ENHANCED PRODUCTION OF IMMUNOGLOBULINS
20180230238 ยท 2018-08-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
A01K2217/07
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A01K67/0275
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A01K2267/01
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A01K2217/072
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
The present invention provides cells, transgenic animals, including transgenic mammals and particularly rodents, comprising engineered immunoglobulin alleles. Mutations in the alleles are designed to compromise allelic exclusion and have potential to be exploited for the isolation of bispecific antibodies.
Claims
1. A genetically modified animal with an engineered immunoglobulin heavy or light chain locus wherein a DNA cassette is inserted to select for productive V(D)J rearrangement, but prevents expression of functional immunoglobulin chain from the engineered immunoglobulin heavy or light chain locus.
2. The genetically modified animal of claim 1, wherein changes to one or more of the animal's immunoglobulin heavy or light chain genes allow for inducible inactivation and/or activation of expression of constant region-encoding parts of the genes.
3. An immunoglobulin light chain gene in the genetically modified animal of claim 1, wherein part or all of one or more constant region exons are placed in inverted reading frame orientation relative to rearranged VJ gene segments in the same immunoglobulin light chain gene.
4. An immunoglobulin protein expressed from the immunoglobulin gene of claim 3.
5. An immunoglobulin light chain gene in the genetically modified animal of claim 1, wherein a DNA cassette is inserted to prevent expression of constant region exons from rearranged VJ gene segments on the same chromosome.
6. An immunoglobulin protein expressed from the immunoglobulin gene of claim 5.
7. An immunoglobulin heavy chain gene in the animal of claim 1, wherein part or all of one or more constant region exons are placed in inverted reading frame orientation relative to rearranged V(D)J gene segments in the same immunoglobulin heavy chain gene.
8. An immunoglobulin protein expressed from the immunoglobulin gene of claim 7.
9. An immunoglobulin heavy chain gene in the animal of claim 1, wherein a DNA cassette is inserted to prevent expression of constant region exons from rearranged V(D)J gene segments on the same chromosome.
10. An immunoglobulin protein expressed from the immunoglobulin gene of claim 9.
11. Primary B cells, immortalized B cells or hybridomas expressing two or more functional variable heavy chain domains and/or two or more functional variable light chain domains derived from the genetically modified animal of claim 1.
12. Part of all of a heavy chain or light chain gene derived from the cells of claim 11.
13. The genetically modified animal of claim 1, that when immunized with one antigen and then with a second, different antigen generates B lymphocytes each capable of sequentially expressing or co-expressing two or more different antigen receptors and/or a bispecific antigen receptor.
14. The genetically modified animal of claim 13, wherein changes to one or more of the animal's immunoglobulin heavy or light chain genes allow for inducible inactivation and/or activation of expression of constant region-encoding parts of the genes.
15. An immunoglobulin light chain gene in the genetically modified animal of claim 13, wherein part or all of one or more constant region exons are placed in inverted reading frame orientation relative to rearranged VJ gene segments in the same immunoglobulin light chain gene.
16. An immunoglobulin protein expressed from an immunoglobulin gene of claim 15.
17. An immunoglobulin light chain gene in the genetically modified animal of claim 13, wherein a DNA cassette is inserted to prevent expression of constant region exons from rearranged VJ gene segments on the same chromosome.
18. An immunoglobulin protein expressed from an immunoglobulin gene of claim 17.
19. An immunoglobulin heavy chain gene in the animal of claim 13, wherein part or all of one or more constant region exons are placed in inverted reading frame orientation relative to rearranged V(D)J gene segments in the same immunoglobulin heavy chain gene.
20. An immunoglobulin protein expressed from an immunoglobulin gene of claim 19.
21. An immunoglobulin heavy chain gene in the animal of claim 13, wherein a DNA cassette is inserted to prevent expression of constant region exons from rearranged V(D)J gene segments on the same chromosome.
22. An immunoglobulin protein expressed from an immunoglobulin gene of claim 19.
23. Primary B cells, immortalized B cells or hybridomas expressing two or more functional variable heavy chain domains and/or two or more functional variable light chain domains derived from the genetically modified animal of claim 13.
24. Part or whole of a heavy or light chain derived from the cells of claim 23.
25. The genetically modified animal of claim 1, wherein two rearranged immunoglobulin heavy chain genes in individual B cells in the animal express gene products that do not homodimerize efficiently with each other.
26. B cells of the genetically modified animal of claim 25, wherein heterodimerization of the two gene products is enabled by a developmental or differentiation event, or can be induced.
27. Part or whole of a heavy or light chain derived from the cells of claim 26.
28. B cells of the genetically modified animal of claim 25, wherein homodimerization of the two gene products does not occur, or is disfavored relative to heterodimerization.
29. Part or all of a heavy chain or light chain gene derived from the cells of claim 28.
30. The genetically modified animal of claim 25, wherein changes to one or more of the animal's immunoglobulin heavy or light chain genes allow for inducible inactivation and/or activation of expression of constant region-encoding parts of the genes.
31. An immunoglobulin light chain gene in the genetically modified animal of claim 25, wherein part or all of one or more constant region exons are placed in inverted reading frame orientation relative to rearranged VJ gene segments in the same immunoglobulin light chain gene.
32. An immunoglobulin protein expressed from an immunoglobulin gene of claim 31.
33. An immunoglobulin light chain gene in the genetically modified animal of claim 25, wherein a DNA cassette is inserted to prevent expression of constant region exons from rearranged VJ gene segments on the same chromosome.
34. An immunoglobulin protein expressed from an immunoglobulin gene of claim 33.
35. An immunoglobulin heavy chain gene in the animal of claim 25, wherein part or all of one or more constant region exons are placed in inverted reading frame orientation relative to rearranged V(D)J gene segments in the same immunoglobulin heavy chain gene.
36. An immunoglobulin protein expressed from an immunoglobulin gene of claim 35.
37. An immunoglobulin heavy chain gene in the animal of claim 25, wherein a DNA cassette is inserted to prevent expression of constant region exons from rearranged V(D)J gene segments on the same chromosome.
38. An immunoglobulin protein expressed from an immunoglobulin gene of claim 37.
39. Primary B cells, immortalized B cells or hybridomas expressing two or more functional variable heavy chain domains and/or two or more functional variable light chain domains derived from the genetically modified animal of claim 25.
40. A heavy or light chain protein derived from the cells of claim 39.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029] Heavy Chain Allele 301, e.g., comprises the following elements: 5-VH (303)-DH (304)-JH (305)-Heavy chain intronic enhancer (306)-Site specific recombination site-1 (314)-Site specific recombination site-2 (307)-CD79A (311)-Heavy chain constant region exons inverted (309)-Site specific recombination site-2 (308)-Site specific recombination site-1 (315)-Heterdimerizer-1 (316)-3; where VH, DH, JH are chimeric genes comprising human coding regions and mouse introns and mouse regulatory sequences as described in US Pub. No. 2013/0219535 to Wabl and Killeen and where the heavy chain enhancer and heavy chain constant region genes comprise a sequence, such as LOCUS: NG_005838 (1..180,971); Site specific recombination site-1 is a site for any site-specific recombinase other than Cre or Flp, e.g., a ROX site for Dre recombinase or an attB/attP site for phiC31 integrase (see, e.g., Anastassiadis K, et al., Disease Models and Mechanisms, 2:508-515 (2009), and Groth A C, et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA., 97:5995-6000 (2000)); Site specific recombination site-2 is, e.g., a loxP site (see, e.g., Oberdoerffer P, et al., Nucleic Acids Res 31:e140 (2003)); CD79A hybrid exon that comprises a splice acceptor, a linker, PTV1-2A peptide, the mouse CD79A open reading frame of the mature protein and the 3 untranslated region [SEQ ID No. 1]; Heterodimerizer-1, comprising, a sequence such as, e.g., Mus musculus jun proto-oncogene LOCUS: NM_010591 or the mutant C-gamma1 constant region described herein at ? [00099].
[0030] Heavy Chain Allele 302 comprises, e.g., the following elements: 5-VH (303)-DH (304)-JH (305)-Heavy Chain Intronic Enhancer (306)-Site specific recombination site-1 (314)-Site specific recombination site-2 (307)-Heavy chain constant region mu (310)-Heavy chain constant region gamma1 (312) and 3UTR with IRES-FLP element (313)-CD79A (inverted 311)-Site specific recombination site-2 (308)-Site specific recombination site 1 (315)-heterdimerizer-2 (317)-3; where VH, DH, JH are chimeric genes regulatory sequences as described in US Pub. No. 2013/0219535 to Wabl and Killeen and where the heavy chain enhancer and heavy chain constant region exons and 3UTR comprise a sequence such as LOCUS: NG_005838 (1..180,971); CD79A hybrid exon that comprises a splice acceptor, a linker, PTV1-2A peptide, the mouse CD79A open reading frame of the mature protein and the 3 untranslated region such as [SEQ ID No. 1]; Site specific recombination site-1 is a site for any site specific recombinase other than Cre or Flp, e.g., a ROX site for Dre recombinase or an attB/attP site for phiC31 integrase (see, e.g., Anastassiadis K, et al. Disease Models and Mechanisms 2:508-515 (2009), and Groth A C, et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 97:5995-6000 (2000)); Site specific recombination site-2 is, e.g., a loxP site (see, e.g., Oberdoerffer P, et al. Nucleic Acids Res 31:e140 (2003)); Heterodimerizer-1, comprising a sequence such as, e.g., Mus musculus FBJ osteosarcoma oncogene (Fos) LOCUS: NM_010591 or the mutant C-gamma1 constant region described herein [00099].
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034] Light Chain Allele 601 comprises, e.g., the following elements: 5-VK-JK-K intron enhancer-loxP site-BAFF-R-C-Kappa inverted-loxP site-3; where VK and JK are chimeric genes comprising human coding regions and mouse introns and mouse regulatory sequences as described in US Pub. No. 2013/0219535 to Wabl and Killeen and comprising sequences for a light chain enhancer and light chain constant region gene, such as e.g., sequence NC_000072.6 (67555636..70726754); and a BAFF-R hybrid exon comprising a splice acceptor, a linker, a PTV1-2A peptide, the mouse Tnfrsf13c open reading frame, and a 3 untranslated region such as [SEQ ID No. 2].
[0035] Light Chain Allele 602 comprises, e.g., the following elements: 5-VK-JK-K intron enhancer-loxP site-C-Kappa inverted-BAFF-R-loxP site-3; where VK and JK are chimeric genes consisting of human coding regions and mouse introns and regulatory sequences as described in US Pub. No. 2013/0219535 to Wabl and Killeen and comprising sequences for a light chain enhancer and light chain constant region gene, e.g., NC_000072.6 (67555636..70726754); and a BAFF-R hybrid exon comprising a splice acceptor, a linker, a PTV1-2A peptide, the mouse Tnfrsf13c open reading frame, and a 3 untranslated region such as [SEQ ID No. 2].
[0036]
DEFINITIONS
[0037] The terms used herein are intended to have the plain and ordinary meaning as understood by those of ordinary skill in the art. The following definitions are intended to aid the reader in understanding the present invention, but are not intended to vary or otherwise limit the meaning of such terms unless specifically indicated.
[0038] The term transgene is used herein to describe genetic material which has been or is about to be artificially inserted into the genome of a cell, and particularly a cell of a vertebrate host animal.
[0039] By transgenic animal it is meant a non-human animal, usually a mammal, such as a rodent, particularly a mouse or a rat though other mammals are envisioned as well, having an exogenous nucleic acid sequence present as a chromosomal or extrachromosomal element in a portion of its cells or stably integrated into its germ line DNA (i.e., in the genomic sequence of most or all of its cells).
[0040] A vector includes plasmids and viruses and any DNA or RNA molecule, whether self-replicating or not, which can be used to transform or transfect a cell.
[0041] Cell surface refers to the plasma membrane of the cell, i.e., that part of the cell most directly exposed to extracellular spaces and available for contact both with cells and proteins in the extracellular (including intercellular) space.
[0042] A bispecific antibody is one that comprises two physically separable antigen-binding surfaces which differ from one another in their antigen specificity. Normal IgG antibodies have two physically separable antigen-binding surfaces that are structurally identical and thus have the same antigen specificity. A preferred version of a bispecific antibody is one that resembles a normal IgG antibody molecule with two physically separable antigen-binding surfaces, but instead of these surfaces being structurally identical they differ from each other. Both of these surfaces may be comprised of the same heavy chain protein but differ from each other in the light chain proteins they comprise. Alternatively, the two surfaces may be comprised of the same light chain protein but differ from each other in the heavy chain proteins they comprise.
[0043] Allelic exclusion refers to the fact that the vast majority of B cells in vertebrate species such as rodents or humans carry a productively rearranged heavy chain gene on only one of two homologous autosomes. Allelic exclusion at light chain loci would refer to an analogous scenario. In a more general sense, allelic exclusion applies whenever productive V(D)J rearrangement at any heavy or light chain locus inhibits further rearrangement of other heavy or light chain V(D)J gene segments, respectively, no matter where their chromosomal location. For example, if two or more sets of heavy chain VDJ linkage groups are inserted in the same chromosome, productive rearrangement at one of the heavy chain linkage groups prevents further V(D)J rearrangement at any of the other heavy chain linkage groups. The same would apply to light chain linkage groups. In principle this type of allelic exclusion would occur by the same mechanism as conventional allelic exclusion
[0044] Allelic inclusion refers to a loss of allelic exclusion, and thus to an increased representation of B cells with productive V(D)J rearrangements on both alleles of the heavy and/or light chain loci.
[0045] As used herein, productive rearrangement is a VDJ or VJ rearrangement that is in frame with the constant domain exon(s) and enables translation of a full length heavy or light chain protein containing variable and constant region domains. The productive VDJ or VJ rearrangement can also be in frame with a heterologous exon that replaces the constant domain exon(s).
[0046] A genomic locale is any region of the genome, preferably a gene, which is associated with one particular functional aspect. The term locale is used here to refer to parts of immunoglobulin loci. For example, locale can refer to that part of an immunoglobulin locus that primarily contains one kind of gene segment, such as a V gene segment locale, or a D gene segment locale, or a J gene segment locale, or more broadly, the variable locale, which includes all of the V, D and J gene segments. The constant region locale is that part of an immunoglobulin locus that contains constant region exons.
[0047] As used herein, homodimer refers to an IgG or other isotype antibody comprising two identical heavy (H) chains, where each of the H chains is paired with an identical light (L) chain. As used herein, heterodimer refers to an IgG or the isotype antibody comprising two heavy (H) chains, where the H chains may or may not be identical, and where each of the H chains is paired with a light (L) chain, where each of the L chains may or may not be identical; however in a heterodimer, if the H chains are identical, the L chains will be different from one another, and if the L chains are identical, the H chains will be different from one another.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0048] The practice of the techniques described herein may employ, unless otherwise indicated, conventional techniques and descriptions of organic chemistry, polymer technology, molecular biology (including recombinant techniques), cell biology, biochemistry, and sequencing technology, which are within the skill of those who practice in the art. Such conventional techniques include polymer array synthesis, hybridization and ligation of polynucleotides, and detection of hybridization using a label. Specific illustrations of suitable techniques can be had by reference to the examples herein. However, other equivalent conventional procedures can, of course, also be used. Such conventional techniques and descriptions can be found in standard laboratory manuals such as Green, et al., Eds. (1999) Genome Analysis: A Laboratory Manual Series (Vols. I-IV); Weiner, Gabriel, Stephens, Eds. (2007), Genetic Variation: A Laboratory Manual; Dieffenbach, Dveksler, Eds. (2003), PCR Primer: A Laboratory Manual; Bowtell and Sambrook (2003), Condensed Protocols from Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual; and Sambrook and Russell (2002), Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual (all from Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press); Stryer, L. (1995) Biochemistry (4th Ed.) W.H. Freeman, New York N.Y.; Lehninger, Principles of Biochemistry 3.sup.rd Ed., W. H. Freeman Pub., New York, N.Y.; and Berg et al. (2002) Biochemistry, 5.sup.th Ed., W.H. Freeman Pub., New York, N.Y.; Nagy, et al., Eds. (2003) Manipulating the Mouse Embryo: A Laboratory Manual (3.sup.rd Ed.) Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., all of which are herein incorporated in their entirety by reference for all purposes.
[0049] Note that as used herein and in the appended claims, the singular forms a, an, and the include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Thus, for example, reference to an immunoglobulin refers to one or more such immunoglobulins, and reference to the method includes reference to equivalent steps and methods known to those skilled in the art, and so forth.
[0050] Unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs. All publications mentioned herein are incorporated by reference for the purpose of describing and disclosing devices, formulations and methodologies that may be used in connection with the presently described invention.
[0051] Where a range of values is provided, it is understood that each intervening value, between the upper and lower limit of that range and any other stated or intervening value in that stated range is encompassed within the invention. The upper and lower limits of these smaller ranges may independently be included and are also encompassed within the invention, subject to any specifically excluded limit in the stated range. Where the stated range includes one or both of the limits, ranges excluding either both of those included limits are also included in the invention.
[0052] In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth to provide a more thorough understanding of the present invention. However, it will be apparent to one of skill in the art that the present invention may be practiced without one or more of these specific details. In other instances, features and procedures well known to those skilled in the art have not been described in order to avoid obscuring the invention.
The Invention in General
[0053] One embodiment of the invention, a transgenic animal (typically a mammal, and more typically a rodent) carries engineered versions of its heavy chain locus on both chromosomes. Both engineered heavy chain alleles are capable of undergoing V(D)J rearrangement to create heavy chain diversity during B cell development. One of the engineered heavy chain alleles is also capable of expressing a full-length transmembrane heavy chain protein that can generate a pre-BCR signal. The other engineered heavy chain allele is disabled in this regard.
[0054] The engineered heavy chain alleles in the embodiment of the invention just summarized are comprised of mutations in the part of the gene that encodes the constant domain of the heavy chain molecules.
[0055] In a further embodiment of the invention, the two engineered heavy chain alleles carry recognition sequences (wild-type or mutated) for one or more site-specific recombinases such as Cre or Flp. The sites are placed in such a way that site-specific recombination would change the functionality of the constant domain-encoding part of the gene. That is, if the allele is capable of expressing a fully functional heavy chain protein, then site-specific recombination would deprive the allele of this property. Similarly, if the allele is incapable of expressing a fully functional heavy chain protein, then site-specific recombination would confer this property on the allele.
[0056] The site-specific recombinase-mediated changes just summarized may be accomplished either by deleting or inverting pieces of DNA in the constant domain-encoding part of the two homologous heavy chain alleles.
[0057] In a preferred embodiment of the invention, site-specific recombinase-dependent loss of constant domain full functionality on one chromosome would be accompanied by synchronous, or near synchronous, gain of full functionality on the other chromosome.
[0058] In a further preferred embodiment of the invention, the transgenic animals just described are immunized with an antigen allowing for clonal expansion of B cells expressing antibody molecules specific for the antigen. Because of the heavy chain gene mutations the B cells carry, the antibodies specific for this antigen are comprised of heavy chains encoded by rearranged versions of only one of the two heavy chain alleles; namely, the allele defined by full functionality in its constant domain-encoding part. The other allele lacks such functionality and because of this does not encode heavy chains capable of participating in the signaling process necessary for antigen-specific clonal expansion.
[0059] In a variation of the embodiment just mentioned, repeated immunizations are employed to maximize clonal expansion and antigen-specific antibody diversity.
[0060] After the immunization regimen has been completed, site-specific recombination is induced resulting in a switch of heavy chain constant domain functionality from one allele to the other. As a result of this switch, the allele encoding the heavy chains in antibodies specific for the antigen used in the immunization is deprived of constant domain full functionality. At the same time, or near to it, the allele that was previously deprived of constant domain full functionality now gains this functionality. Through this switch in functionality, cells that participated in clonal expansion in response to the antigen used in the immunization regimen gain expression of new heavy chain proteins.
[0061] Subsequent to the induced site-specific recombinase-dependent switch just describedand in a further embodiment of the inventionthe animals are immunized with a second antigen.
[0062] Clonal expansion in response to the second antigen depends on antibodies comprised of heavy chains encoded by the second allele, i.e., the one that gained constant domain functionality due to the induced site-specific recombinase event.
[0063] A second immunization may be repeated to maximize clonal expansion and antigen-specific antibody diversity.
[0064] In another embodiment of the invention, clonally expanded cells expressing antibodies specific for the second antigen are those that had previously been involved in clonal expansion in response to the first antigen. During the second clonal expansion, these cells do not express the heavy chain protein that conferred specificity for the first antigen but instead express a different heavy chain protein. The heavy chain protein they express that confers specificity for the second antigen is encoded by the heavy chain allele that gained constant domain full functionality as a consequence of the induced site-specific recombination event.
[0065] After the second immunization regimen has been completed, hybridoma or other techniques are employed to isolate antigen-specific B cells.
[0066] In one embodiment of the invention, B cells specific for the second antigen are isolated using hybridoma or other technology. In an alternative embodiment of the invention, a second site-specific recombinase event is induced before isolation of B cells specific for the first antigen using hybridoma or other technology.
[0067] In a further embodiment of the invention, B cells, hybridomas or other derivatives specific for one of the two antigens are modified by site-specific recombination, or another means. This modification confers constant domain full functionality on the allele they carry that previously lacked full functionality. Through this modification it is possible to assess the capacity of the cells to express two types of antibody molecules: one specific for the antigen used in the first immunization regimen, and the other specific for the antigen used in the second immunization regimen.
[0068] In another embodiment of the invention, pairs of proteins or protein domains, termed heterodimerizers, are used to induce heterodimerization and suppress homodimerization of the antigen binding domains encoded by the two heavy chain alleles of the bispecific B cells, hybridomas or other derivatives. One member of each heterodimerizer pair is encoded by each heavy chain allele and replaces the normal constant domains of the antibody heavy chain. The heterodimerizers in one embodiment are pairs of IgG dimerization domains that are each mutated so that they preferentially form heterodimers when present in a population of two different IgG heavy chains, and in another embodiment are non-immunoglobulin proteins such as c-Fos and c-Jun, which physiologically heterodimerize to form the AP-1 transcription factor, or other leucine zipper-type proteins or protein domains.
[0069] In yet a further embodiment of the invention, rather than allelic exclusion being compromised at the heavy chain locus, allelic exclusion is instead compromised at a light chain locus. In this version of the invention, heavy chain allelic exclusion would be normal. The light chain allelic inclusion version of the invention is conceptually similar to that of the heavy chain allelic inclusion version, featuring analogous mutations in the constant domain-encoding part of the relevant homologous light chain genes. Light chain allelic inclusion is exploited using a similar double immunization scheme combined with an appropriately staged inducible site-specific recombination step. Bispecific B cells are identified and/or isolated in a similar fashion to what has been described for the heavy chain allelic inclusion version of the invention. This light chain allelic inclusion version of the invention is expected to yield bispecific antibodies each comprised of two light chain proteins and one heavy chain protein, whereas the heavy chain allelic inclusion version would yield bispecific antibodies each comprised of one light chain protein and two heavy chains.
Transgenic Cell Libraries
[0070] The transgenic cells of the invention may also be used to produce expression libraries, preferably low complexity libraries, for identification of antibodies of interest on the surface of plasma cells. The present invention thus also includes antibody libraries produced using the cell technologies of the invention for identification of antigen-specific antibodies expressed on plasma cells.
Transgenic Animals
[0071] In specific aspects of the invention, the invention provides transgenic animals carrying engineered immunoglobulin heavy chain or light genes.
[0072] In a preferred aspect, the transgenic animals of the invention further comprise human immunoglobulin regions. For example, numerous methods have been developed for replacing endogenous mouse immunoglobulin regions with human immunoglobulin sequences to create partially- or fully-human antibodies for drug discovery purposes. Examples of such mice include those described in, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,145,056; 7,064,244; 7,041,871; 6,673,986; 6,596,541; 6,570,061; 6,162,963; 6,130,364; 6,091,001; 6,023,010; 5,593,598; 5,877,397; 5,874,299; 5,814,318; 5,789,650; 5,661,016; 5,612,205; and 5,591,669.
[0073] In a particularly preferred aspect, the transgenic animals of the invention comprise chimeric immunoglobulin segments as described in co-pending application US Pub. No. 2013/0219535 by Wabl and Killeen. Such transgenic animals have a genome comprising an introduced partially human immunoglobulin region, where the introduced region comprising human variable region coding sequences and non-coding variable sequences based on the endogenous genome of the non-human vertebrate. Preferably, the transgenic cells and animals of the invention have genomes in which part or all of the endogenous immunoglobulin region is removed.
Use in Antibody Production
[0074] Culturing cells in vitro has been the basis of the production of numerous therapeutic biotechnology products, and involves the production of protein products in cells and release into the support medium. The quantity and quality of protein production over time from the cells growing in culture depends on a number of factors, such as, for example, cell density, cell cycle phase, cellular biosynthesis rates of the proteins, condition of the medium used to support cell viability and growth, and the longevity of the cells in culture. (See, for example, Fresney, Culture of Animal Cells, Wiley, Blackwell (2010); and Cell Culture Technology for Pharmaceutical and Cell-Based Therapies, Ozturk and Ha, Eds., CRC Press, (2006).)
[0075] The invention provides a source of B cells derived from immunization schemes in which animals are first provided with one antigen and then later with another antigen. In both cases, multiple immunizations may be employed to increase antigen-specific antibody titers in individual animals. An inducible site-specific recombination step would be included between the two immunization series. Subsequent to the second immunization scheme, B cells are isolated and cultured or used to create hybridomas, or used as a source of RNA for cloning immunoglobulin chain genes. The B cells or the antibody molecules they contain are tested for bispecific antigen-binding properties. In the case of hybridomas, this is accomplished by screening hybridomas for specificity for one kind of antigen, and then analyzing them for whether they carry additional rearranged immunoglobulin chain genes that confer specificity for a second kind of antigen, i.e., they have latent or expressed bi-specificity.
EXAMPLES
[0076] The following examples are put forth so as to provide those of ordinary skill in the art with a complete disclosure and description of how to make and use the present invention, and are not intended to limit the scope of what the inventors regard as their invention, nor are they intended to represent or imply that the experiments below are all of or the only experiments performed. It will be appreciated by persons skilled in the art that numerous variations and/or modifications may be made to the invention as shown in the specific embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention as broadly described. The present embodiments are, therefore, to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive.
[0077] Efforts have been made to ensure accuracy with respect to terms and numbers used (e.g., vectors, amounts, temperature, etc.) but some experimental errors and deviations should be accounted for. Unless indicated otherwise, parts are parts by weight, molecular weight is weight average molecular weight, temperature is in degrees centigrade, and pressure is at or near atmospheric.
Example 1: Engineered Heavy Chain Alleles Permissive for the Isolation of Bispecific Antibodies Featuring a Genetic Modification to Select for Allelic Inclusion
[0078] Mice are generated carrying heavy chain alleles that differ from one another in their constant domain-encoding locales. One of the alleles is capable of expressing a full length heavy chain protein after a productive V(D)J rearrangement. The other allele lacks this functionality.
[0079] Both alleles contain recognition sequences for two different site-specific recombinases, positioned within the constant domain-encoding locale. Site-specific recombination at one of these sites causes an inversion of a piece of DNA in both alleles, and as a consequence of this inversion, the constant domain functionality in the alleles is changed. A subsequent site-specific recombination in bispecific B cells by a different recombinase causes replacement of the normal constant domains of the immunoglobulin heavy chains with heterodimerizers, pairs of proteins or protein domains that favor heterodimerization over homodimerization of the two different heavy chains produced by these B cells. Also included are elements designed to improve the efficiency with which the desired kind of bispecific B cells are isolated.
[0080] Site-specific recombination confers the capacity to express a full-length heavy chain protein on the allele that initially lacked this capacity. By contrast, site-specific recombination removes this capacity from the allele that initially had it.
[0081] One version of this kind of paired alleles is depicted in
[0082] V(D)J rearrangement of the alleles depicted in
[0083] Element 311 is designed to provide selection for in-frame rearrangements on the allele (301) that is not capable of expressing a full-length heavy chain protein. For example, one embodiment of this element is one that begins with a sequence encoding a self-cleaving (2A) peptide fused in-frame with an open reading frame for a protein that is crucial for pre-BCR and BCR signaling, such as the CD79a protein (R. Pelanda, et al. [2002] Journal of Immunology 169:865-872). If a mouse is employed that is homozygous for a loss-of-function mutation in the endogenous gene encoding its CD79a protein, then the only source of this protein in B cells is the 311 element. The 2A self-cleaving peptide sequence is placed such that it would be in-frame with a productively rearranged VDJ exon. If the 301 allele fails to rearrange productively, no CD79a protein is expressed and B cell development is blocked. B cells are only capable of completing development if they undergo an in-frame rearrangement and thereby gain expression of CD79a.
[0084] Crucially, the selection scheme just outlined rescues CD79a protein expression, but B cells only develop if they also undergo a productive rearrangement on their 302 allele and thereby gain expression of a full-length heavy chain protein.
[0085] B cell receptor signaling during a response to an antigen also requires CD79a. A deficiency of CD79a therefore blocks signaling not only in the bone marrow but also in mature B cells. Thus, the 311 element also provides selection for B cells to continue to retain productive rearrangements on both of their alleles so that normal homeostasis is preserved and so that B cells are capable of participating in immune responses.
[0086] Peripheral B cells that develop in the mice carrying the alleles shown in
[0087] Immunization of mice carrying the alleles shown in
[0088] Transgenic mouse systems exist, or are readily engineered, to permit inducible expression of particular site-specific recombinases in multiple cell types including B lymphocytes. Immunized mice that have made demonstrable antibody responses to the antigen used in the immunization are caused to express the relevant site-specific recombinase, obviously requiring that the mice carry in them the necessary inducible site-specific recombinase system.
[0089] Induced site-specific recombination at the rearranged versions of the germline alleles depicted in
[0090] Immunization of mice carrying the arrangement of alleles depicted in
[0091] B cells specific for the antigen used in the second immunization include some B cells that have not undergone clonal expansion in response to the first antigen. Such B cells are not an obvious source for bispecific antibodies capable of recognizing the antigens used in the two immunizations. However, some fraction of the B cells specific for the second antigen have been involved in clonal expansion in response to the first antigen. These B cells are an obvious source for bispecific antibodies: with one of their rearranged heavy chain genes they produce antibodies that have specificity for one of the two antigens, while with their other rearranged heavy chain gene they produce antibodies specific for the other antigen. In both cases, individual B cells would use one light chain protein to pair with both heavy chain proteins.
[0092] The 312 element is a set of IgG constant domain-encoding exons with an associated upstream switch recombination sequence. The presence of this element in the 302 allele confers on the allele the capacity to undergo class switch recombination from IgM to IgG. A switch to IgG isotype usage facilitates the isolation of B cells expressing antibodies with high affinity for an antigen. It also permits a marking system to be included in the allele such as is represented by the element labeled as 313.
[0093] A possible embodiment of element 313 is for this to be comprised of an IRES-Flp element. Cells that undergo an IgM to IgG class switch recombination gain expression of the Flp recombinase through the IRES-Flp 313 element placed within the 3 untranslated region of the last IgG exon.
[0094] Systems exist, or can be readily engineered, that allow for cells to gain essentially irreversible expression of a reporter due to Flp recombination. For example, if the mouse carrying the 301 and 302 alleles also carries such a system (e.g., a Rosa26-FRT-Stop-FRT-YFP reporter transgene), then B cells that have undergone class switch recombination to IgG on the 302 allele gain Flp expression and thereby irreversibly gain reporter (e.g., YFP) expression.
[0095] Marking cells that have undergone class switch recombination during an immunization permits the isolation of these cells prior to, or after, the induced site-specific recombination step and/or a second immunization step. If the cells are isolated prior to the second immunization step, they may be adoptively transferred into other mice, which could then subsequently be immunized. If the cells are isolated after the second immunization step, their reporter phenotype may be exploited to facilitate the isolation of bispecific cells.
[0096]
[0097] Hybridoma or other cloning technology may be exploited to recover B cells with specificity for the second immunizing antigen. These B cells are then analyzed to determine whether they also carry a second rearranged heavy chain gene that confers specificity for the second antigen.
[0098] Bispecific B cells have different VDJ rearrangements on each heavy chain allele to enable recognition of two antigens. To form a bispecific antibody the two different heavy chains in the cell should form a heterodimer which then binds a common light chain. However, homodimer formation is also possible and this would result in a monospecific antibody. The heavy chain alleles in this example contain exons encoding heterodimerizer elements (416 and 417), which are proteins or protein domains that favor heterodimer over homodimer formation. A possible embodiment of element 416 is c-Jun and of 417 is c-Fos. Site-specific recombination involving the recognition sequences 414 and 415 is used to remove DNA elements upstream of elements 416 and 417. Transcripts now have the structure 5-VDJ-c-Jun-3 from allele 401 and 5-VDJ-c-Fos-3 from allele 402 and encode fusion proteins that preferentially form heterodimers.
[0099] Another possible embodiment of elements 416 and 417 is modification of the IgG1 C.sub.H3 dimerization domains on both alleles so that the encoded heavy chains are less compatible for homodimerization but complementary to each other for heterodimerization. The fourth exons of both IgG1 alleles, which encode the C.sub.H3 domains, are mutated such that they promote the formation of heavy chain heterodimers and suppress homodimerization. In preferred methods, the mutations are D276K, E233K, and Q234K on one heavy chain allele; and K286D, K269D, and T247D on the other heavy chain allele (amino acid numbering starts at the first codon of C.sub.H1). The mutations at similar positions in the human IgG1 heavy chain have been shown to promote heterodimerization and the secretion of bispecific antibodies in cell lines (see, e.g., Gunasekaran, et al., Journal of Biological Chemistry 285:19637-19646 (2010)).
Example 2: Engineered Light Chain Alleles Permissive for the Isolation of Bispecific Antibodies Featuring a Genetic Modification to Select for Allelic Inclusion
[0100] The same general principles used to favor allelic inclusion of the heavy chain locus in Example 1 are utilized here to favor allelic inclusion of the light chain locus.
[0101] Mice are generated carrying light chain alleles that differ from one another in their constant domain-encoding locales. One of the alleles is capable of expressing a full length light chain protein after a productive VJ rearrangement. The other allele lacks this functionality.
[0102] Both alleles contain recognition sequences for one or more site-specific recombinases positioned within the constant domain-encoding locale. Site-specific recombination at these sites causes an inversion of a piece of DNA in both alleles, and as a consequence of this inversion, the constant domain functionality in the alleles is changed. Also included are elements designed to improve the efficiency with which the desired kind of bispecific B cells is isolated.
[0103] Site-specific recombination confers the capacity to express a full-length light chain protein on the allele that initially lacked this capacity. By contrast, site-specific recombination removes this capacity from the allele that initially had it.
[0104] One version of this kind of paired alleles is depicted in
[0105] VJ rearrangement of the alleles depicted in
[0106] Element 611 is designed to provide selection for in-frame rearrangements on the allele (601) that is not capable of expressing a full-length light chain protein. One embodiment of this element is one that begins with a sequence encoding a self-cleaving (2A) peptide fused in-frame with an open reading frame for a protein that is crucial for B cell survival in the periphery, such as the receptor for B cell activation factor from the tumor necrosis factor family (BAFF, also known as BLyS, TALL-1, zTNF4 and THANK) (J. S. Thompson et al. [2001] Science, 293:2108-2111; Y. Sasaki et al. [2004] Journal of Immunology 173:2245-2252). The BAFF receptor (BAFF-R) is encoded by the Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor Superfamily Member 13C gene (Tnfrsf13c). If the mouse used is homozygous for a loss-of-function mutation in the endogenous gene encoding its BAFF-R protein, then the only source of this protein in B cells is the 611 element. The 2A self-cleaving peptide sequence is placed such that it is in-frame with a productively rearranged VJ exon. If the 601 allele fails to rearrange productively, no BAFF-R protein is expressed and the B cell dies shortly after leaving the bone marrow. B cells are only capable of completing their maturation in the periphery if they undergo an in-frame VJ rearrangement and thereby gain expression of BAFF-R.
[0107] Crucially, the selection scheme just outlined rescues BAFF-R protein expression, but B cells only mature if they also undergo a productive VJ rearrangement on their 602 alleles and thereby gain expression of a full-length light chain protein.
[0108] Survival of mature B cells in the periphery is highly dependent on BAFF-R. Thus, the 611 element provides selection for B cells to continue to retain productive rearrangements on both of their alleles so that normal homeostasis is preserved and so that B cells are capable of participating in immune responses.
[0109] Peripheral B cells that develop in the mice carrying the alleles shown in
[0110] Immunization of mice carrying the alleles shown in
[0111] Transgenic mouse systems exist, or can be readily engineered, to permit inducible expression of particular site-specific recombinases in multiple cell types including B lymphocytes. Immunized mice that have made demonstrable antibody responses to the antigen used in the immunization are caused to express the relevant site-specific recombinase, which obviously requires that the mice carry in them the necessary inducible site-specific recombinase system.
[0112] Induced site-specific recombination at the rearranged versions of the germline alleles depicted in
[0113] Immunization of mice carrying the arrangement of alleles depicted in
[0114] B cells specific for the antigen used in the second immunization would include some that had not undergone clonal expansion in response to the first antigen. Such B cells are not an obvious source for bispecific antibodies capable of recognizing the antigens used in both of the immunizations. However, some fraction of the B cells specific for the second antigen also have been involved in clonal expansion in response to the first antigen. These B cells are an obvious source for bispecific antibodies: with one of their rearranged light chain genes they can produce antibodies that have specificity for one of the two antigens, while with their other rearranged light chain gene they can produce antibodies specific for the other antigen. In both cases, individual B cells use one heavy chain protein to pair with both light chain proteins.
[0115] Hybridoma or other cloning technology is exploited to recover B cells with specificity for the second immunizing antigen. These B cells are then analyzed to determine whether they also carry a second rearranged heavy chain gene that confers specificity for the second antigen.
[0116] The preceding merely illustrates the principles of the invention. It will be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise various arrangements which, although not explicitly described or shown herein, embody the principles of the invention and are included within its spirit and scope. Furthermore, all examples and conditional language recited herein are principally intended to aid the reader in understanding the principles of the invention and the concepts contributed by the inventors to furthering the art, and are to be construed as being without limitation to such specifically recited examples and conditions. Moreover, all statements herein reciting principles, aspects, and embodiments of the invention as well as specific examples thereof, are intended to encompass both structural and functional equivalents thereof. Additionally, it is intended that such equivalents include both currently known equivalents and equivalents developed in the future, i.e., any elements developed that perform the same function, regardless of structure. The scope of the present invention, therefore, is not intended to be limited to the exemplary embodiments shown and described herein. Rather, the scope and spirit of present invention is embodied by the appended claims. In the claims that follow, unless the term means is used, none of the features or elements recited therein should be construed as means-plus-function limitations pursuant to 35 U.S.C. ? 112, ?6.