Abstract
Albumin and IgG have remarkably long serum half-lives due to pH-dependent FcRn-mediated cellular recycling that rescues both ligands from intracellular degradation. Furthermore, increase in half-lives of IgG and albumin-based therapeutics has the potential to improve their efficacies, but there is a great need for robust methods for screening of relative FcRn-dependent recycling ability. Here, we report on a novel human endothelial cell-based recycling assay (HERA) that can be used for such pre-clinical screening. In HERA, rescue from degradation depends on FcRn, and engineered ligands are recycled in a manner that correlates with their half-lives in human FcRn transgenic mice. Thus, HERA is a novel cellular assay that can be used to predict how FcRn-binding proteins are rescued from intracellular degradation.
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CITATION STYLE
Grevys, A., Nilsen, J., Sand, K. M. K., Daba, M. B., Øynebråten, I., Bern, M., … Andersen, J. T. (2018). A human endothelial cell-based recycling assay for screening of FcRn targeted molecules. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-03061-x
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