Therapy with monoclonal antibodies. II. The contribution of Fcγ receptor binding and the influence of CH1 and CH3 domains on in vivo effector function

JD Isaacs, J Greenwood, H Waldmann - The Journal of Immunology, 1998 - journals.aai.org
JD Isaacs, J Greenwood, H Waldmann
The Journal of Immunology, 1998journals.aai.org
An in vivo model is used to define Fc motifs engaged by mAbs to deplete target cells. Human
IgG1 and human IgG4 were very potent, and mutations within a motif critical for FcγR binding
(glutamate 233 to proline, leucine/phenylalanine 234 to valine, and leucine 235 to alanine)
completely prevented depletion. Mouse IgG2b was also potent, and mutations to prevent
complement activation did not impair depletion with this isotype, as previously shown for
human IgG1. In contrast, a mutation that impaired binding to mouse FcγRII (glutamate 318 to …
Abstract
An in vivo model is used to define Fc motifs engaged by mAbs to deplete target cells. Human IgG1 and human IgG4 were very potent, and mutations within a motif critical for FcγR binding (glutamate 233 to proline, leucine/phenylalanine 234 to valine, and leucine 235 to alanine) completely prevented depletion. Mouse IgG2b was also potent, and mutations to prevent complement activation did not impair depletion with this isotype, as previously shown for human IgG1. In contrast, a mutation that impaired binding to mouse FcγRII (glutamate 318 to alanine) eliminated effector function of mouse IgG2b and also reduced the potency of human IgG4. To reveal potential contributions of domains other than C H 2, domain switch mutants were created between human IgG1 and rat IgG2a. Two hybrid mAbs were generated with potencies exceeding anything previously seen in this model. While their mechanism of depletion was not defined, their activity appeared dependent upon interdomain interactions in the Fc region.
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