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Dive into the research topics where Leanna Staben is active.

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Featured researches published by Leanna Staben.


Nature | 2015

Novel antibody–antibiotic conjugate eliminates intracellular S. aureus

Sophie M. Lehar; Thomas H. Pillow; Min Xu; Leanna Staben; Kimberly Kajihara; Richard Vandlen; Laura DePalatis; Helga Raab; Wouter L. W. Hazenbos; J. Hiroshi Morisaki; Janice Kim; Summer Park; Martine Darwish; Byoung-Chul Lee; Hilda Hernandez; Kelly M. Loyet; Patrick Lupardus; Rina Fong; Donghong Yan; Cecile Chalouni; Elizabeth Luis; Yana Khalfin; Emile Plise; Jonathan Cheong; Joseph P. Lyssikatos; Magnus Strandh; Klaus Koefoed; Peter S. Andersen; John A. Flygare; Man Wah Tan

Staphylococcus aureus is considered to be an extracellular pathogen. However, survival of S. aureus within host cells may provide a reservoir relatively protected from antibiotics, thus enabling long-term colonization of the host and explaining clinical failures and relapses after antibiotic therapy. Here we confirm that intracellular reservoirs of S. aureus in mice comprise a virulent subset of bacteria that can establish infection even in the presence of vancomycin, and we introduce a novel therapeutic that effectively kills intracellular S. aureus. This antibody–antibiotic conjugate consists of an anti-S. aureus antibody conjugated to a highly efficacious antibiotic that is activated only after it is released in the proteolytic environment of the phagolysosome. The antibody–antibiotic conjugate is superior to vancomycin for treatment of bacteraemia and provides direct evidence that intracellular S. aureus represents an important component of invasive infections.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Site-Specific Trastuzumab Maytansinoid Antibody–Drug Conjugates with Improved Therapeutic Activity through Linker and Antibody Engineering

Thomas H. Pillow; Janet Tien; Kathryn Parsons-Reponte; Sunil Bhakta; Hao Li; Leanna Staben; Guangmin Li; Josefa Chuh; Aimee Fourie-O’Donohue; Martine Darwish; Victor Yip; Luna Liu; Douglas D. Leipold; Dian Su; Elmer Wu; Susan D. Spencer; Ben-Quan Shen; Keyang Xu; Katherine R. Kozak; Helga Raab; Richard Vandlen; Gail Lewis Phillips; Richard H. Scheller; Paul Polakis; Mark X. Sliwkowski; John A. Flygare; Jagath R. Junutula

Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) have a significant impact toward the treatment of cancer, as evidenced by the clinical activity of the recently approved ADCs, brentuximab vedotin for Hodgkin lymphoma and ado-trastuzumab emtansine (trastuzumab-MCC-DM1) for metastatic HER2+ breast cancer. DM1 is an analog of the natural product maytansine, a microtubule inhibitor that by itself has limited clinical activity and high systemic toxicity. However, by conjugation of DM1 to trastuzumab, the safety was improved and clinical activity was demonstrated. Here, we report that through chemical modification of the linker-drug and antibody engineering, the therapeutic activity of trastuzumab maytansinoid ADCs can be further improved. These improvements include eliminating DM1 release in the plasma and increasing the drug load by engineering four cysteine residues into the antibody. The chemical synthesis of highly stable linker-drugs and the modification of cysteine residues of engineered site-specific antibodies resulted in a homogeneous ADC with increased therapeutic activity compared to the clinically approved ADC, trastuzumab-MCC-DM1.


Nature Chemistry | 2016

Targeted drug delivery through the traceless release of tertiary and heteroaryl amines from antibody–drug conjugates

Leanna Staben; Stefan G. Koenig; Sophie M. Lehar; Richard Vandlen; Donglu Zhang; Josefa Chuh; Shang-Fan Yu; Carl Ng; Jun Guo; Yanzhou Liu; Aimee Fourie-O'Donohue; MaryAnn Go; Xin Linghu; Nathaniel L. Segraves; Tao Wang; Jinhua Chen; Binqing Wei; Gail Lewis Phillips; Keyang Xu; Katherine R. Kozak; Sanjeev Mariathasan; John A. Flygare; Thomas H. Pillow

The reversible attachment of a small-molecule drug to a carrier for targeted delivery can improve pharmacokinetics and the therapeutic index. Previous studies have reported the delivery of molecules that contain primary and secondary amines via an amide or carbamate bond; however, the ability to employ tertiary-amine-containing bioactive molecules has been elusive. Here we describe a bioreversible linkage based on a quaternary ammonium that can be used to connect a broad array of tertiary and heteroaryl amines to a carrier protein. Using a concise, protecting-group-free synthesis we demonstrate the chemoselective modification of 12 complex molecules that contain a range of reactive functional groups. We also show the utility of this connection with both protease-cleavable and reductively cleavable antibody-drug conjugates that were effective and stable in vitro and in vivo. Studies with a tertiary-amine-containing antibiotic show that the resulting antibody-antibiotic conjugate provided appropriate stability and release characteristics and led to an unexpected improvement in activity over the conjugates previously connected via a carbamate.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2017

Stabilizing a Tubulysin Antibody–Drug Conjugate To Enable Activity Against Multidrug-Resistant Tumors

Leanna Staben; Shang-Fan Yu; Jinhua Chen; Gang Yan; Zijin Xu; Geoffrey Del Rosario; Jeffrey Lau; Luna Liu; Jun Guo; Bing Zheng; Josefa dela Cruz-Chuh; Byoung-Chul Lee; Rachana Ohri; Wenwen Cai; Hongxiang Zhou; Katherine R. Kozak; Keyang Xu; Gail Lewis Phillips; Jiawei Lu; John S. Wai; Andrew Polson; Thomas H. Pillow

The tubulysins are promising anticancer cytotoxic agents due to the clinical validation of their mechanism of action (microtubule inhibition) and their particular activity against multidrug-resistant tumor cells. Yet their high potency and subsequent systemic toxicity make them prime candidates for targeted therapy, particularly in the form of antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs). Here we report a strategy to prepare stable and bioreversible conjugates of tubulysins to antibodies without loss of activity. A peptide trigger along with a quaternary ammonium salt linker connection to the tertiary amine of tubulysin provided ADCs that were potent in vitro. However, we observed metabolism of a critical acetate ester of the drug in vivo, resulting in diminished conjugate activity. We were able to circumvent this metabolic liability with the judicious choice of a propyl ether replacement. This modified tubulysin ADC was stable and effective against multidrug-resistant lymphoma cell lines and tumors.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2018

Immolation of p-Aminobenzyl Ether Linker and Payload Potency and Stability Determine the Cell-Killing Activity of Antibody–Drug Conjugates with Phenol-Containing Payloads

Donglu Zhang; Hoa Le; Josefa dela Cruz-Chuh; Sudheer Bobba; Jun Guo; Leanna Staben; Chenghong Zhang; Yong Ma; Katherine R. Kozak; Gail Lewis Phillips; Breanna S. Vollmar; Jack Sadowsky; Richard Vandlen; Binqing Wei; Dian Su; Peter Fan; Peter S. Dragovich; S. Cyrus Khojasteh; Cornelis E. C. A. Hop; Thomas H. Pillow

The valine-citrulline (Val-Cit) dipeptide and p-aminobenzyl (PAB) spacer have been commonly used as a cleavable self-immolating linker in ADC design including in the clinically approved ADC, brentuximab vedotin (Adcetris). When the same linker was used to connect to the phenol of the cyclopropabenzindolone (CBI) (P1), the resulting ADC1 showed loss of potency in CD22 target-expressing cancer cell lines (e.g., BJAB, WSU-DLCL2). In comparison, the conjugate (ADC2) of a cyclopropapyrroloindolone (CPI) (P2) was potent despite the two corresponding free drugs having similar picomolar cell-killing activity. Although the corresponding spirocyclization products of P1 and P2, responsible for DNA alkylation, are a prominent component in buffer, the linker immolation was slow when the PAB was connected as an ether (PABE) to the phenol in P1 compared to that in P2. Additional immolation studies with two other PABE-linked substituted phenol compounds showed that electron-withdrawing groups accelerated the immolation to release an acidic phenol-containing payload (to delocalize the negative charge on the anticipated anionic phenol oxygen during immolation). In contrast, efficient immolation of LD4 did not result in an active ADC4 because the payload (P4) had a low potency to kill cells. In addition, nonimmolation of LD5 did not affect the cell-killing potency of its ADC5 since immolation is not required for DNA alkylation by the center-linked pyrrolobenzodiazepine. Therefore, careful evaluation needs to be conducted when the Val-Cit-PAB linker is used to connect antibodies to a phenol-containing drug as the linker immolation, as well as payload potency and stability, affects the cell-killing activity of an ADC.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Discovery of Peptidomimetic Antibody–Drug Conjugate Linkers with Enhanced Protease Specificity

Binqing Wei; Janet Gunzner-Toste; Hui Yao; Tao Wang; Jing Wang; Zijin Xu; Jinhua Chen; John S. Wai; Jim Nonomiya; Siao Ping Tsai; Josefa Chuh; Katherine R. Kozak; Yichin Liu; Shang-Fan Yu; Jeff Lau; Guangmin Li; Gail D. Phillips; Doug Leipold; Amrita Kamath; Dian Su; Keyang Xu; Charles Eigenbrot; Stefan Steinbacher; Rachana Ohri; Helga Raab; Leanna Staben; Guiling Zhao; John A. Flygare; Thomas H. Pillow; Vishal A. Verma

Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) have become an important therapeutic modality for oncology, with three approved by the FDA and over 60 others in clinical trials. Despite the progress, improvements in ADC therapeutic index are desired. Peptide-based ADC linkers that are cleaved by lysosomal proteases have shown sufficient stability in serum and effective payload-release in targeted cells. If the linker can be preferentially hydrolyzed by tumor-specific proteases, safety margin may improve. However, the use of peptide-based linkers limits our ability to modulate protease specificity. Here we report the structure-guided discovery of novel, nonpeptidic ADC linkers. We show that a cyclobutane-1,1-dicarboxamide-containing linker is hydrolyzed predominantly by cathepsin B while the valine-citrulline dipeptide linker is not. ADCs bearing the nonpeptidic linker are as efficacious and stable in vivo as those with the dipeptide linker. Our results strongly support the application of the peptidomimetic linker and present new opportunities for improving the selectivity of ADCs.


Archive | 2014

Anti-wall teichoic antibodies and conjugates

Eric J. Brown; Martine Darwish; John A. Flygare; Wouter L. W. Hazenbos; Byoung Chul Lee; Sophie M. Lehar; Sanjeev Mariathasan; John Hiroshi Morisaki; Thomas H. Pillow; Leanna Staben; Richard Vandlen; Klaus Koefoed; Magnus Strandh; Peter Sejr Andersen


Archive | 2016

Quaternary amine compounds and antibody-drug conjugates thereof

John A. Flygare; Thomas H. Pillow; Leanna Staben


Archive | 2017

PROTAC ANTIBODY CONJUGATES AND METHODS OF USE

Thomas H. Pillow; Jack Sadowsky; Leanna Staben; Steven Staben; Binqing Wei; Ingrid E. Wertz; Pragya Adhikari; Nicole Blaquiere; Peter S. Dragovich; Wayne J. Fairbrother


Archive | 2016

Anti-staphylococcus aureus antibody rifamycin conjugates and uses thereof

Eric J. Brown; Wouter L. W. Hazenbos; Isidro Hotzel; Kimberly Kajihara; Sophie M. Lehar; Sanjeev Mariathasan; Thomas H. Pillow; Leanna Staben; Vishal Verma; Binqing Wei; Yi Xia; Min Xu

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Eric J. Brown

University of California

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