4.7 Article

Physicochemical Rules for Identifying Monoclonal Antibodies with Drug-like Specificity

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 17, Issue 7, Pages 2555-2569

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.0c00257

Keywords

polyspecificity; pharmacokinetics; solubility; aggregation; viscosity; developability

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01GM104130, R01AG050598, RF1AG059723, R35GM136300, T32-GM008353]
  2. National Science Foundation [CBET 1813963, CBET 1605266, CBET 1804313, DGE 1256260]
  3. Albert M. Mattocks Chair

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The ability of antibodies to recognize their target antigens with high specificity is fundamental to their natural function. Nevertheless, therapeutic antibodies display variable and difficult-to-predict levels of nonspecific and self-interactions that can lead to various drug development challenges, including antibody aggregation, abnormally high viscosity, and rapid antibody clearance. Here we report a method for predicting the overall specificity of antibodies in terms of their relative risk for displaying high levels of nonspecific or self-interactions at physiological conditions. We find that individual and combined sets of chemical rules that limit the maximum and minimum numbers of certain solvent-exposed amino acids in antibody variable regions are strong predictors of specificity for large panels of preclinical and clinical-stage antibodies. We also demonstrate how the chemical rules can be used to identify sites that mediate nonspecific interactions in suboptimal antibodies and guide the design of targeted sublibraries that yield variants with high antibody specificity. These findings can be readily used to improve the selection and engineering of antibodies with drug-like specificity.

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