Press Releases
Data Published in PNAS Show Engineering the Fc Region of Antibodies Makes Them More Toxic to Cancer Cells
Monrovia, CA –
March 7, 2006 – Engineering the “Fc“ region of monoclonal antibodies
(mAbs) increases their toxicity to cancer cells, potentially improving
the utility of targeted cancer therapies, according to research
conducted at Xencor, which will be published in the March 14 print
issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
Monoclonal antibodies have important advantages over chemotherapy and
small molecule drug treatments for cancer, such as their specificity in
targeting tumor cells and low toxicity. There are currently eight
approved anticancer antibody products on the market today and many more
are in development. Unfortunately, many marketed treatments lack the
desired potency against tumor cells, providing only incremental
improvements in therapeutic success, and many development-stage
antibodies fail in clinical trials due to lack of demonstrated efficacy.
Scientists at Xencor, a biotherapeutics company developing protein and
antibody therapeutics, said the changes it made to the antibody Fc
regions increased antibody effector functions such as activation of
immune cells for tumor lysis, called Antibody-Dependent Cell-mediated
Cytotoxicity (ADCC), by more than two orders of magnitude. Studies
conducted in in vivo models demonstrated that these antibodies were
greater than ten times more toxic to target cells. The enhanced
antibodies also were able to kill tumor cells that are typically
“invisible“ to other antibodies because they express low levels of
target antigen.
While antibodies such as Genentech's Rituxan are well known for their
role in the treatment of cancer, many other promising antibodies are
sub-optimal for use as therapeutics. “They just aren't powerful
enough,“ said Bassil Dahiyat, Ph.D., President and CEO of Xencor. “The
work we published in PNAS shows that specific changes to the Fc regions
of antibodies have the potential to greatly improve the effectiveness
of next-generation antibody therapeutics, and may mean that many more
antibodies can be used in the treatment of cancer than ever before.“
Xencor's Fc variants were engineered using the company's XmAb®
technology, which couples computational design algorithms with
high-throughput screening to rationally design the antibody constant
region. The Fc portion of the constant region of the antibody has been
shown in previous studies to be responsible for mediating
antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity and has been the target
of Xencor's XmAb technology. Xencor has leveraged its XmAb technology
to develop therapeutic antibodies, for which it plans to begin clinical
testing next year.
We've already applied the XmAb technology used in this research to
generate a suite of patented Fc antibody variants that have optimized
antibody-Fc receptor affinity, which translate into increased effector
functions and improved cell cytotoxicity. “These can be used to enhance
the potency of nearly any antibody under development today,“ Dahiyat
added. Xencor's research was published in an article entitled
“Engineered Antibody Fc Variants with Enhanced Effector Functions“
(Greg A. Lazar, et al.).
About XmAb® Antibodies
Xencor's XmAb engineered Fc domains are designed to enhance the
therapeutic properties of monoclonal antibodies and form a leading
proprietary position in Fc engineering. Xencor's Fc domains can be
inserted into antibody candidates against any target antigen and may
improve one or more important effector functions, including enhanced
antibody-mediated tumor cell killing, sustained half-life and increased
structural stability. XmAb antibodies are produced using conventional
expression and manufacturing processes. Xencor is creating a pipeline
of XmAb antibody drug candidates with enhanced potency and
pharmaceutical properties.
About Xencor
Xencor, Inc., engineers superior biotherapeutics using its proprietary
Protein Design Automation® technology platform. The company is
internally advancing both XPro™ protein therapeutic candidates and
XmAb® antibody drug candidates optimized for activity against
biologically validated targets. Xencor's product development is led by
a protein therapeutic drug candidate, XPro1595, for the treatment of
arthritis and other rheumatic disorders and antibody candidates for the
treatment of cancer. With multiple partners, such as industry leaders
Genentech, Roche, Centocor and MedImmune, Xencor is applying its suite
of XmAb antibody Fc domains to improve antibody drug candidates for
traits such as potency and sustained half-life. Xencor also develops
therapeutic protein variants in collaboration with major pharmaceutical
partners. For more information, please visit www.xencor.com.