Key Points
Anti-CD40 Ab fused to CD40L potentiates efficacy for B cell and DC activation.
Anti-CD40–CD40L stabilizes off-rate and drives CD40 clustering and internalization.
An anti-OX40 Ab–OX40L fusion is also a superagonist.
Abstract
CD40 is a potent activating receptor within the TNFR family expressed on APCs of the immune system, and it regulates many aspects of B and T cell immunity via interaction with CD40 ligand (CD40L; CD154) expressed on the surface of activated T cells. Soluble CD40L and agonistic mAbs directed to CD40 are being explored as adjuvants in therapeutic or vaccination settings. Some anti-CD40 Abs can synergize with soluble monomeric CD40L. We show that direct fusion of CD40L to certain agonistic anti-CD40 Abs confers superagonist properties, reducing the dose required for efficacy, notably greatly increasing total cytokine secretion by human dendritic cells. The tetravalent configuration of anti-CD40–CD40L Abs promotes CD40 cell surface clustering and internalization and is the likely mechanism of increased receptor activation. CD40L fused to either the L or H chain C termini, with or without flexible linkers, were all superagonists with greater potency than CD40L trimer. The increased anti-CD40–CD40L Ab potency was independent of higher order aggregation. Moreover, the anti-CD40–CD40L Ab showed higher potency in vivo in human CD40 transgenic mice compared with the parental anti-CD40 Ab. To broaden the concept of fusing agonistic Ab to natural ligand, we fused OX40L to an agonistic OX40 Ab, and this resulted in dramatically increased efficacy for proliferation and cytokine production of activated human CD4+ T cells as well as releasing the Ab from dependency on cross-linking. This work shows that directly fusing antireceptor Abs to ligand is a useful strategy to dramatically increase agonist potency.
Footnotes
This work was supported by a Roche Collaborative Research Grant to the Baylor Scott & White Research Institute, which supported the initial development of anti-CD40 Abs with enhanced agonist potency, and the Vaccine Research Institute via the ANR-10-LABX-77 grant funded the rest of the work.
V.C.: investigation, methodology, formal analysis, data curation, writing–original draft, review and editing. S.Z.: conceptualization, investigation, methodology, formal analysis, writing–review and editing. M.M.: investigation, methodology. A.B.: planning, writing. Z.W.: investigation, methodology. J.E.: investigation, methodology. B.Z.I.: planning, writing. Y.L.: conceptualization, funding acquisition, supervision, visualization, writing–review and editing. G.Z.: conceptualization, methodology, formal analysis, data curation, funding acquisition, supervision, writing–original draft.
The online version of this article contains supplemental material.
Abbreviations used in this article
- anti-hCD40
- anti-human CD40
- BD
- Becton Dickinson
- CD40L
- CD40 ligand
- CHO-S
- Chinese hamster ovary subline S
- CP
- CP-870, 893
- DC
- dendritic cell
- hIgG1
- human IgG1
- MDDC
- human myeloid-derived DC
- ref
- reference
- RT
- room temperature
- RU
- resonance unit
- sCD40L
- monomeric soluble CD40L
- SEC
- size-exclusion chromatography
- SPR
- surface plasmon resonance
- Received June 11, 2020.
- Accepted August 16, 2021.
- Copyright © 2021 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.
This article is distributed under The American Association of Immunologists, Inc., Reuse Terms and Conditions for Author Choice articles.