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      Affinity and cross-reactivity engineering of CTLA4-Ig to modulate T cell costimulation.

      The Journal of Immunology Author Choice
      Animals, Antigens, CD80, antagonists & inhibitors, biosynthesis, genetics, Antigens, CD86, Arthritis, Rheumatoid, immunology, pathology, therapy, CHO Cells, Cricetinae, Cricetulus, Cross Reactions, Genes, Synthetic, HEK293 Cells, Humans, Immunoconjugates, metabolism, therapeutic use, Jurkat Cells, Lymphocyte Activation, Peptide Library, Plasmids, Protein Binding, T-Lymphocyte Subsets

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          Abstract

          CTLA4-Ig is an Fc fusion protein containing the extracellular domain of CTLA-4, a receptor known to deliver a negative signal to T cells. CTLA4-Ig modulates T cell costimulatory signals by blocking the CD80 and CD86 ligands from binding to CD28, which delivers a positive T cell costimulatory signal. To engineer CTLA4-Ig variants with altered binding affinity to CD80 and CD86, we employed a high-throughput protein engineering method to map the ligand binding surface of CTLA-4. The resulting mutagenesis map identified positions critical for the recognition of each ligand on the three CDR-like loops of CTLA-4, consistent with the published site-directed mutagenesis and x-ray crystal structures of the CTLA-4/CD80 and CTLA-4/CD86 complexes. A number of single amino acid substitutions were identified that equally affected the binding affinity of CTLA4-Ig for both ligands as well as those that differentially affected binding. All of the high-affinity variants showed improved off-rates, with the best one being a 17.5-fold improved off-rate over parental CTLA4-Ig binding to CD86. Allostimulation of human CD4(+) T cells showed that improvement of CD80 and CD86 binding activity augmented inhibition of naive and primed T cell activation. In general, increased affinity for CD86 resulted in more potent inhibition of T cell response than did increased affinity for CD80. Optimization of the affinity balance to CD80 and CD86 to particular disease settings may lead to development of a CTLA4-Ig molecule with improved efficacy and safety profiles.

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