Increased brain penetration and potency of a therapeutic antibody using a monovalent molecular shuttle.

["Niewoehner J", "Bohrmann B", "Collin L", "Urich E", "Sade H", "Maier P", "Rueger P", "Stracke J", "Lau W", "Tissot A"]
Neuron 2014
Open on PubMed

Although biotherapeutics have vast potential for treating brain disorders, their use has been limited due to low exposure across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). We report that by manipulating the binding mode of an antibody fragment to the transferrin receptor (TfR), we have developed a Brain Shuttle module, which can be engineered into a standard therapeutic antibody for successful BBB transcytosis. Brain Shuttle version of an anti-Aβ antibody, which uses a monovalent binding mode to the TfR, increases β-Amyloid target engagement in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease by 55-fold compared to the parent antibody. We provide in vitro and in vivo evidence that the monovalent binding mode facilitates transcellular transport, whereas a bivalent binding mode leads to lysosome sorting. Enhanced target engagement of the Brain Shuttle module translates into a significant improvement in amyloid reduction. These findings have major implications for the development of biologics-based treatment of brain disorders.

1 Figure Extracted
Figures Deep Link
Figures available at source paper (no open-access XML found).
View on publisher site →