Abstract

Monoclonal antibodies and their fragments have significantly changed the outcome of cancer in the clinic, effectively inhibiting tumor cell proliferation, triggering antibody-dependent immune effector cell activation and complement mediated cell death. Along with a continued expansion in number, diversity, and complexity of validated tumor targets there is an increasing focus on engineering recombinant antibody fragments for lead development. Single-domain antibodies (sdAbs), in particular those engineered from the variable heavy-chain fragment (VHH gene) found in Camelidae heavy-chain antibodies (or IgG2 and IgG3), are the smallest fragments that retain the full antigen-binding capacity of the antibody with advantageous properties as drugs. For similar reasons, growing attention is being paid to the yet smaller variable heavy chain new antigen receptor (VNAR) fragments found in Squalidae. sdAbs have been selected, mostly from immune VHH libraries, to inhibit or modulate enzyme activity, bind soluble factors, internalize cell membrane receptors, or block cytoplasmic targets. This succinct review is a compilation of recent data documenting the application of engineered, recombinant sdAb in the clinic as epitope recognition “modules” to build monomeric, dimeric and multimeric ligands that target, tag and stall solid tumor growth in vivo. Size, affinity, specificity, and the development profile of sdAbs drugs are seemingly consistent with desirable clinical efficacy and safety requirements. But the hepatotoxicity of the tetrameric anti-DR5-VHH drug in patients with pre-existing anti-drug antibodies halted the phase I clinical trial and called for a thorough pre-screening of the immune and poly-specific reactivities of the sdAb leads.

Highlights

  • The success of monoclonal antibodies in cancer therapy is driven by the overall efficacy of targeted therapies

  • Sequence identity of the variable heavy chain new antigen receptor (VNAR) domain with canonical human VH falls as low as 25%, while known camelid heavy-chain only antibody fragment or nanobody (VHH) domains are distinctly close to human VH3 germline sequences and a source of humanized single-domain antibody drugs [10, 14,15,16]

  • This study showed an accumulation of the cysteine-conjugated 7D12 in epidermoid carcinoma cell line (A431) human tumor xenografts in nude mice or high tumor-to-muscle ratio

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The success of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) in cancer therapy is driven by the overall efficacy of targeted therapies. Sequence identity of the VNAR domain with canonical human VH falls as low as 25%, while known camelid VHH domains are distinctly close to human VH3 germline sequences and a source of humanized single-domain antibody (sdAb) drugs [10, 14,15,16]. Services such as Hybribody, a platform from Hybrigenics for the selection and validation of antibodies derived from a fully synthetic humanized sdAb library displayed on phage, can supply humanized sdAbs to specific targets (Table 1, item 3) [17]. GonzalezSapienza et al suggested a plausible mechanism of selection of HcAb producing B-cells that supports the emergence of independently folding, soluble VH and VHH domains [72]

Optimizing sdAb lead candidate selection
Tailoring the sdAb in vivo half-life
Targeting known tumor antigens
Targeting immune checkpoints
Findings
CONCLUDING REMARKS
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