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Tuning the potency and selectivity of ImmTAC molecules by affinity modulation.

Authors :
Robertson, Ian B
Mulvaney, Rachel
Dieckmann, Nele
Vantellini, Alessio
Canestraro, Martina
Amicarella, Francesca
O'Dwyer, Ronan
Cole, David K
Harper, Stephen
Dushek, Omer
Kirk, Peter
Source :
Clinical & Experimental Immunology. Feb2024, Vol. 215 Issue 2, p105-119. 15p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

T-cell-engaging bispecifics have great clinical potential for the treatment of cancer and infectious diseases. The binding affinity and kinetics of a bispecific molecule for both target and T-cell CD3 have substantial effects on potency and specificity, but the rules governing these relationships are not fully understood. Using immune mobilizing monoclonal TCRs against cancer (ImmTAC) molecules as a model, we explored the impact of altering affinity for target and CD3 on the potency and specificity of the redirected T-cell response. This class of bispecifics binds specific target peptides presented by human leukocyte antigen on the cell surface via an affinity-enhanced T-cell receptor and can redirect T-cell activation with an anti-CD3 effector moiety. The data reveal that combining a strong affinity TCR with an intermediate affinity anti-CD3 results in optimal T-cell activation, while strong affinity of both targeting and effector domains significantly reduces maximum cytokine release. Moreover, by optimizing the affinity of both parts of the molecule, it is possible to improve the selectivity. These results could be effectively modelled based on kinetic proofreading with limited signalling. This model explained the experimental observation that strong binding at both ends of the molecules leads to reduced activity, through very stable target-bispecific-effector complexes leading to CD3 entering a non-signalling dark state. These findings have important implications for the design of anti-CD3-based bispecifics with optimal biophysical parameters for both activity and specificity. These studies demonstrate how to optimize the fundamental process of T-cell activation, both in terms of affinity and binding kinetics to target cell and T-cell epitopes. Current theories of T-cell biology are used to build a mathematical model that explains most features of the data. How the kinetics of target and cluster of differentiation 3 binding regulate T-cell activation in the context of the clinically validated immune mobilizing monoclonal TCRs against cancer platform, which directly targets peptide-human leukocyte antigen complexes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00099104
Volume :
215
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Clinical & Experimental Immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176448923
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/cei/uxad120