The kinase Akt plays a central role as a regulator of multiple growth factor input signals, making it an attractive anti-cancer drug target. A-443654 is an ATP-competitive Akt inhibitor. Unexpectedly, treatment of cells with A-443654 causes paradoxical hyperphosphorylation of Akt at its two regulatory sites (Thr308 and Ser473). We explore whether inhibitor-induced hyperphosphorylation of Akt by A-443654 is a consequence of disrupted feedback regulation at a pathway level or whether it is a direct consequence of inhibitor binding to the ATP binding site of Akt. Catalytically inactive mutants of Akt reveal that binding of an inhibitor to the ATP site of Akt is sufficient to directly cause hyperphosphorylation of the kinase in the absence of any pathway feedback effects. We conclude that ATP-competitive Akt inhibitors impart regulatory phosphorylation of their target kinase Akt providing new insights into both natural regulation of Akt activation and Akt inhibitors entering the clinic.
To overcome a lack of selectivity during the chemical modification of native non-engineered antibodies, we have developed a technology platform termed “AJICAP” for the site-specific chemical conjugation of antibodies through the use of a class of IgG Fc-affinity reagents. To date, a limited number of antibody–drug conjugates (ADCs) have been synthesized via this approach, and no toxicological study was reported. Herein, we describe the compatibility and robustness of AJICAP technology, which enabled the synthesis of a wide variety of ADCs. A stability assessment of a thiol-modified antibody synthesized by AJICAP technology indicated no appreciable increase in aggregation or decomposition upon prolonged storage, indicating that the unexpectedly stable thiol intermediate has a great potential intermediate for payload or linker screening or large-scale manufacturing. Payload conjugation with this stable thiol intermediate generated several AJICAP-ADCs. In vivo xenograft studies indicated that the AJICAP-ADCs displayed significant tumor inhibition comparable to benchmark ADC Kadcyla. Furthermore, a rat pharmacokinetic analysis and toxicology study indicated an increase in the maximum tolerated dose, demonstrating an expansion of the AJICAP-ADC therapeutic index, compared with stochastic conjugation technology. This is the first report of the therapeutic index estimation of site-specific ADCs produced by utilizing Fc affinity reagent conjugation. The described site-specific conjugation technology is a powerful platform to enable next-generation ADCs through reduced heterogeneity and enhanced therapeutic index.
The site-directed chemical conjugation of antibodies remains an area of great interest and active efforts within the antibody–drug conjugate (ADC) community. We previously reported a unique site modification using a class of immunoglobulin-G (IgG) Fc-affinity reagents to establish a versatile, streamlined, and site-selective conjugation of native antibodies to enhance the therapeutic index of the resultant ADCs. This methodology, termed “AJICAP”, successfully modified Lys248 of native antibodies to produce site-specific ADC with a wider therapeutic index than the Food and Drug Administration-approved ADC, Kadcyla. However, the long reaction sequences, including the reduction–oxidation (redox) treatment, increased the aggregation level. In this manuscript, we aimed to present an updated Fc-affinity-mediated site-specific conjugation technology named “AJICAP second generation” without redox treatment utilizing a “one-pot” antibody modification reaction. The stability of Fc affinity reagents was improved owing to structural optimization, enabling the production of various ADCs without aggregation. In addition to Lys248 conjugation, Lys288 conjugated ADCs with homogeneous drug-to-antibody ratio of 2 were produced using different Fc affinity peptide reagent possessing a proper spacer linkage. These two conjugation technologies were used to produce over 20 ADCs from several combinations of antibodies and drug linkers. The in vivo profile of Lys248 and Lys288 conjugated ADCs was also compared. Furthermore, nontraditional ADC production, such as antibody–protein conjugates and antibody–oligonucleotide conjugates, were achieved. These results strongly indicate that this Fc affinity conjugation approach is a promising strategy for manufacturing site-specific antibody conjugates without antibody engineering.
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