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During evolution, antibodies have acquired several invaluable properties that are now being exploited for clinical applications. First, they can bind a wide variety of target molecules with exquisite specificity. This property can be used to block the action of ligands such as TNFα in patients with rheumatoid arthritis or the Her-2 receptor in patients with breast cancer. In contrast to this mode of action, antibodies can also imitate ligand binding and stimulate various signaling pathways. Antibodies binding to CD20, for example, can induce apoptotic signals in the malignant cells of patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Additional effector functions are provided by the Fc domains, which can induce cell lysis by binding to complement (CDC) or by binding to Fc receptors on natural killer cells and macrophages (ADCC). An additional binding domain for the neonatal receptor on endothelial cells facilitates their uptake and recycling, enabling antibody therapeutics to remain in the circulation for many weeks.
To optimize the properties of an antibody for a particular indication or for use as a diagnostic, it would be preferable to improve or even delete particular characteristics. For example, to achieve better tumor penetration or a better tumor-to-blood ratio for visualizing metastases, it would be preferable to have a relatively small antibody fragment with a fairly short half-life. On the other hand, the antibody should not be too small in order to avoid a rapid clearance immediately after its application. It would also be very advantageous for certain clinical applications to improve the effector functions.
Recombinant Antibodies for Immunotherapy provides a comprehensive overview of the field of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), a market that has grown tremendously in recent years. Twenty-five articles by experienced and innovative authors cover the isolation of specific human mAbs, humanization, immunogenicity, technologies for improving efficacy, 'arming' mAbs, novel alternative Ab constructs, increasing half-lives, alternative concepts employing non-immunoglobulin scaffolds, novel therapeutic approaches, a market analysis of therapeutic mAbs, and future developments in the field. The concepts and technologies are illustrated by examples of recombinant antibodies being used in the clinic or in development. This book will appeal to both newcomers and experienced scientists in the field, biology and biotechnology students, research and development departments in the pharmaceutical industry, medical researchers, clinicians, and biotechnology investors.
The potential of antibodies as magic bullets for curing disease has excited the imagination of medical researchers ever since this phrase was first coined by Paul Ehrlich about a century ago. Seventy-five years after the publication of Ehrlich's side-chain theory to explain antibody-antigen reactions in 1900, Georges Köhler and César Milstein invented a means of cloning antibodies with defined specificity that paved the way for major advances in cell biological and clinical research. They were awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1984 for this ground-breaking research. In 1986, the first monoclonal antibody, the murine mAb OKT3 for preventing transplant rejection, was approved for clinical use, and although many other murine mAbs were subsequently investigated as therapeutic agents, most of them had a disappointing clinical profile largely due to their immunogenicity. This situation improved dramatically with the advent of techniques to humanize existing mAbs, followed by technologies that sought to imitate the generation of specific antibodies by the immune system in vitro. For example, the expression of antibody fragments in E. coli using bacterial leader sequences and the use of phage display and later ribosome display facilitated the selection of specific human antibodies from extremely large libraries. The process of somatic hypermutation to increase antibody affinity was mimicked by introducing random mutations. Another major advance for obtaining human antibodies was the creation of transgenic mice carrying a large part of the human antibody gene repertoire, which could be used to produce human antibodies by standard hybridoma technology.