Frontiers in Immunology (Dec 2021)

Immune Complex Formation Is Associated With Loss of Tolerance and an Antibody Response to Both Drug and Target

  • Mark A. Kroenke,
  • Troy E. Barger,
  • Jenny Hu,
  • Mieke Jill Miller,
  • Kevin Kalenian,
  • Lidong He,
  • Hailing Hsu,
  • Yessenia Bartley,
  • Vincent Fung-Sing Chow,
  • Marcia Cristina Teixeira dos Santos,
  • Barbara A. Sullivan,
  • Laurence E. Cheng,
  • Jane R. Parnes,
  • Rupa Padaki,
  • Scott Kuhns,
  • Daniel T. Mytych

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.782788
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

AMG 966 is a bi-specific, heteroimmunoglobulin molecule that binds both tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) and TNF-like ligand 1A (TL1A). In a first-in-human clinical study in healthy volunteers, AMG 966 elicited anti-drug antibodies (ADA) in 53 of 54 subjects (98.1%), despite a paucity of T cell epitopes observed in T cell assays. ADA were neutralizing and bound to all domains of AMG 966. Development of ADA correlated with loss of exposure. In vitro studies demonstrated that at certain drug-to-target ratios, AMG 966 forms large immune complexes with TNFα and TL1A, partially restoring the ability of the aglycosylated Fc domain to bind FcγRIa and FcγRIIa, leading to the formation of ADA. In addition to ADA against AMG 966, antibodies to endogenous TNFα were also detected in the sera of subjects dosed with AMG 966. This suggests that the formation of immune complexes between a therapeutic and target can cause loss of tolerance and elicit an antibody response against the target.

Keywords