SUMMARY Interleukin-2 (IL-2) is a pleiotropic cytokine that regulates immune cell homeostasis, and has been used to treat a range of disorders such as cancer and autoimmune disease. IL-2 signals via interleukin-2 receptor-β (IL-2Rβ):IL-2Rγ heterodimers on cells expressing high (regulatory T cells, Treg) or low (effector cells) amounts of IL-2Rα (CD25). When complexed with IL-2, certain anti-cytokine antibodies preferentially stimulate expansion of Treg (JES6-1) or effector (S4B6) cells, offering a strategy for targeted disease therapy. We found that JES6-1 sterically blocked the IL-2:IL-2Rβ and IL-2:IL-2Rγ interactions, but also allosterically lowered the IL-2:IL-2Rα affinity through a ‘triggered exchange’ mechanism favoring IL-2Rαhi Treg cells, creating a positive feedback loop for IL-2Rαhi cell activation. Conversely, S4B6 sterically blocked the IL-2:IL-2Rα interaction, while also conformationally stabilizing the IL-2:IL-2Rβ interaction, thus stimulating all IL-2 responsive immune cells, particularly IL-2Rβhi effector cells. Our insights provide a molecular blueprint for engineering selectively potentiating therapeutic antibodies.
Cytokines exert a vast array of immunoregulatory actions critical to human biology and disease. However, the desired immunotherapeutic effects of native cytokines are often mitigated by toxicity or lack of efficacy, either of which results from cytokine receptor pleiotropy and/or undesired activation of off-target cells. As our understanding of the structural principles of cytokine–receptor interactions has advanced, mechanism-based manipulation of cytokine signaling through protein engineering has become an increasingly feasible and powerful approach. Modified cytokines, both agonists and antagonists, have been engineered with narrowed target cell specificities, and they have also yielded important mechanistic insights into cytokine biology and signaling. Here we review the theory and practice of cytokine engineering and rationalize the mechanisms of several engineered cytokines in the context of structure. We discuss specific examples of how structure-based cytokine engineering has opened new opportunities for cytokines as drugs, with a focus on the immunotherapeutic cytokines interferon, interleukin-2, and interleukin-4.
SUMMARY Interleukin-2 (IL-2) regulates lymphocyte function by signaling through heterodimerization of the IL-2Rβ and γc receptor subunits. IL-2 is of considerable therapeutic interest, but harnessing its actions in a controllable manner remains a challenge. Previously, we have engineered an IL-2 “superkine” with enhanced affinity for IL-2Rβ. Here, we describe next-generation IL-2 variants that function as “receptor signaling clamps.” They retained high-affinity for IL-2Rβ, inhibiting binding of endogenous IL-2, but their interaction with γc was weakened, attenuating IL-2Rβ-γc heterodimerization. These IL-2 analogues acted as partial agonists and differentially affected lymphocytes poised at distinct activation thresholds. Moreover, one variant, H9-RETR, antagonized IL-2 and IL-15 better than blocking antibodies against IL-2Rα or IL-2Rβ. Furthermore, this mutein prolonged survival in a model of graft-versus-host disease and blocked spontaneous proliferation of smoldering adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) T cells. This receptor-clamping approach may be a general mechanism-based strategy for engineering cytokine partial agonists for therapeutic immunomodulation.
Due to its common dysregulation in epithelial-based cancers and extensive characterization of its role in tumor growth, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is a highly validated target for anticancer therapies. There has been particular interest in the development of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) targeting EGFR, resulting in two approved mAb-based drugs and several others in clinical trials. It has recently been reported that treatment with combinations of noncompetitive mAbs can induce receptor clustering, leading to synergistic receptor down-regulation. We elucidate three key aspects of this phenomenon. First, we show that highly potent combinations consisting of two noncompetitive mAbs that target EGFR domain 3 reduce surface receptor levels by up to 80% with a halftime of 0.5-5 h in both normal and transformed human cell lines to an extent inversely proportional to receptor density. Second, we find the mechanism underlying down-regulation to be consistent with recycling inhibition. Third, in contrast to the agonism associated with ligand-induced down-regulation, we demonstrate that mAb-induced down-regulation does not activate EGFR or its downstream effectors and it leads to synergistic reduction in migration and proliferation of cells that secrete autocrine ligand. These new insights will aid in ongoing rational design of EGFR-targeted antibody therapeutics.ErbB | monoclonal antibody | tyrosine kinase | trafficking E pidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is a member of the ErbB family of single-pass transmembrane receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs). Under normal conditions, EGFR activation is tightly regulated by its native ligands, epidermal growth factor (EGF) and transforming growth factor-α (TGFα), which bind to the receptor extracellular domain (1). Ligand binding induces conformational changes in EGFR that stabilize homo-or heterodimerization, leading to autophosphorylation of its intracellular domain. Phosphorylation of selected tyrosine residues activates signaling effectors in downstream pathways, including the mitogenactivated protein kinase (MAPK) and phosphoinositol kinase 3 (PI3K) pathways, eliciting responses such as growth, migration, differentiation, and apoptosis (2). The primary mechanisms of signal attenuation are receptor deactivation via phosphatase activity and receptor degradation following endocytosis (3). Ligand activation accelerates receptor endocytosis and simultaneously decreases the recycling to degradation ratio to terminate EGFR signaling (4).Dysregulation of EGFR leading to unregulated growth has been observed in a variety of cancers. Means of dysregulation include receptor overexpression, which occurs in one-third of all epithelial-based tumors (5), mutation, aberrant localization, autocrine ligand secretion, and obstruction of endocytosis (3). Due to its prevalence and altered expression in cancer patients, several therapeutic strategies have been employed to target EGFR, one of which involves the use of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that bind the receptor ectodomain. mAbs...
Techniques to analyze and sort single cells based on functional outputs, such as secreted products, have the potential to transform our understanding of cellular biology, as well as accelerate the development of next generation cell and antibody therapies. However, secreted molecules rapidly diffuse away from cells, and analysis of these products requires specialized equipment and expertise to compartmentalize individual cells and capture their secretions. Herein we demonstrate the use of suspendable microcontainers to sort single viable cells based on their secreted products at high-throughput using only commonly accessible laboratory infrastructure. Our microparticles act as solid supports which facilitate cell attachment, partition uniform aqueous compartments, and capture secreted proteins. Using this platform, we demonstrate highthroughput screening of stably-and transiently-transfected producer cells based on relative IgG production as well as screening of B lymphocytes and hybridomas based on antigen-specific antibody production using commercially available flow sorters. Leveraging the high-speed sorting capabilities of standard sorters, we sorted >1,000,000 events in less than an hour. The reported microparticles can be easily stored, and distributed as a consumable reagent amongst researchers, democratizing access to high-throughput functional cell screening.
Receptor Tyrosine Kinases (RTKs) conduct biochemical signals via lateral dimerization in the plasma membrane, and defects in their dimerization lead to unregulated signaling and disease. RTK transmembrane (TM) domains are proposed to play an important role in the process, underscored by the finding that single amino acids mutations in the TM domains can induce pathological phenotypes. Therefore, many important questions pertaining to the mode of signal transduction and the mechanism of pathology induction could be answered by studying the chemical-physical basis behind RTK TM domain dimerization and the interactions of RTK TM domains with lipids in model bilayer systems. As a first step towards this goal, here we report the synthesis of the TM domain of fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3), an RTK that is crucial for skeletal development. We have used solid phase peptide synthesis to produce two peptides: one corresponding to the membrane embedded segment and the naturally occurring flanking residues at the N- and C-termini (TMwt), and a second one in which the flanking residues have been substituted with diLysines at the termini (TMKK). We have demonstrated that the hydrophobic FGFR3 TM domain can be synthesized for biophysical studies with high yield. The protocol presented in the paper can be applied to the synthesis of other RTK TM domains. As expected, the Lys flanks decrease the hydrophobicity of the TM domain, such that TMKK elutes much earlier than TMwt during reverse phase HPLC purification. The Lysines have no effect on peptide solubility in SDS and on peptide secondary structure, but they abolish peptide dimerization on SDS gels. These results suggest that caution should be exercised when modifying RTK TM domains to render them more manageable for biophysical studies.
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