Richard S. Barnett
Eli Lilly and Company
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Richard S. Barnett.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Feng Tian; Yingchun Lu; Anthony Manibusan; Aaron Sellers; Hon Tran; Ying Sun; Trung Phuong; Richard S. Barnett; Brad Hehli; Frank Song; Michael J. DeGuzman; Semsi Ensari; Jason Pinkstaff; Lorraine Sullivan; Sandra L. Biroc; Ho Cho; Peter G. Schultz; John F. DiJoseph; Maureen Dougher; Dangshe Ma; Russell Dushin; Mauricio Leal; Lioudmila Tchistiakova; Eric Feyfant; Hans-Peter Gerber; Puja Sapra
Significance Here we demonstrate the ability to genetically incorporate nonnative amino acids into proteins in mammalian cells using both transient and stable platform expression systems that provide yields and fidelities compatible with commercial applications. To illustrate the utility of this methodology we have generated chemically homogeneous antibody drug conjugates (NDCs) with precise control over the site and stoichiometry of drug conjugation. In rodent xenograft models these NDCs display improved properties, including half-life, efficacy and safety, relative to conventional heterogeneous ADCs. These advances allow the generation of therapeutic antibody drug conjugates with medicinal chemistry like control over structure, which should greatly facilitate the optimization of their pharmacological activities. Using an expanded genetic code, antibodies with site-specifically incorporated nonnative amino acids were produced in stable cell lines derived from a CHO cell line with titers over 1 g/L. Using anti-5T4 and anti-Her2 antibodies as model systems, site-specific antibody drug conjugates (NDCs) were produced, via oxime bond formation between ketones on the side chain of the incorporated nonnative amino acid and hydroxylamine functionalized monomethyl auristatin D with either protease-cleavable or noncleavable linkers. When noncleavable linkers were used, these conjugates were highly stable and displayed improved in vitro efficacy as well as in vivo efficacy and pharmacokinetic stability in rodent models relative to conventional antibody drug conjugates conjugated through either engineered surface-exposed or reduced interchain disulfide bond cysteine residues. The advantages of the oxime-bonded, site-specific NDCs were even more apparent when low–antigen-expressing (2+) target cell lines were used in the comparative studies. NDCs generated with protease-cleavable linkers demonstrated that the site of conjugation had a significant impact on the stability of these rationally designed prodrug linkers. In a single-dose rat toxicology study, a site-specific anti-Her2 NDC was well tolerated at dose levels up to 90 mg/kg. These experiments support the notion that chemically defined antibody conjugates can be synthesized in commercially relevant yields and can lead to antibody drug conjugates with improved properties relative to the heterogeneous conjugates formed by nonspecific chemical modification.
Angewandte Chemie | 2014
Sumith A. Kularatne; Vishal Deshmukh; Virginie Tardif; Reyna K. V. Lim; Holly Pugh; Ying Sun; Anthony Manibusan; Aaron Sellers; Richard S. Barnett; Shailaja Srinagesh; Jane S. Forsyth; Wolf Hassenpflug; Feng Tian; Tsotne Javahishvili; Brian R. Lawson; Stephanie A. Kazane; Peter G. Schultz
A chemically defined anti-CXCR4-auristatin antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) was synthesized that selectively eliminates tumor cells overexpressing the CXCR4 receptor. The unnatural amino acid p-acetylphenylalanine (pAcF) was site-specifically incorporated into an anti-CXCR4 immunoglobulin G (IgG) and conjugated to an auristatin through a stable, non-cleavable oxime linkage to afford a chemically homogeneous ADC. The full-length anti-CXCR4 ADC was selectively cytotoxic to CXCR4(+) cancer cells in vitro (half maximal effective concentration (EC50 )≈80-100 pM). Moreover, the anti-CXCR4 ADC eliminated pulmonary lesions from human osteosarcoma cells in a lung-seeding tumor model in mice. No significant overt toxicity was observed but there was a modest decrease in the bone-marrow-derived CXCR4(+) cell population. Because CXCR4 is highly expressed in a majority of metastatic cancers, a CXCR4-auristatin ADC may be useful for the treatment of a variety of metastatic malignancies.
Archive | 2009
Feng Tian; Anna-Maria A. Hays Putnam; Frank Song; Stephanie Chu; Joseph Sheffer; Richard S. Barnett; Marc Siladi; Kyle Atkinson; Darin Lee; Peter C. Canning
Archive | 2013
Ying Sun; Ning Zou; Amha Hewet; Jason Pinkstaff; Shailaja Srinagesh; Richard S. Barnett; Feng Tian; Anna-Maria A. Hays Putnam; Marco Gymnopoulos; Nick Knudsen; Andrew Beck
Archive | 2013
Richard S. Barnett; Nick Knudsen; Ying Sun; Sandra Biroc; Timothy Buss; Tsotne Javahishvili; Damien Bresson; Shailaja Srinagesh; Amha Hewet; Jason Pinkstaff
Archive | 2013
Richard S. Barnett; Feng Tian; Anna-Maria A. Hays Putnam; Marco Gymnopoulos; Nick Knudsen; Andrew Beck; Ying Sun
Archive | 2013
Richard S. Barnett; Feng Tian; Anna-Maria A. Hays Putnam; Marco Gymnopoulos; Nick Knudsen; Andrew Beck; Ying Sun
Archive | 2013
Richard S. Barnett; Nick Knudsen; Ying Sun; Sandra Biroc; Timothy Buss; Tsotne Javahishvili; Damien Bresson; Shailaja Srinagesh; Amha Hewet; Jason Pinkstaff
Archive | 2013
Ying Sun; Ning Zou; Amha Hewet; Jason Pinkstaff; Shailaja Srinagesh; Richard S. Barnett; Feng Tian; Anna-Maria A. Hays Putnam; Marco Gymnopoulos; Nick Knudsen; Andrew Beck
Archive | 2009
Feng Tian; Putnam Anna-Maria A. Hays; Frank Song; Stephanie Chu; Joseph Sheffer; Richard S. Barnett; Marc Siladi; Kyle Atkinson; Darin Lee; Peter C. Canning