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Publication
Featured researches published by Markus Fiedler.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Susan Lorey; Erik Fiedler; Anja Kunert; Jörg Nerkamp; Christian Lange; Markus Fiedler; Eva Bosse-Doenecke; Maren Meysing; Manja Gloser; Chris Rundfeldt; Una Rauchhaus; Ilka Hänssgen; Thomas Göttler; Arnd Steuernagel; Ulrike Fiedler; Ulrich Haupts
Background: Targeting molecules to tumor cells is a promising mode of action for cancer therapy. Results: Ubiquitin-based high affinity, specific, and stable binding molecules for extradomain B are accumulated in the tumor. Conclusion: Ubiquitin may be engineered for high affinity target binding and modified with half-life extension technologies. Significance: Ubiquitin qualifies as a well suited scaffold protein adaptable to specific tasks. Targeting effector molecules to tumor cells is a promising mode of action for cancer therapy and diagnostics. Binding proteins with high affinity and specificity for a tumor target that carry effector molecules such as toxins, cytokines, or radiolabels to their intended site of action are required for these applications. In order to yield high tumor accumulation while maintaining low levels in healthy tissues and blood, the half-life of such conjugates needs to be in an optimal range. Scaffold-based binding molecules are small proteins with high affinity and short systemic circulation. Due to their low molecular complexity, they are well suited for combination with effector molecules as well as half-life extension technologies yielding therapeutics with half-lives adapted to the specific therapy. We have identified ubiquitin as an ideal scaffold protein due to its outstanding biophysical and biochemical properties. Based on a dimeric ubiquitin library, high affinity and specific binding molecules, so-called Affilin® molecules, have been selected against the extradomain B of fibronectin, a target almost exclusively expressed in tumor tissues. Extradomain B-binding molecules feature high thermal and serum stability as well as strong in vitro target binding and in vivo tumor accumulation. Application of several half-life extension technologies results in molecules of largely unaffected affinity but significantly prolonged in vivo half-life and tumor retention. Our results demonstrate the utility of ubiquitin as a scaffold for the generation of high affinity binders in a modular fashion, which can be combined with effector molecules and half-life extension technologies.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Andreas Hoffmann; Michael Kovermann; Hauke Lilie; Markus Fiedler; Jochen Balbach; Rainer Rudolph; Sven Pfeifer
A variety of approaches have been employed to generate binding proteins from non-antibody scaffolds. Utilizing a beta-sheet of the human ubiquitin for paratope creation we obtained binding proteins against tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha. The bioactive form of this validated pharmacological target protein is a non-covalently linked homo-trimer. This structural feature leads to the observation of a certain heterogeneity concerning the binding mode of TNF-alpha binding molecules, for instance in terms of monomer/trimer specificity. We analyzed a ubiquitin-based TNF-alpha binder, selected by ribosome display, with a particular focus on its mode of interaction. Using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays, specific binding to TNF-alpha with nanomolar affinity was observed. In isothermal titration calorimetry we obtained comparable results regarding the affinity and detected an exothermic reaction with one ubiquitin-derived binding molecule binding one TNF-alpha trimer. Using NMR spectroscopy and other analytical methods the 1∶3 stoichiometry could be confirmed. Detailed binding analysis showed that the interaction is affected by the detergent Tween-20. Previously, this phenomenon was reported only for one other type of alternative scaffold-derived binding proteins – designed ankyrin repeat proteins – without further investigation. As demonstrated by size exclusion chromatography and NMR spectroscopy, the presence of the detergent increases the association rate significantly. Since the special architecture of TNF-alpha is known to be modulated by detergents, the access to the recognized epitope is indicated to be restricted by conformational transitions within the target protein. Our results suggest that the ubiquitin-derived binding protein targets a new epitope on TNF-alpha, which differs from the epitopes recognized by TNF-alpha neutralizing antibodies.
Trends in Biotechnology | 2005
Thomas Hey; Erik Fiedler; Rainer Rudolph; Markus Fiedler
Archive | 2004
Markus Fiedler; Ulrike Fiedler; Rainer Rudolph
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2007
Hilmar Ebersbach; Erik Fiedler; Tanja Scheuermann; Markus Fiedler; Milton T. Stubbs; Carola Reimann; Gabriele Proetzel; Rainer Rudolph; Ulrike Fiedler
Archive | 2010
Anja Kunert; Jörg Narkamp; Arnd Steuernagel; Markus Fiedler; Erik Fiedler; Thomas Göttler
Archive | 2010
Arnd Steuernagel; Erik Fiedler; Markus Fiedler; Anja Kunert; Joerg Nerkamp; Thomas Goettler; Manja Gloser; Ilka Haenssgen
Archive | 2005
Markus Fiedler; Ulrike Fiedler; Rainer Rudolph
Archive | 2012
Joerg Nerkamp; Eva Bosse-Doenecke; Arnd Steuernagel; Ulrike Fiedler; Markus Fiedler
Archive | 2013
Christian Lange; Manja Gloser; Susan Lorey; Markus Fiedler