Humanization of an anti-lymphocyte function-associated antigen (LFA)-1 monoclonal antibody and reengineering of the humanized antibody for binding to rhesus LFA-1.

1996 
Lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1 (LFA-1; CD11a/CD18) is involved in leukocyte adhesion during cellular interactions essential for immunologic responses and inflammation. mAbs against LFA-1 have been shown to inhibit several T cell-dependent immune functions in vitro and prevent graft failure after bone marrow transplantation in vivo. A murine anti-human CD11a mAb, MHM24, has been humanized and shown to prevent adhesion of human T cells to human keratinocytes and the proliferation of T cells in response to nonautologous leukocytes in the mixed lymphocyte response assay. However, of the nonhuman primate CD11a that we tested, the murine and humanized mAbs cross-reacted only with chimpanzee CD11a. To have a mAb available for preclinical studies in rhesus monkeys, the humanized mAb was reengineered to bind to rhesus CD11a by changing four residues in one of the complementarity-determining regions, CDR-H2, in the variable heavy domain. Cloning and molecular modeling of rhesus CD11a I-domain suggested that the changes from Lys197 and/or Arg189 in human CD11a I-domain to Glu197 and Gln189 in rhesus CD11a I-domain may be the reason that rhesus CD11a does not bind to the murine and humanized mAbs.
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