Bispecific humanized anti-IL-2 receptor alpha beta antibodies inhibitory for both IL-2- and IL-15-mediated proliferation.

  • Pilson R
  • Levin W
  • Desai B
  • et al.
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Abstract

Humanized anti-Tac (HAT) and Mik beta1 (HuMik beta 1) Abs directed at IL-2R alpha and IL-2R beta, respectively, inhibit IL-2 binding and biological activity and together act synergistically in vitro. The Abs have been used successfully in primate models of allograft rejection, graft-vs-host disease, and autoimmunity. We produced bifunctional humanized anti-IL-2R alpha beta Abs (BF-IgG) to combine the specificity of the two Abs into one entity by fusing HAT-producing NSO cells and HuMik beta 1-producing Sp2/0 cells. BF-IgG was purified using protein G-Sepharose affinity chromatography, followed by IL-2R alpha and IL-2R beta affinity chromatography and hydrophobic interaction chromatography. BF-IgG exhibited both anti-IL-2R alpha and anti-IL-2R beta specificities in binding assays. While the Ab binds the IL-2R with intermediate affinity (Kd = 2.82 nM), it does not inhibit IL-15 binding to its high affinity IL-15R. In Kit225/K6 (IL-2R alpha beta gamma+) cells, BF-IgG was 10-fold more potent than a HAT/HuMik beta 1 equimolar mixture in blocking IL-2-induced proliferation and, unexpectedly, was at least 65-fold more active than the mixture in blocking IL-15-induced proliferation. This dual inhibitory activity may be due to cross-linking of the IL-2R alpha and IL-2R beta, thus blocking IL-2 binding and possibly impeding the association of IL-2R beta with IL-15R. BF-IgG has potent immunosuppressant activities against both IL-2- and IL-15-mediated responses, and this antagonist could be more efficacious than HAT and/or HuMik beta 1 for the treatment of autoimmunity and the prevention of allograft rejection.

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APA

Pilson, R. S., Levin, W., Desai, B., Reik, L. M., Lin, P., Korkmaz-Duffy, E., … Hakimi, J. (1997). Bispecific humanized anti-IL-2 receptor alpha beta antibodies inhibitory for both IL-2- and IL-15-mediated proliferation. The Journal of Immunology, 159(3), 1543–1556. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.159.3.1543

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