Abstract
The immunogenicity of therapeutic Abs limits their long-term use. The processes of complementarity-determining region grafting, resurfacing, and hyperchimerization diminish mAb immunogenicity by reducing the number of foreign residues. However, this does not prevent anti-idiotypic and anti-allotypic responses following repeated administration of cell-binding Abs. Classical studies have demonstrated that monomeric human IgG is profoundly tolerogenic in a number of species. If cell-binding Abs could be converted into monomeric non-cell-binding tolerogens, then it should be possible to pretolerize patients to the therapeutic cell-binding form. We demonstrate that non-cell-binding minimal mutants of the anti-CD52 Ab CAMPATH-1H lose immunogenicity and can tolerize to the “wild-type” Ab in CD52-expressing transgenic mice. This finding could have utility in the long-term administration of therapeutic proteins to humans.
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CITATION STYLE
Gilliland, L. K., Walsh, L. A., Frewin, M. R., Wise, M. P., Tone, M., Hale, G., … Waldmann, H. (1999). Elimination of the Immunogenicity of Therapeutic Antibodies. The Journal of Immunology, 162(6), 3663–3671. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.162.6.3663
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