A soluble single-chain T-cell receptor IL-2 fusion protein retains MHC-restricted peptide specificity and IL-2 bioactivity Article

Industry Collaboration

cited authors

  • Card, KF, Price-Schiavi, SA, Liu, B, Thomson, E, Nieves, E, Belmont, H, Builes, J, Jiao, JA, Hernandez, J, Weidanz, J, Sherman, L, Francis, JL, Amirkhosravi, A, Wong, HC

abstract

  • Antibody-based targeted immunotherapy has shown promise as an approach to treat cancer. However, many known tumor-associated antigens are not expressed as integral membrane proteins and cannot be utilized as targets for antibody-based therapeutics. In order to expand the limited target range of antibodies, we have constructed a soluble single-chain T-cell receptor (TCR) fusion protein designated 264scTCR/IL-2. This fusion protein is comprised of a three-domain HLA-A2-restricted TCR specific for a peptide epitope of the human p53 tumor suppressor protein, which is overexpressed in a broad range of human malignancies. The 264scTCR/IL-2 fusion protein has been expressed at high levels in mammalian cells, and milligram quantities have been purified. MHC-restricted antigen-specific binding properties are maintained in the single-chain, three-domain TCR portion of the fusion protein, and the IL-2 portion retains bioactivity similar to that of free recombinant IL-2. Moreover, this fusion protein is capable of conjugating target and effector cells, remains intact in the blood and substantially increases the half life of the IL-2 portion of the molecule. Finally, the 264scTCR/IL-2 fusion protein can be used to stain tumor cells and is capable of reducing lung metastases in an experimental model of metastasis. Thus, TCR-based fusion proteins may provide a novel class of targeted immunotherapeutics for cancer.

Publication Date

  • April 1, 2004

webpage

published in

category

start page

  • 345

end page

  • 357

volume

  • 53

issue

  • 4

WoS Citations

  • 28

WoS References

  • 56