4.6 Article

Functional Analysis of the Anti-adalimumab Response Using Patient-derived Monoclonal Antibodies

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 50, Pages 34482-34488

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.615500

Keywords

Antibody Engineering; Autoimmune Disease; Biotechnology; Humoral Response; Monoclonal Antibody; Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF); Adalimumab; Immunogenicity

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Background: Therapeutic antibodies such as adalimumab can elicit anti-drug antibodies. Results: Monoclonal patient-derived antibodies were generated and found to compete for binding to adalimumab and are neutralizing, but they show markedly different fine-specificity. Conclusion: Anti-adalimumab antibodies bind to overlapping but distinct epitopes on adalimumab. Significance: Even for a fully human therapeutic antibody, there may be multiple determinants that contribute to immunogenicity. The production of antibodies to adalimumab in autoimmune patients treated with adalimumab is shown to diminish treatment efficacy. We previously showed that these antibodies are almost exclusively neutralizing, indicating a restricted response. Here, we investigated the characteristics of a panel of patient-derived monoclonal antibodies for binding to adalimumab. Single B-cells were isolated from two patients, cultured, and screened for adalimumab specificity. Analysis of variable region sequences of 16 clones suggests that the immune response against adalimumab is broad, involving multiple B-cell clones each using different combinations of V(D)J segments. A strong bias for replacement mutations in the complementarity determining regions was found, indicating an antigen-driven response. We recombinantly expressed 11 different monoclonal antibodies and investigated their affinity and specificity. All clones except one are of high affinity (K-d between 0.6 and 233 pm) and compete with TNF as well as each other for binding to adalimumab. However, binding to a panel of single-point mutants of adalimumab indicates markedly different fine specificities that also result in a differential tendency of each clone to form dimeric and multimeric immune complexes. We conclude that although all anti-adalimumab antibodies compete for binding to TNF, the response is clonally diverse and involves multiple epitopes on adalimumab. These results are important for understanding the relationship between self and non-self or idiotypic determinants on therapeutic antibodies and their potential immunogenicity.

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