4.6 Article

Digital Receptor Occupancy Assay in Quantifying On- and Off-Target Binding Affinities of Therapeutic Antibodies

Journal

ACS SENSORS
Volume 5, Issue 2, Pages 296-302

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.9b01736

Keywords

antibody binding affinity; receptor occupancy; on-target binding; on-target quantification; single-molecule detection; microfluidics

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [CCSG P30 CA 016672, R01 CA211615, RO1 AI116722, U01 CA201777, GM129617]
  2. Cancer Prevention & Research Institutes of Texas [RP160710, RR160005]
  3. Breast Cancer Research Foundation [BCRF-17-069]
  4. National Breast Cancer Foundation, Inc.
  5. Patel Memorial Breast Cancer Endowment Fund
  6. The University of Texas MD Anderson -China Medical University and Hospital Sister Institution Fund
  7. T32 Training Grant in Cancer Biology [5T32CA186892]
  8. Ministry of Health and Welfare, China Medical University Hospital Cancer Research Center of Excellence [MOHVV107-TDU-B-212-112015, MOHW107-TDU-B-212-114024]
  9. Center for Biological Pathways
  10. Texas 4000
  11. Robert A. Welch Foundation [F-1833]
  12. National Science Foundation [1611451]
  13. YingTsai Young Scholar Award of China Medical University [CMU108-YTY01]
  14. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) in Taiwan [MOST 108-2636-E-039-001]
  15. Division Of Chemistry
  16. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1611451] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

While monoclonal antibodies are the fastest-growing class of therapeutic agents, we lack a method that can directly quantify the on- and off-target binding affinities of newly developed therapeutic antibodies in crude cell lysates. As a result, some therapeutic antibody candidates could have a moderate on-target binding affinity but a high off-target binding affinity, which not only gives a reduced efficacy but triggers unwanted side effects. Here, we report a single-molecule counting method that precisely quantifies antibody-bound receptors, free receptors, and unbound antibodies in crude cell lysates, termed digital receptor occupancy assay (DRO). Compared to the traditional flow cytometry-based binding assay, DRO assay enables direct and digital quantification of the three molecular species in solution without the additional antibodies for competitive binding. When characterizing the therapeutic antibody, cetuximab, using DRO assay, we found the on-target binding ratio to be 65% and the binding constant (K-d) to be 2.4 nM, while the off-target binding causes the binding constant to decrease by 0.3 nM. Other than cultured cells, the DRO assay can be performed on tumor mouse xenograft models. Thus, DRO is a simple and highly quantitative method for cell-based antibody binding analysis which can be broadly applied to screen and validate new therapeutic antibodies.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available