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Dive into the research topics where Roland A Newman is active.

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Featured researches published by Roland A Newman.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

Elimination of Fc receptor-dependent effector functions of a modified IgG4 monoclonal antibody to human CD4.

Manjula Reddy; Cheryl Ann S. Kinney; Margery A. Chaikin; Angela Payne; Jacqueline Fishman-Lobell; Ping Tsui; Paul R. Dal Monte; Michael L. Doyle; Michael Brigham-Burke; Darrell R Anderson; Mitchell E Reff; Roland A Newman; Nabil Hanna; Raymond Sweet; Alemseged Truneh

Several CD4 mAbs have entered the clinic for the treatment of autoimmune diseases or transplant rejection. Most of these mAbs caused CD4 cell depletion, and some were murine mAbs which were further hampered by human anti-mouse Ab responses. To obviate these concerns, a primatized CD4 mAb, clenoliximab, was generated by fusing the V domains of a cynomolgus macaque mAb to human constant regions. The heavy chain constant region is a modified IgG4 containing two single residue substitutions designed to ablate residual Fc receptor binding activity and to stabilize heavy chain dimer formation. This study compares and contrasts the in vitro properties of clenoliximab with its matched IgG1 derivative, keliximab, which shares the same variable regions. Both mAbs show potent inhibition of in vitro T cell responses, lack of binding to complement component C1q, and inability to mediate complement-dependent cytotoxicity. However, clenoliximab shows markedly reduced binding to Fc receptors and therefore does not mediate Ab-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity or modulation/loss of CD4 from the surface of T cells, except in the presence of rheumatoid factor or activated monocytes. Thus, clenoliximab retains the key immunomodulatory attributes of keliximab without the liability of strong Fcγ receptor binding. In initial clinical trials, these properties have translated to a reduced incidence of CD4+ T cell depletion.


International Journal of Oncology | 2011

BM-ca is a newly defined type I/II anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody with unique biological properties.

Michio Nishida; Norio Uematsu; Hideaki Kobayashi; Yuka Matsunaga; Shoko Ishida; Minoru Takata; Ohtsura Niwa; Eduardo A. Padlan; Roland A Newman

Rituximab (chimeric anti-CD20 mAb) is currently used in the treatment of B-NHL and B cell malignancies, alone or in combination with chemotherapy. However, subsets of patients do not initially respond and/or develop resistance to additional treatments. Hence, there is a need to develop more effective anti-CD20 mAbs that may improve clinical response. BM-ca is a novel humanized anti-CD20 mAb that was tested against several B-NHL cell lines and was compared to several anti-CD20 mAbs (Rituximab, ofatumumab, 2H7, B1 and B-Ly1). BM-ca was shown to strongly induce both homotypic cell aggregation and redistribution of CD20 to membrane lipid rafts. BM-ca was also able to induce programmed cell death (apoptosis) without the need for cross-linking and demonstrated potent complement-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC). BM-ca was more cytotoxic than rituximab even in malignant B cells expressing low amounts of membrane CD20. Type I anti-CD20 mAbs typically induce minimal levels of homotypic cell aggregation and apoptosis but strong localization of CD20 to lipid rafts and potent CDC. Type II anti-CD20 mAbs typically exert the reverse activities. Noteworthy, BM-ca exhibits properties that are shared by both type I and type II anti-CD20 mAbs, which may reflect the recognition of a new CD20 epitope and/or exhibit different molecular signaling. Overall, the present data show that BM-ca is a novel anti-CD20 mAb that may be classified as a type I/II. The therapeutics efficacy of BM-ca awaits its use in clinical trials.


Methods in Enzymology | 2000

Measurement of protein interaction bioenergetics: Application to structural variants of anti-sCD4 antibody

Michael L. Doyle; Michael Brigham-Burke; Michael Neal Blackburn; Ian Brooks; Thomas M. Smith; Roland A Newman; Mitchell E Reff; Walter F Stafford; Raymond W. Sweet; Alemseged Truneh; Preston Hensley; Daniel J. O'Shannessy

This chapter has described a bioenergetic analysis of the interaction of sCD4 with an IgG1 and two IgG4 derivatives of an anti-sCD4 MAb. The MAbs have identical VH and VL domains but differ markedly in their CH and CL domains, raising the question of whether their antigen-binding chemistries are altered. We find the sCD4-binding kinetics and thermodynamics of the MAbs are indistinguishable, which indicates rigorously that the molecular details of the binding interactions are the same. We also showed the importance of using multiple biophysical methods to define the binding model before the bioenergetics can be appropriately interpreted. Analysis of the binding thermodynamics and kinetics suggests conformational changes that might be coupled to sCD4 binding by these MAbs are small or absent.


Methods in Enzymology | 1987

Lymphoid receptors for transferrin

Roland A Newman

Publisher Summary Transferrin receptors present on the cell surface interact with this serum protein and provide a way in which iron can be specifically and vectorially transported through the plasma membrane. The transferrin receptor has proved to be an extremely useful system for the characterization of ligand/receptor interactions, receptor recycling, and examining the relationship between cell surface receptors and the regulation of cell growth. Many of the techniques used to successfully characterize the transferrin receptor have been made possible by the availability of anti-transferrin receptor monoclonal antibodies. These anti bodies will undoubtedly play a more prominent role in clinical therapy in the future to control cell growth or to specifically deliver toxins or drugs to tumor cells. Molecular biology techniques will also play a dominant role in determining in precise molecular terms the mechanisms by which cell growth is regulated at the DNA and RNA level and the way the expression of transferring receptor relates to the cell surface expression of other growth factor receptors.


Archive | 1993

Therapeutic application of chimeric and radiolabeled antibodies to human B lymphocyte restricted differentiation antigen for treatment of B cell lymphoma

Darrell R Anderson; Nabil Hanna; John E Leonard; Roland A Newman; Mitchell E Reff; William H Rastetter


Archive | 1995

RECOMBINANT ANTIBODIES FOR HUMAN THERAPY

Roland A Newman; Nabil Hanna; Ronald W Raab


Nature Biotechnology | 1992

“Primatization” of Recombinant Antibodies for Immunotherapy of Human Diseases: A Macaque/Human Chimeric Antibody Against Human CD4

Roland A Newman; James Alberts; Darrell R Anderson; Kristin Carner; Cheryl Heard; Frank Norton; Ronald W Raab; Mitchell E Reff; Steve Shuey; Nabil Hanna


Archive | 1996

Neutralizing high affinity human monoclonal antibodies specific to RSV F-protein and methods for their manufacture and therapeutic use thereof

Peter Brams; Soulaima Chamat; Li-Zhen Pan; Edward E. Walsh; Cheryl Heard; Roland A Newman


Archive | 1995

Chimeric and radiolabelled antibodies specific to human CD20 antigen and use thereof for treatment of B-cell lymphoma

Darrell R Anderson; Nabil Hanna; Roland A Newman; Mitchell E Reff; William H Rastetter


International Immunopharmacology | 2001

A humanized anti-human CD154 monoclonal antibody blocks CD154–CD40 mediated human B cell activation

Peter Brams; Amelia Black; Eduardo A. Padlan; Kandasamy Hariharan; John E Leonard; Karen Chambers-Slater; Randolph J. Noelle; Roland A Newman

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Nabil Hanna

National Institutes of Health

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Darrell R Anderson

City of Hope National Medical Center

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John E Leonard

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Eduardo A. Padlan

National Institutes of Health

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Soulaima Chamat

American University of Beirut

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