Mutations in diphtheria toxin separate binding from entry and amplify immunotoxin selectivity
Autor: | Larry Greenfield, Richard J. Youle, Virginia Gray Johnson |
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Rok vydání: | 1987 |
Předmět: |
Antigens
Differentiation T-Lymphocyte Chemical Phenomena medicine.drug_class Cell Survival T-Lymphocytes Receptors Cell Surface Ricin Biology medicine.disease_cause Monoclonal antibody Cell Line chemistry.chemical_compound Structure-Activity Relationship Antigen Immunotoxin medicine Animals Diphtheria Toxin Receptors Cholinergic Vero Cells Diphtheria toxin Multidisciplinary Toxin Immunotoxins Antibodies Monoclonal Molecular biology Chemistry chemistry ADP-ribosylation Antigens Surface Mutation biology.protein Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins Antibody Heparin-binding EGF-like Growth Factor |
Zdroj: | Science (New York, N.Y.). 238(4826) |
ISSN: | 0036-8075 |
Popis: | Monoclonal antibodies linked to toxic proteins (immunotoxins) can selectively kill some tumor cells in vitro and in vivo. However, reagents that combine the full potency of the native toxins with the high degree of cell type selectivity of monoclonal antibodies have not previously been designed. Two heretofore inseparable activities on one polypeptide chain of diphtheria toxin and ricin account for the failure to construct optimal reagents. The B chains (i) facilitate entry of the A chain to the cytosol, which allows immunotoxins to efficiently kill target cells, and (ii) bind to receptors present on most cells, which imparts to immunotoxins a large degree of non-target cell toxicity. This report identifies point mutations in the B polypeptide chain of diphtheria toxin that block binding but allow cytosol entry. Three mutants of diphtheria toxin have 1/1,000 to 1/10,000 the toxicity and 1/100 to 1/8,000 the binding activity of diphtheria toxin. Linking of either of two of the inactivated mutant toxins (CRM103, Phe508; CRM107, Phe390, Phe525) to a monoclonal antibody specific for human T cells reconstitutes full target-cell toxicity--indistinguishable from that of the native toxin linked to the same antibody--without restoring non-target cell toxicity. This separation of the entry function from the binding function generates a uniquely potent and cell type-specific immunotoxin that retains full diphtheria toxin toxicity, yet is four to five orders of magnitude less toxic than the native toxin is to nontarget cells. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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