These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Engineering a humanized bispecific F(ab')2 fragment for improved binding to T cells. Author: Rodrigues ML, Shalaby MR, Werther W, Presta L, Carter P. Journal: Int J Cancer Suppl; 1992; 7():45-50. PubMed ID: 1428403. Abstract: We recently constructed a humanized bispecific antibody (BsF(ab')2v1) by separate E. coli expression of each Fab' arm followed by directed chemical coupling in vitro. BsF(ab')2 v1 (anti-CD3/anti-p185HER2) was demonstrated to retarget the cytotoxic activity of human CD3+ CTL in vitro against the human breast-tumor cell line, SK-BR-3, which over-expresses the p185HER2 product of the proto-oncogene HER2. Our minimalistic humanization strategy is to install as few murine residues as possible into a human antibody in order to recruit antigen-binding affinity and biological properties comparable to that of the murine parent antibody. This strategy proved very successful for the anti-p185HER2 arm of BsF(ab')2 v1. In contrast BsF(ab')2 v1 binds to T cells via its anti-CD3 arm much less efficiently than does the chimeric BsF(ab')2 which contains the variable domains of the murine parent anti-CD3 antibody. Here we have constructed additional BsF(ab')2 fragments containing variant anti-CD3 arms with selected amino acid replacements in an attempt to improve antibody binding to T cells. One such variant, BsF(ab')2 v9, was created by replacing 6 residues in the second hypervariable loop of the anti-CD3 heavy chain variable domain of BsF(ab')2 v1 with their counterparts from the murine parent anti-CD3 antibody. BsF(ab')2 v9 binds to T cells (Jurkat) much more efficiently than does BsF(ab')2 v1 and almost as efficiently as the chimeric BsF(ab')2. This improvement in the efficiency of T-cell binding of the humanized BsF(ab')2 is an important step in its development as a potential therapeutic agent for the treatment of p185HER2 over-expressing cancers.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]