Designing the Furin-Cleavable Linker in Recombinant
Immunotoxins Based on Pseudomonas Exotoxin
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Abstract
Recombinant
immunotoxins (RITs) are fusion proteins that join antibodies
to protein toxins for targeted cell killing. RITs armed with Pseudomonas exotoxin A (PE) are undergoing clinical
trials for the treatment of cancer. The current design of PE-based
RITs joins an antibody fragment to the catalytic domain of PE using
a polypeptide linker that is cleaved by the protease furin. Intracellular
cleavage of native PE by furin is required for cytotoxicity, yet the
PE cleavage site has been shown to be a poor furin substrate. Here
we describe the rational design of more efficiently cleaved furin
linkers in PE-based RITs, and experiments evaluating their effects
on cleavage and cytotoxicity. We found that changes to the furin site
could greatly influence both cleavage and cytotoxicity, but the two
parameters were not directly correlated. Furthermore, the effects
of alterations to the furin linker were not universal. Identical mutations
in the anti-CD22 RIT HA22-LR often displayed different cytotoxicity
from mutations in the anti-mesothelin RIT SS1-LR/GGS, underscoring
the prominent role of the target site in their intoxication pathways.
Combining several beneficial mutations in HA22-LR resulted in a variant
(HA22-LR/FUR) with a remarkably enhanced cleavage rate and improved
cytotoxicity against five B cell lines and similar or enhanced cytotoxicity
in five out of six hairy cell leukemia patient samples. This result
informs the design of protease-sensitive linkers and suggests that
HA22-LR/FUR may be a candidate for further preclinical development