A Fully Human, Allosteric Monoclonal Antibody That Activates the Insulin Receptor and Improves Glycemic Control

Author:

Bhaskar Vinay1,Goldfine Ira D.2,Bedinger Daniel H.1,Lau Angela1,Kuan Hua F.1,Gross Lisa M.1,Handa Masahisa1,Maddux Betty A.2,Watson Susan R.1,Zhu Shirley1,Narasimha Ajay J.1,Levy Raphael1,Webster Lynn1,Wijesuriya Sujeewa D.1,Liu Naichi1,Wu Xiaorong1,Chemla-Vogel David1,Tran Catarina1,Lee Steve R.1,Wong Steve1,Wilcock Diane1,White Mark L.1,Corbin John A.1

Affiliation:

1. Preclinical Research Department, XOMA (US) LLC, Berkeley, California

2. Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, California

Abstract

Many patients with diabetes mellitus (both type 1 and type 2) require therapy to maintain normal fasting glucose levels. To develop a novel treatment for these individuals, we used phage display technology to target the insulin receptor (INSR) complexed with insulin and identified a high affinity, allosteric, human monoclonal antibody, XMetA, which mimicked the glucoregulatory, but not the mitogenic, actions of insulin. Biophysical studies with cultured cells expressing human INSR demonstrated that XMetA acted allosterically and did not compete with insulin for binding to its receptor. XMetA was found to function as a specific partial agonist of INSR, eliciting tyrosine phosphorylation of INSR but not the IGF-IR. Although this antibody activated metabolic signaling, leading to enhanced glucose uptake, it neither activated Erk nor induced proliferation of cancer cells. In an insulin resistant, insulinopenic model of diabetes, XMetA markedly reduced elevated fasting blood glucose and normalized glucose tolerance. After 6 weeks, significant improvements in HbA1c, dyslipidemia, and other manifestations of diabetes were observed. It is noteworthy that hypoglycemia and weight gain were not observed during these studies. These studies indicate, therefore, that allosteric monoclonal antibodies have the potential to be novel, ultra-long acting, agents for the regulation of hyperglycemia in diabetes.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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