Human antibody domains and fragments targeting neutrophil elastase as candidate therapeutics for cancer and inflammation-related diseases

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Abstract

Neutrophil elastase (NE) is a serine protease released during neutrophil maturation. High levels of NE are related to lung tissue damage and poor prognosis in cancer; thus, NE is a potential target for therapeutic immunotherapy for multiple lung diseases and cancers. Here, we isolate and characterize two high-affinity, specific, and noncompetitive anti-NE antibodies Fab 1C10 and VH 1D1.43 from two large phage-displayed human Fab and VH libraries. After fusion with human IgG1 Fc, both of them (VH-Fc 1D1.43 and IgG1 1C10) inhibit NE enzymatic activity with VH-Fc 1D1.43 showing comparable inhibitory effects to that of the small molecule NE inhibitor SPCK and IgG1 1C10 exhibiting even higher (2.6-fold) activity than SPCK. Their epitopes, as mapped by peptide arrays combined with structural modeling, indicate different mechanisms for blocking NE activity. Both VH-Fc and IgG1 antibodies block NE uptake by cancer cells and fibroblast differentiation. VHFc 1D1.43 and IgG1 1C10 are promising for the antibody-based immunotherapy of cancer and inflammatory diseases.

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APA

Chu, X., Sun, Z., Baek, D. S., Li, W., Mellors, J. W., Shapiro, S. D., & Dimitrov, D. S. (2021). Human antibody domains and fragments targeting neutrophil elastase as candidate therapeutics for cancer and inflammation-related diseases. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 22(20). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms222011136

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