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Featured researches published by Matthew Pollard.


mAbs | 2015

Potent neutralizing anti-CD1d antibody reduces lung cytokine release in primate asthma model.

Jonathan Kannan Nambiar; Adam William Clarke; Doris Shim; David Mabon; Chen Tian; Karolina Windloch; Chris Buhmann; Beau Corazon; Matilda Lindgren; Matthew Pollard; Teresa Domagala; Lynn Dorothy Poulton; Anthony Gerard Doyle

CD1d is a receptor on antigen-presenting cells involved in triggering cell populations, particularly natural killer T (NKT) cells, to release high levels of cytokines. NKT cells are implicated in asthma pathology and blockade of the CD1d/NKT cell pathway may have therapeutic potential. We developed a potent anti-human CD1d antibody (NIB.2) that possesses high affinity for human and cynomolgus macaque CD1d (KD ∼100 pM) and strong neutralizing activity in human primary cell-based assays (IC50 typically <100 pM). By epitope mapping experiments, we showed that NIB.2 binds to CD1d in close proximity to the interface of CD1d and the Type 1 NKT cell receptor β-chain. Together with data showing that NIB.2 inhibited stimulation via CD1d loaded with different glycolipids, this supports a mechanism whereby NIB.2 inhibits NKT cell activation by inhibiting Type 1 NKT cell receptor β-chain interactions with CD1d, independent of the lipid antigen in the CD1d antigen-binding cleft. The strong in vitro potency of NIB.2 was reflected in vivo in an Ascaris suum cynomolgus macaque asthma model. Compared with vehicle control, NIB.2 treatment significantly reduced bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) levels of Ascaris-induced cytokines IL-5, IL-8 and IL-1 receptor antagonist, and significantly reduced baseline levels of GM-CSF, IL-6, IL-15, IL-12/23p40, MIP-1α, MIP-1β, and VEGF. At a cellular population level NIB.2 also reduced numbers of BAL lymphocytes and macrophages, and blood eosinophils and basophils. We demonstrate that anti-CD1d antibody blockade of the CD1d/NKT pathway modulates inflammatory parameters in vivo in a primate inflammation model, with therapeutic potential for diseases where the local cytokine milieu is critical.


mAbs | 2018

An anti-TL1A antibody for the treatment of asthma and inflammatory bowel disease

Adam William Clarke; Lynn Dorothy Poulton; Doris Shim; David Mabon; Danyal Butt; Matthew Pollard; Vanya Pande; Jean Husten; Jacquelyn Lyons; Chen Tian; Anthony Gerard Doyle

ABSTRACT TL1A is an attractive therapeutic target for the treatment of mucosal inflammation associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and asthma. Blockade of the TL1A pathway has been shown to reduce inflammatory responses while leaving baseline immunity intact, and to be beneficial in animal models of colitis and asthma. Given the therapeutic potential of blocking this pathway in IBD and asthma, we developed C03V, a human antibody that binds with high affinity to soluble and membrane-bound TL1A. In an assay measuring apoptosis induced by exogenous TL1A, C03V was 43-fold more potent than the next most potent anti-TL1A antibody analyzed. C03V also potently inhibited endogenous TL1A activity in a primary cell-based assay. This potency was linked to the C03V-binding epitope on TL1A, encompassing the residue R32. This residue is critical for the binding of TL1A to its signaling receptor DR3 but not to its decoy receptor DcR3, and explains why C03V inhibited TL1A-DR3 binding to a much greater extent than TL1A-DcR3 binding. This characteristic may be advantageous to preserve some of the homeostatic functions of DcR3, such as TL1A antagonism. In colitis models, C03V significantly ameliorated microscopic, macroscopic and clinical aspects of disease pathology, and in an asthma model it significantly reduced airways inflammation. Notable in both types of disease model was the reduction in fibrosis observed after C03V treatment. C03V has the potential to address unmet medical needs in asthma and IBD.


Archive | 2012

POLYPEPTIDE CONSTRUCTS AND USES THEREOF

Jr David S Wilson; Sarah L. Pogue; Glen Mikesell; Tetsuya Taura; Wouter Korver; Anthony Gerard Doyle; Adam William Clarke; Matthew Pollard; Stephen Tran; Jack Tzu-Chiao Lin


Archive | 2016

ANTI-CD38 ANTIBODIES AND FUSIONS TO ATTENUATED INTERFERON ALPHA-2B

Adam William Clarke; Matthew Pollard; Anthony Gerard Doyle; Collette Behrens; Tetsuo Yamagishi; David S. Wilson; Sarah L. Pogue; Tetsuya Taura


Archive | 2011

Anti-IL-23 heterodimer specific antibodies

Adam William Clarke; Anthony Gerard Doyle; Matthew Pollard; Stephen Tran


Archive | 2014

ANTIBODIES AGAINST TL1a AND USES THEREOF

Lynn Dorothy Poulton; Adam William Clarke; Andrew James Pow; Debra Tamvakis; George Kopsidas; Anthony Gerard Doyle; Philip Anthony Jennings; Matthew Pollard


Archive | 2014

ANTIBODIES TO CD1d

Jonathan Kannan Nambiar; Lynn Dorothy Poulton; Adam William Clarke; Andrew James Pow; Debra Tamvakis; George Kopsidas; Anthony Gerard Doyle; Matthew Pollard; Huseyin Mustafa


Archive | 2016

INTERFERON ALPHA 2B VARIANTS

Collette Behrens; Anthony Gerard Doyle; Adam William Clarke; Matthew Pollard; Teresa Domagala


Archive | 2010

Humanised antibodies with anti-tumour activity

Adam William Clarke; Anthony Gerard Doyle; Philip Anthony Jennings; Norbert Alexander Kienzle; Matthew Pollard


Archive | 2017

POLYPEPTIDE CONSTRUCT AND USE THEREOF

David S. Wilson; Sarah L. Pogue; Glen Mikesell; Taura Tetsuya; Wouter Korver; Anthony Gerard Doyle; Adam William Clarke; Matthew Pollard; Stephen Tran; Jack Tzu-Chiao Lin

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