3.8 Review

Fcγ receptor-dependent effector mechanisms regulate CD19 and CD20 antibody immunotherapies for B lymphocyte malignancies and autoimmunity

Journal

SPRINGER SEMINARS IN IMMUNOPATHOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 4, Pages 351-364

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00281-006-0057-9

Keywords

lymphoma; innate immunity; monocytes; monoclonal antibody; mouse models

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Immunotherapy using Rituximab, an unconjugated CD20 monoclonal antibody, has proven effective for treating non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and autoimmune disease. CD19 antibody immunotherapy is also effective in mouse models of lymphoma and autoimmunity. In both cases, mouse models have demonstrated that effector cell networks effectively deplete the vast majority of circulating and tissue B lymphocytes through Fc gamma receptor-dependent pathways. In mice, B cell depletion is predominantly, if not exclusively, mediated by monocytes. CD20 mAbs rapidly deplete circulating and tissue B cells in an antibody isotype-restricted manner with a hierarchy of antibody effectiveness: IgG2a/c > IgG1 > IgG2b >> IgG3. Depending on antibody isotype, mouse B cell depletion is regulated by Fc gamma RI-, Fc gamma RII-, Fc gamma RIII-, and Fc gamma RIV-dependent pathways. The potency of IgG2a/c mAbs for B cell depletion in vivo results from Fc gamma RIV interactions, with likely contributions from high-affinity Fc gamma RI. IgG1 mAbs induce B cell depletion through preferential, if not exclusive, interactions with low-affinity Fc gamma RIII, while IgG2b mAbs interact preferentially with intermediate-affinity Fc gamma RIV. By contrast, inhibitory Fc gamma RIIB-deficiency significantly increases CD20 mAb-induced B cell depletion at low mAb doses by enhancing monocyte function. Thus, isotype-specific mAb interactions with distinct Fc gamma Rs contribute significantly to the effectiveness of CD20 mAbs in vivo. These results provide a molecular basis for earlier observations that human Fc gamma RII and Fc gamma RIII polymorphisms correlate with the in vivo effectiveness of CD20 antibody therapy. That the innate monocyte network depletes B cells through Fc gamma R-dependent pathways during immunotherapy has important clinical implications for CD19, CD20, and other antibody-based therapies for the treatment of diverse B cell malignancies and autoimmune disease.

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