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Antibodies specific for a segment of human membrane IgE deplete IgE-producing B cells in humanized mice
Hans D. Brightbill, … , Mercedesz Balazs, Lawren C. Wu
Hans D. Brightbill, … , Mercedesz Balazs, Lawren C. Wu
Published May 10, 2010
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2010;120(6):2218-2229. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI40141.
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Research Article Immunology

Antibodies specific for a segment of human membrane IgE deplete IgE-producing B cells in humanized mice

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Abstract

IgE-mediated hypersensitivity is central to the pathogenesis of asthma and other allergic diseases. Although neutralization of serum IgE with IgE-specific antibodies is in general an efficacious treatment for allergic asthma, one limitation of this approach is its lack of effect on IgE production. Here, we have developed a strategy to disrupt IgE production by generating monoclonal antibodies that target a segment of membrane IgE on human IgE-switched B cells that is not present in serum IgE. This segment is known as the M1′ domain, and using genetically modified mice that contain the human M1′ domain inserted into the mouse IgE locus, we demonstrated that M1′-specific antibodies reduced serum IgE and IgE-producing plasma cells in vivo, without affecting other immunoglobulin isotypes. M1′-specific antibodies were effective when delivered prophylactically and therapeutically in mouse models of immunization, allergic asthma, and Nippostrongylus brasiliensis infection, likely by inducing apoptosis of IgE-producing B cells. In addition, we generated a humanized M1′-specific antibody that was active on primary human cells in vivo, as determined by its reduction of serum IgE levels and IgE plasma cell numbers in a human PBMC-SCID mouse model. Thus, targeting of human IgE-producing B cells with apoptosis-inducing M1′-specific antibodies may be a novel treatment for asthma and allergy.

Authors

Hans D. Brightbill, Surinder Jeet, Zhonghua Lin, Donghong Yan, Meijuan Zhou, Martha Tan, Allen Nguyen, Sherry Yeh, Donnie Delarosa, Steven R. Leong, Terence Wong, Yvonne Chen, Mark Ultsch, Elizabeth Luis, Sree Ranjani Ramani, Janet Jackman, Lino Gonzalez, Mark S. Dennis, Anan Chuntharapai, Laura DeForge, Y. Gloria Meng, Min Xu, Charles Eigenbrot, Wyne P. Lee, Canio J. Refino, Mercedesz Balazs, Lawren C. Wu

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Figure 7

Characterization of a humanized M1′-specific antibody.

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Characterization of a humanized M1′-specific antibody.
(A) Humanized M1′...
(A) Humanized M1′-specific 47H4 antibody (h47H4) bound human membrane IgE-transfected Daudi B cells but not Daudi transfectants expressing membrane IgE that lacks the M1′ sequence. Humanized M1′-specific 47H4 antibody also bound the U266 myeloma cell line, which naturally expresses low levels of membrane IgE. (B) Scatchard analysis of humanized M1′-specific 47H4 antibody binding to membrane IgE-transfected Daudi cells. The left panel shows a competition binding curve, where each data point represents the ratio of iodinated h47H4 antibody bound to cells/total iodinated and unlabeled h47H4 antibody on the y axis vs. the total concentration of iodinated and unlabeled h47H4 antibody on the x axis. The right panel shows a Scatchard plot, where each data point represents the ratio of iodinated h47H4 antibody bound to cells/unbound iodinated h47H4 antibody on the y axis vs. the concentration of bound iodinated h47H4 antibody on the x axis. The mean binding affinity ± SD from 2 separate experiments is 1.50 ± 0.14 nM.

Copyright © 2023 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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