4.7 Article

Development of Novel Activin-Targeted Therapeutics

Journal

MOLECULAR THERAPY
Volume 23, Issue 3, Pages 434-444

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1038/mt.2014.221

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC, Australia) [526648, 566820]
  2. NH&MRC Career Development Fellowships [1013533, 1046782]
  3. Pfizer Australia
  4. Endocrine Society of Australia Postdoctoral Fellowship Award
  5. Operational Infrastructure Support Program of the Victorian Government, Australia

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Soluble activin type II receptors (ActRIIA/ActRIIB), via binding to diverse TGF-beta proteins, can increase muscle and bone mass, correct anemia or protect against diet-induced obesity. While exciting, these multiple actions of soluble ActRIIA/IIB limit their therapeutic potential and highlight the need for new reagents that target specific ActRIIA/IIB ligands. Here, we modified the activin A and activin B prodonnains, regions required for mature growth factor synthesis, to generate specific activin antagonists. Initially, the prodomains were fused to the Fc region of mouse IgG2A antibody and, subsequently, fastener residues (Lys(45), Tyr(96), His(97), and Ala(98); activin A numbering) that confer latency to other TGF-beta proteins were incorporated. For the activin A prodomain, these modifications generated a reagent that potently (IC50 5 nmol/l) and specifically inhibited activin A signaling in vitro, and activin A-induced muscle wasting in vivo. Interestingly, the modified activin B prodomain inhibited both activin A and B signaling in vitro (IC50 similar to 2 nmol/l) and in vivo, suggesting it could serve as a general activin antagonist. Importantly, unlike soluble ActRIIA/IIB, the modified prodomains did not inhibit myostatin or GDF-11 activity. To underscore the therapeutic utility of specifically antagonising activin signaling, we demonstrate that the modified activin prodomains promote significant increases in muscle mass.

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