Hydrolytically Stable Site-Specific Conjugation at
the N‑Terminus of an Engineered Antibody
Posted on 2015-10-21 - 00:00
Antibody–drug conjugates (ADCs)
have emerged as an important
class of therapeutics for cancer treatment that combine the target
specificity of antibodies with the killing activity of anticancer
chemotherapeutics. Early conjugation technologies relied upon random
conjugation to either lysine or cysteine residues, resulting in heterogeneous
ADCs. Recent technology advancements have resulted in the preparation
of homogeneous ADCs through the site-specific conjugation at engineered
cysteines, glycosylated amino acids, and bioorthogonal unnatural amino
acids. Here we describe for the first time the conjugation of an anti-mitotic
drug to an antibody following the mild and selective oxidation of
a serine residue engineered at the N-terminus of
the light chain. Using an alkoxyamine-derivatized monomethyl auristatine
E payload, we have prepared a hydrolytically stable ADC that retains
binding to its antigen and displays potent in vitro cytotoxicity and
in vivo tumor growth inhibition.
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Thompson, Pamela; Bezabeh, Binyam; Fleming, Ryan; Pruitt, Monica; Mao, Shenlan; Strout, Patrick; et al. (2016). Hydrolytically Stable Site-Specific Conjugation at
the N‑Terminus of an Engineered Antibody. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.5b00355