Christilyn Graff
Biogen Idec
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Publication
Featured researches published by Christilyn Graff.
Nature Medicine | 2007
Sha Mi; Bing Hu; Kyungmin Hahm; Yi Luo; Edward S. Hui; Qiuju Yuan; Wai-Man Wong; Li Wang; Huanxing Su; Tak-Ho Chu; Jiasong Guo; Wenming Zhang; Kf So; Blake Pepinsky; Zhaohui Shao; Christilyn Graff; Ellen Garber; Vincent Jung; Wutian Wu
Demyelinating diseases, such as multiple sclerosis, are characterized by the loss of the myelin sheath around neurons, owing to inflammation and gliosis in the central nervous system (CNS). Current treatments therefore target anti-inflammatory mechanisms to impede or slow disease progression. The identification of a means to enhance axon myelination would present new therapeutic approaches to inhibit and possibly reverse disease progression. Previously, LRR and Ig domain–containing, Nogo receptor–interacting protein (LINGO-1) has been identified as an in vitro and in vivo negative regulator of oligodendrocyte differentiation and myelination. Here we show that loss of LINGO-1 function by Lingo1 gene knockout or by treatment with an antibody antagonist of LINGO-1 function leads to functional recovery from experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. This is reflected biologically by improved axonal integrity, as confirmed by magnetic resonance diffusion tensor imaging, and by newly formed myelin sheaths, as determined by electron microscopy. Antagonism of LINGO-1 or its pathway is therefore a promising approach for the treatment of demyelinating diseases of the CNS.
mAbs | 2011
Jianying Dong; Arlene Sereno; Dikran Aivazian; Emma Langley; Brian Robert Miller; William Snyder; Eric Chan; Matt Cantele; Ronald Morena; Ingrid B.J.K. Joseph; Antonio Boccia; Cyrus Virata; James Gamez; Grace Yco; Michael Favis; Xiufeng Wu; Christilyn Graff; Qin Wang; Ellen Rohde; Rachel Rennard; Lisa Berquist; Flora Huang; Ying Zhang; Sharon X. Gao; Steffan N. Ho; Stephen J. Demarest; Mitchell E Reff; Kandasamy Hariharan; Scott Glaser
The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and the type I insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF-1R) are two cell surface receptor tyrosine kinases known to cooperate to promote tumor progression and drug resistance. Combined blockade of EGFR and IGF-1R has shown improved anti-tumor activity in preclinical models. Here, we report the characterization of a stable IgG-like bispecific antibody (BsAb) dual-targeting EGFR and IGF-1R that was developed for cancer therapy. The BsAb molecule (EI-04), constructed with a stability-engineered single chain variable fragment (scFv) against IGF-1R attached to the carboxyl-terminus of an IgG against EGFR, displays favorable biophysical properties for biopharmaceutical development. Biochemically, EI-04 bound to human EGFR and IGF-1R with sub nanomolar affinity, co-engaged the two receptors simultaneously, and blocked the binding of their respective ligands with similar potency compared to the parental monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). In tumor cells, EI-04 effectively inhibited EGFR and IGF-1R phosphorylation, and concurrently blocked downstream AKT and ERK activation, resulting in greater inhibition of tumor cell growth and cell cycle progression than the single mAbs. EI-04, likely due to its tetravalent bispecific format, exhibited high avidity binding to BxPC3 tumor cells co-expressing EGFR and IGF-1R, and consequently improved potency at inhibiting IGF-driven cell growth over the mAb combination. Importantly, EI-04 demonstrated enhanced in vivo anti-tumor efficacy over the parental mAbs in two xenograft models, and even over the mAb combination in the BxPC3 model. Our data support the clinical investigation of EI-04 as a superior cancer therapeutic in treating EGFR and IGF-1R pathway responsive tumors.
Protein Science | 2010
R. Blake Pepinsky; Laura Silvian; Steven A. Berkowitz; Graham K. Farrington; Alexey Lugovskoy; Lee Walus; John K. Eldredge; Allan D. Capili; Sha Mi; Christilyn Graff; Ellen Garber
Monoclonal antibodies (Mabs) are a favorite drug platform of the biopharmaceutical industry. Currently, over 20 Mabs have been approved and several hundred others are in clinical trials. The anti‐LINGO‐1 Mab Li33 was selected from a large panel of antibodies by Fab phage display technology based on its extraordinary biological activity in promoting oligodendrocyte differentiation and myelination in vitro and in animal models of remyelination. However, the Li33 Fab had poor solubility when converted into a full antibody in an immunoglobulin G1 framework. A detailed analysis of the biochemical and structural features of the antibody revealed several possible reasons for its propensity to aggregate. Here, we successfully applied three molecular approaches (isotype switching, targeted mutagenesis of complementarity determining region residues, and glycosylation site insertion mutagenesis) to address the solubility problem. Through these efforts we were able to improve the solubility of the Li33 Mab from 0.3 mg/mL to >50 mg/mL and reduce aggregation to an acceptable level. These strategies can be readily applied to other proteins with solubility issues.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Adam Doern; Xianjun Cao; Arlene Sereno; Christopher L. Reyes; Angelina E. Altshuler; Flora Huang; Cathy Hession; Albert Flavier; Michael Favis; Hon Tran; Eric Ailor; Melissa Levesque; Tracey Murphy; Lisa Berquist; Susan Tamraz; Tracey Snipas; Ellen Garber; William S. Shestowsky; Rachel Rennard; Christilyn Graff; Xiufeng Wu; William Snyder; Lindsay J. Cole; David Gregson; Michael Shields; Steffan N. Ho; Mitchell E Reff; Scott Glaser; Jianying Dong; Stephen J. Demarest
Therapeutic antibodies directed against the type 1 insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF-1R) have recently gained significant momentum in the clinic because of preliminary data generated in human patients with cancer. These antibodies inhibit ligand-mediated activation of IGF-1R and the resulting down-stream signaling cascade. Here we generated a panel of antibodies against IGF-1R and screened them for their ability to block the binding of both IGF-1 and IGF-2 at escalating ligand concentrations (>1 μm) to investigate allosteric versus competitive blocking mechanisms. Four distinct inhibitory classes were found as follows: 1) allosteric IGF-1 blockers, 2) allosteric IGF-2 blockers, 3) allosteric IGF-1 and IGF-2 blockers, and 4) competitive IGF-1 and IGF-2 blockers. The epitopes of representative antibodies from each of these classes were mapped using a purified IGF-1R library containing 64 mutations. Most of these antibodies bound overlapping surfaces on the cysteine-rich repeat and L2 domains. One class of allosteric IGF-1 and IGF-2 blocker was identified that bound a separate epitope on the outer surface of the FnIII-1 domain. Using various biophysical techniques, we show that the dual IGF blockers inhibit ligand binding using a spectrum of mechanisms ranging from highly allosteric to purely competitive. Binding of IGF-1 or the inhibitory antibodies was associated with conformational changes in IGF-1R, linked to the ordering of dynamic or unstructured regions of the receptor. These results suggest IGF-1R uses disorder/order within its polypeptide sequence to regulate its activity. Interestingly, the activity of representative allosteric and competitive inhibitors on H322M tumor cell growth in vitro was reflective of their individual ligand-blocking properties. Many of the antibodies in the clinic likely adopt one of the inhibitory mechanisms described here, and the outcome of future clinical studies may reveal whether a particular inhibitory mechanism leads to optimal clinical efficacy.
Archive | 2006
Sha Mi; R. Blake Pepinsky; Zhaohui Shao; Christilyn Graff
Archive | 2009
Kandasamy Hariharan; Scott Glaser; Ellen Garber; Christilyn Graff; Christopher L. Reyes; Stephen J. Demarest
Archive | 2009
Sha Mi; R. Blake Pepinsky; Christilyn Graff
Archive | 2009
Xinzhong Wang; Veronique Bailly; Alexey Lugovskoy; Graham K. Farrington; Christilyn Graff; Scott Glaser
Archive | 2012
Christopher L. Reyes; Peter Chu; Xiangyang Tan; Weixing Yang; Christilyn Graff
Archive | 2012
Christopher L. Reyes; Peter Chu; Xiangyang Tan; Weixing Yang; Christilyn Graff