Antigenic modulation limits the efficacy of anti-CD20 antibodies: implications for antibody selection

Author:

Beers Stephen A.1,French Ruth R.1,Chan H. T. Claude1,Lim Sean H.1,Jarrett Timothy C.1,Vidal Regina Mora1,Wijayaweera Sahan S.1,Dixon Sandra V.1,Kim Hyungjin1,Cox Kerry L.1,Kerr Jonathan P.1,Johnston David A.2,Johnson Peter W. M.3,Verbeek J. Sjef4,Glennie Martin J.1,Cragg Mark S.1

Affiliation:

1. Tenovus Laboratory, Cancer Sciences Division,

2. Biomedical Imaging Unit, and

3. Cancer Research UK Cancer Centre, Southampton University School of Medicine, General Hospital, Southampton, United Kingdom; and

4. Department of Human Genetics, Leiden University Medical Centre, Leiden, The Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract Rituximab, a monoclonal antibody that targets CD20 on B cells, is now central to the treatment of a variety of malignant and autoimmune disorders. Despite this success, a substantial proportion of B-cell lymphomas are unresponsive or develop resistance, hence more potent anti-CD20 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are continuously being sought. Here we demonstrate that type II (tositumomab-like) anti-CD20 mAbs are 5 times more potent than type I (rituximab-like) reagents in depleting human CD20 Tg B cells, despite both operating exclusively via activatory Fcγ receptor–expressing macrophages. Much of this disparity in performance is attributable to type I mAb-mediated internalization of CD20 by B cells, leading to reduced macrophage recruitment and the degradation of CD20/mAb complexes, shortening mAb half-life. Importantly, human B cells from healthy donors and most cases of chronic lymphatic leukemia and mantle cell lymphoma, showed rapid CD20 internalization that paralleled that seen in the Tg mouse B cells, whereas most follicular lymphoma and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma cells were far more resistant to CD20 loss. We postulate that differences in CD20 modulation may play a central role in determining the relative efficacy of rituximab in treating these diseases and strengthen the case for focusing on type II anti-CD20 mAb in the clinic.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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