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Generation of avian-derived anti-B7-H4 antibodies exerts a blockade effect on the immunosuppressive response

Authors :
Keng-Chang Tsai
Tz Wen Yang
Fu Ling Chang
Yan Ni Lo
Chih Tien Chen
Tsai Yu Lin
Yu Ching Lee
Ting Sheng Chung
Wang Chuan Chen
Ming Hui Cheng
Tsung Hsun Tsai
Source :
Experimental Animals
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Japanese Association for Laboratory Animal Science, 2021.

Abstract

For highly conserved mammalian protein, chicken is a suitable immune host to generate antibodies. Monoclonal antibodies have been successfully targeted with immunity checkpoint proteins as a means of cancer treatment; this treatment enhances tumor-specific immunity responses through immunoregulation. Studies have identified the importance of B7-H4 in immunoregulation and its use as a potential target for cancer treatment. High levels of B7-H4 expression are found in tumor tissues and are associated with adverse clinical and pathological characteristics. Using the phage display technique, this study isolated specific single-chain antibody fragments (scFvs) against B7-H4 from chickens. Our experiment proved that B7-H4 clearly induced the inhibition of T-cell activation. Therefore, use of anti-B7-H4 scFvs can effectively block the exhaustion of immunity cells and also stimulate and activate T-cells in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Sequence analysis revealed that two isolated scFv S2 and S4 have the same VH complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) sequence. Molecule docking was employed to simulate the complex structures of scFv with B7-H4 to analyze the interaction. Our findings revealed that both scFvs employed CDR-H1 and CDR-H3 as main driving forces and had strong binding effects with the B7-H4. The affinity of scFv S2 was better because the CDR-L2 loop of the scFv S2 had three more hydrogen bond interactions with B7-H4. The results of this experiment suggest the usefulness of B7-H4 as a target for immunity checkpoints; the isolated B7-H4-specific chicken antibodies have the potential for use in future cancer immunotherapy applications.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18817122 and 13411357
Volume :
70
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Experimental Animals
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....68c70a0165d0630797cf755102694e0a