Inhibiting N‐glycan processing increases the antibody binding affinity and effector function of human natural killer cells

Author:

Rodriguez Benavente Maria Carolina1,Hughes Harrison B.1,Kremer Paul G.1,Subedi Ganesh P.2,Barb Adam W.1234ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology University of Georgia Athens Georgia USA

2. Roy J Carver Department of Biochemistry Biophysics and Molecular Biology, Iowa State University Ames Iowa USA

3. Department of Chemistry University of Georgia Athens Georgia USA

4. Complex Carbohydrate Research Center University of Georgia Athens Georgia USA

Abstract

AbstractNovel approaches are required to improve the efficacy of immunotherapies and increase the proportion of patients who experience a benefit. Antibody‐dependent cell‐mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) contributes to the efficacy of many monoclonal antibodies therapies. Natural killer (NK) cells mediate ADCC, though responses are highly variable and depend on prior treatment as well as other factors. Thus, strategies to increase NK cell activity are expected to improve multiple therapies. Both cytokine treatment and NK cell receptor engineering are being explored to increase ADCC. Post‐translational modifications, including glycosylation, are widely recognized as mediators of cellular processes but minimally explored as an alternative strategy to increase ADCC. We evaluated the impact of treatment with kifunensine, an inhibitor of asparagine‐linked (N‐)glycan processing, on ADCC using primary and cultured human NK cells. We also probed affinity using binding assays and CD16a structure with nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Treating primary human NK cells and cultured YTS‐CD16a cells with kifunensine doubled ADCC in a CD16a‐dependent manner. Kifunensine treatment also increased the antibody‐binding affinity of CD16a on the NK cell surface. Structural interrogation identified a single CD16a region, proximal to the N162 glycan and the antibody‐binding interface, perturbed by the N‐glycan composition. The observed increase in NK cell activity following kifunensine treatment synergized with afucosylated antibodies, further increasing ADCC by an additional 33%. These results demonstrate native N‐glycan processing is an important factor that limits NK cell ADCC. Furthermore, optimal antibody and CD16a glycoforms are defined that provide the greatest ADCC activity.

Funder

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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