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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Modular composition of antibody drug conjugates (ADCs)
- ADC metabolism and intracellular trafficking
- Optimization of ADCs
- The TWEAK receptor as an ADC target
- Anti-TWEAKR mAbs with high affinity and good internalization
- Antibody modification with small molecule drugs
- Stability: a topic for improvement
- Hydrolysis of thiosuccinimide ring to avoid de-conjugation
- Impact of ring-opening on ADC properties
- ADCs: the toxophore perspective
- Inhibitors of kinesin spindle protein as an ADC toxophore
- KSP inhibitors are promising ADC toxophores
- From small molecule KSP inhibitors to ADCs
- In vivo efficacy of TWEAKR-KSP ADC 2 and 3
- Quantification of active metabolite of TWEAKR ADCS
- Classical conjugate design (1)
- Rational for ADC metabolism under legumain control
- Legumain-cleavable antibody prodrug conjugates (APDCs)
- Classical conjugate design (2)
- Feasibility study of APDCs
- Tailoring legumain-cleavable sequences with SMOL tool compounds
- Increasing legumain-cleavage specificity
- Impact on tumor/liver ratios of active metabolite
- Legumain capping to address aortic endothelial side-effects
- Equipotency of TWEAKR APDC and ADC
- 2nd case study in solid tumors
- Anti-B7H3 APDCs representing low and high legumain challenge
- Efficacy and metabolite distribution of APDCs 3g and 3f
- Conclusion and outlook
- Acknowledgements
- Disclosure information
Topics Covered
- Modular composition of antibody drug conjugates
- ADC mode of action
- TWEAK receptor as an ADC target
- Improvements to achieve stable antibody conjugation
- KSP inhibitors as ADC toxophores
- Legumain-cleavable antibody prodrug conjugates
- Conceptualization of Antibody Prodrug Conjugates (APDCs) to increase the therapeutic window
Talk Citation
Lerchen, H. (2021, March 30). Development of antibody prodrug conjugates activated by legumain [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/PRLX5515.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Dr. Hans-Georg Lerchen is an employee of Bayer AG and holds stock in the company.
A selection of talks on Pharmaceutical Sciences
Transcript
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0:00
Ladies and gentlemen, dear colleagues.
My name is Hans-Georg Lerchen.
I'm Chief Scientist in the Medicine and Chemistry Department in the Pharmaceutical
R&D organization, Bayer AG.
Today, I would like to invite you to
a journey into the world of antibody drug conjugates,
an exciting hot topic in oncology research and development.
0:23
Antibody drug conjugates are biologics which are composed of three modules:
a monoclonal antibody (left-hand side);
a toxophore (right-hand side);
and the linker in between.
The design of antibody drug conjugates follows the vision of magic bullets
which Paul Ehrlich formulated about 120 years ago.
He envisioned that it would be possible to directly
deliver a drug to the target cell without harming the body.
Up to the present day, this vision remains a big challenge.
Today we talk about the 'therapeutic window' between the minimal dose required for
activity and the highest dose which can be
administered without causing unacceptable side effects.
To increase the therapeutic window,
the ADC design follows the goal to combine
tumor specificity of a monoclonal antibody-targeting moiety
with the high potency of a toxophore moiety, to kill tumor cells.
1:22
With the approval of Main Bayer, nine antibody drug conjugates and more than 80
which are in clinical trials,
the ADC landscape has evolved rapidly during the last decade.
However, in parallel to these success stories,
disappointing results in clinical trials also led
to a large number of discontinuations of ADC programs,
mainly due to the occurrence of
dose-limiting toxicities before an efficacious dose was reached.
The ADC mode of action is well understood,
and shown on this cartoon.
The antibody which is stably modified with toxophore moieties, as
symbolized by the Ys with the red pellets, binds to its antigen on the cell surface.
This antigen has been selected for high expression on the surface of tumor cells,
and low (or no) expression on healthy tissues.
Upon binding, the ADC is internalized and
intracellularly trafficked to the lysosomal compartment.
Here the ADC is cleaved and the active metabolite
(shown in the red circle) is released.
After its release from the antibody,
it has to leave the lysosome
and find its intracellular target.
Target inhibition finally leads to apoptosis.
The focus of my talk today is how ADC cleavage and
the physico-chemical properties of the active metabolite
may contribute to an increased therapeutic window of the ADC.