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Site-specific conjugation of native antibody
Author(s) -
Amissi Sadiki,
Shefali R. Vaidya,
Mina Abdollahi,
Gunjan Bhardwaj,
Michael E. Dolan,
Harpreet Turna,
Varnika Arora,
Athul Sanjeev,
Timothy D Robinson,
Andrea Koid,
Aashka Amin,
Zhaohui Sunny Zhou
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
antibody therapeutics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.579
H-Index - 5
ISSN - 2516-4236
DOI - 10.1093/abt/tbaa027
Subject(s) - bioconjugation , glycan , chemistry , asparagine , lysine , biochemistry , binding site , conjugate , combinatorial chemistry , acylation , glutamine , amine gas treating , amino acid , glycoprotein , organic chemistry , mathematical analysis , mathematics , catalysis
Traditionally, non-specific chemical conjugations, such as acylation of amines on lysine or alkylation of thiols on cysteines, are widely used; however, they have several shortcomings. First, the lack of site-specificity results in heterogeneous products and irreproducible processes. Second, potential modifications near the complementarity-determining region may reduce binding affinity and specificity. Conversely, site-specific methods produce well-defined and more homogenous antibody conjugates, ensuring developability and clinical applications. Moreover, several recent side-by-side comparisons of site-specific and stochastic methods have demonstrated that site-specific approaches are more likely to achieve their desired properties and functions, such as increased plasma stability, less variability in dose-dependent studies (particularly at low concentrations), enhanced binding efficiency, as well as increased tumor uptake. Herein, we review several standard and practical site-specific bioconjugation methods for native antibodies, i.e., those without recombinant engineering. First, chemo-enzymatic techniques, namely transglutaminase (TGase)-mediated transamidation of a conserved glutamine residue and glycan remodeling of a conserved asparagine N-glycan (GlyCLICK), both in the Fc region. Second, chemical approaches such as selective reduction of disulfides (ThioBridge) and N-terminal amine modifications. Furthermore, we list site-specific antibody–drug conjugates in clinical trials along with the future perspectives of these site-specific methods.

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