Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Kathy Manchulenko is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kathy Manchulenko.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Enhancing antibody Fc heterodimer formation through electrostatic steering effects: Applications to bispecific molecules and monovalent IgG

Kannan Gunasekaran; Martin Pentony; Min Shen; Logan Garrett; Carla Forte; Anne Woodward; Soo Bin Ng; Teresa L. Born; Marc W. Retter; Kathy Manchulenko; Heather Sweet; Ian Foltz; Michael Wittekind; Wei Yan

Naturally occurring IgG antibodies are bivalent and monospecific. Bispecific antibodies having binding specificities for two different antigens can be produced using recombinant technologies and are projected to have broad clinical applications. However, co-expression of multiple light and heavy chains often leads to contaminants and pose purification challenges. In this work, we have modified the CH3 domain interface of the antibody Fc region with selected mutations so that the engineered Fc proteins preferentially form heterodimers. These novel mutations create altered charge polarity across the Fc dimer interface such that coexpression of electrostatically matched Fc chains support favorable attractive interactions thereby promoting desired Fc heterodimer formation, whereas unfavorable repulsive charge interactions suppress unwanted Fc homodimer formation. This new Fc heterodimer format was used to produce bispecific single chain antibody fusions and monovalent IgGs with minimal homodimer contaminants. The strategy proposed here demonstrates the feasibility of robust production of novel Fc-based heterodimeric molecules and hence broadens the scope of bispecific molecules for therapeutic applications.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

A Novel Antibody Engineering Strategy for Making Monovalent Bispecific Heterodimeric IgG Antibodies by Electrostatic Steering Mechanism

Zhi Liu; Esther Leng; Kannan Gunasekaran; Martin J. Pentony; Min Shen; Monique Howard; Janelle Stoops; Kathy Manchulenko; Vladimir I. Razinkov; Hua Liu; William C. Fanslow; Zhonghua Hu; Nancy Sun; Haruki Hasegawa; Rutilio Clark; Ian Foltz; Wei Yan

Background: Bispecific heterodimeric antibody consisting of two different heavy chains and two different light chains requires heterodimerization of heavy chains and cognate light-heavy chain pairings. Results: Cognate light-heavy chain pairing can be achieved by an antibody engineering approach. Conclusion: Bispecific hetero-IgG antibodies can be made in mammalian cells. Significance: The technology could be used in the production of bispecific antibodies for many biotechnological applications. Producing pure and well behaved bispecific antibodies (bsAbs) on a large scale for preclinical and clinical testing is a challenging task. Here, we describe a new strategy for making monovalent bispecific heterodimeric IgG antibodies in mammalian cells. We applied an electrostatic steering mechanism to engineer antibody light chain-heavy chain (LC-HC) interface residues in such a way that each LC strongly favors its cognate HC when two different HCs and two different LCs are co-expressed in the same cell to assemble a functional bispecific antibody. We produced heterodimeric IgGs from transiently and stably transfected mammalian cells. The engineered heterodimeric IgG molecules maintain the overall IgG structure with correct LC-HC pairings, bind to two different antigens with comparable affinity when compared with their parental antibodies, and retain the functionality of parental antibodies in biological assays. In addition, the bispecific heterodimeric IgG derived from anti-HER2 and anti-EGF receptor (EGFR) antibody was shown to induce a higher level of receptor internalization than the combination of two parental antibodies. Mouse xenograft BxPC-3, Panc-1, and Calu-3 human tumor models showed that the heterodimeric IgGs strongly inhibited tumor growth. The described approach can be used to generate tools from two pre-existent antibodies and explore the potential of bispecific antibodies. The asymmetrically engineered Fc variants for antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity enhancement could be embedded in monovalent bispecific heterodimeric IgG to make best-in-class therapeutic antibodies.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2012

MEDI0639: a novel therapeutic antibody targeting Dll4 modulates endothelial cell function and angiogenesis in vivo

David Jenkins; Sarah Ross; Margaret Veldman-Jones; Ian Foltz; Brandon C. P. Clavette; Kathy Manchulenko; Cath Eberlein; Jane Kendrew; Philip Petteruti; Song Cho; Melissa Damschroder; Li Peng; Dawn Baker; Neil R. Smith; Hazel M. Weir; David C. Blakey; Vahe Bedian; Simon T. Barry

The Notch signaling pathway has been implicated in cell fate determination and differentiation in many tissues. Accumulating evidence points toward a pivotal role in blood vessel formation, and the importance of the Delta-like ligand (Dll) 4-Notch1 ligand–receptor interaction has been shown in both physiological and tumor angiogenesis. Disruption of this interaction leads to a reduction in tumor growth as a result of an increase in nonfunctional vasculature leading to poor perfusion of the tumor. MEDI0639 is an investigational human therapeutic antibody that targets Dll4 to inhibit the interaction between Dll4 and Notch1. The antibody cross-reacts to cynomolgus monkey but not mouse species orthologues. In vitro MEDI0639 inhibits the binding of Notch1 to Dll4, interacting via a novel epitope that has not been previously described. Binding to this epitope translates into MEDI0639 reversing Notch1-mediated suppression of human umbilical vein endothelial cell growth in vitro. MEDI0639 administration resulted in stimulation of tubule formation in a three-dimensional (3D) endothelial cell outgrowth assay, a phenotype driven by disruption of the Dll4-Notch signaling axis. In contrast, in a two-dimensional endothelial cell–fibroblast coculture model, MEDI0639 is a potent inhibitor of tubule formation. In vivo, MEDI0639 shows activity in a human endothelial cell angiogenesis assay promoting human vessel formation and reducing the number of vessels with smooth muscle actin-positive mural cells coverage. Collectively, the data show that MEDI0639 is a potent modulator of Dll4-Notch signaling pathway. Mol Cancer Ther; 11(8); 1650–60. ©2012 AACR.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2011

Kinetic analysis of unpurified native antigens available in very low quantities and concentrations.

Palaniswami Rathanaswami; Karen Richmond; Kathy Manchulenko; Ian Foltz

Affinity measurements of antigen-antibody interactions are generally performed using known concentrations of purified or recombinant materials. In addition, many technologies that measure affinity require the interacting components to be present in at least microgram quantities. Specifically, if the antigen is either available only in low quantities or unable to be purified, or if the quantity is unknown, then the measurement of affinity can be very difficult. Using the Kinetic Exclusion Assay (KinExA) technology, here we describe a method that overcomes the requirement for large amounts of purified and known quantities of antigen. We used this method to precisely measure the affinity of fully human anti-human interleukin 13 (IL13) monoclonal antibodies to IL13 produced in native form from primary T cells derived from a variety of species, including human. These antigens were available only in the limited quantities present in the conditioned cell culture medium, and the affinity was measured directly without further purification.


mAbs | 2014

Remediating agitation-induced antibody aggregation by eradicating exposed hydrophobic motifs.

Rutilio Clark; Ramil F. Latypov; Cyr De Imus; Jane Carter; Zien Wilson; Kathy Manchulenko; Michael Brown; Randal R. Ketchem

Therapeutic antibodies must encompass drug product suitable attributes to be commercially marketed. An undesirable antibody characteristic is the propensity to aggregate. Although there are computational algorithms that predict the propensity of a protein to aggregate from sequence information alone, few consider the relevance of the native structure. The Spatial Aggregation Propensity (SAP) algorithm developed by Chennamsetty et. al. incorporates structural and sequence information to identify motifs that contribute to protein aggregation. We have utilized the algorithm to design variants of a highly aggregation prone IgG2. All variants were tested in a variety of high-throughput, small-scale assays to assess the utility of the method described herein. Many variants exhibited improved aggregation stability whether induced by agitation or thermal stress while still retaining bioactivity.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2017

Impact of antibody subclass and disulfide isoform differences on the biological activity of CD200R and βklotho agonist antibodies

Ognjen Grujic; Jennitte Stevens; Robert Y.-T. Chou; Jennifer Weiszmann; Laura Sekirov; Christy Thomson; Anita Badh; Stephanie Grauer; Brian Mingtung Chan; Kevin Graham; Kathy Manchulenko; Thomas M. Dillon; Yang Li; Ian Foltz

Agonism of cell surface receptors by monoclonal antibodies is dependent not only on its ability to bind the target, but also to deliver a biological signal through receptors to the cell. Immunoglobulin G2 antibodies (IgG2s) are made up of a mixture of distinct isoforms (IgG2-A, -B and A/B), which differ by the disulfide connectivity at the hinge region. When evaluating panels of agonistic antibodies against CD200 receptor (CD200R) or βklotho receptor (βklotho), we noticed striking activity differences of IgG1 or IgG2 antibodies with the same variable domains. For the CD200R antibody, the IgG2 antibody demonstrated higher activity than the IgG1 or IgG4 antibody. More significantly, for βklotho, agonist antibodies with higher biological activity as either IgG2 or IgG1 were identified. In both cases, ion exchange chromatography was able to isolate the bioactivity to the IgG2-B isoform from the IgG2 parental mixture. The subclass-related increase in agonist activity was not correlated with antibody aggregation or binding affinity, but was driven by enhanced avidity for the CD200R antibody. These results add to the growing body of evidence that show that conformational differences in the antibody hinge region can have a dramatic impact on the antibody activity and must be considered when screening and engineering therapeutic antibody candidates. The results also demonstrate that the IgG1 (IgG2-A like) or the IgG2-B form may provide the most active form of agonist antibodies for different antibodies and targets.


Archive | 2003

Antibodies directed to tumor necrosis factor and uses thereof

John Babcook; Jaspal Singh Kang; Orit Foord; Larry Green; Xiao Feng; Scott L. Klakamp; Mary Haak-Frendscho; Palaniswami Rathanaswami; Craig Robin Pigott; Meina Liang; Yen-Wah Rozanne Lee; Kathy Manchulenko; Raffaella Faggioni; Giorgio Senaldi; Qiaojuan Jane Su


Archive | 2003

Antibodies directed to tumor necrosis factor

John Babcook; Jaspal Singh Kang; Orit Foord; Larry Green; Xiao Feng; Scott L. Klakamp; Mary Haak-Frendscho; Palaniswami Rathanaswami; Craig Robin Pigott; Meina Liang; Yen-Wah Rozanne Lee; Kathy Manchulenko; Raffaella Faggioni; Giorgio Senaldi; Qiaojuan Jane Su


Archive | 2005

Fully human monoclonal antibodies to IL-13

Ian Foltz; Raffaella Faggioni; Giorgio Senaldi; Kathy Manchulenko; Jaspal Singh Kang; Palaniswami Rathanaswami; Kiran Ahluwalia; Orit Foord; Scott L. Klakamp


Blood | 2005

Generation of a Fully Human High Affinity Neutralizing Antibody Against MT-SP1/Matriptase and Its Potential Role for the Treatment of B Cell Lymphoma.

Ian Foltz; Stan Morkowski; Caroline Darne Scatena; Peter Koon Bong Ling; Hao Li; Ying Liu; Chadwick Terence King; Jaspal Singh Kang; Kathy Manchulenko; Lisa Perkins; Sukhbir Kang; Minchao Chen; Wayne R. Godfrey; Bruce Keyt; Jennifer H. Richardson

Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge