG from degradation, thereby explaining the long half-life of this class of antibody in the serum.
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