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Dive into the research topics where Stefan Seeber is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefan Seeber.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

In vivo blockade of OX40 ligand inhibits thymic stromal lymphopoietin driven atopic inflammation

Dhaya Seshasayee; Wyne P. Lee; Meijuan Zhou; Jean Shu; Eric Suto; Juan Zhang; Laurie Diehl; Cary D. Austin; Y. Gloria Meng; Martha Tan; Sherron Bullens; Stefan Seeber; Maria E. Fuentes; Aran Frank Labrijn; Yvo Graus; Lisa A. Miller; Edward S. Schelegle; Dallas M. Hyde; Lawren C. Wu; Sarah G. Hymowitz; Flavius Martin

Thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP) potently induces deregulation of Th2 responses, a hallmark feature of allergic inflammatory diseases such as asthma, atopic dermatitis, and allergic rhinitis. However, direct downstream in vivo mediators in the TSLP-induced atopic immune cascade have not been identified. In our current study, we have shown that OX40 ligand (OX40L) is a critical in vivo mediator of TSLP-mediated Th2 responses. Treating mice with OX40L-blocking antibodies substantially inhibited immune responses induced by TSLP in the lung and skin, including Th2 inflammatory cell infiltration, cytokine secretion, and IgE production. OX40L-blocking antibodies also inhibited antigen-driven Th2 inflammation in mouse and nonhuman primate models of asthma. This treatment resulted in both blockade of the OX40-OX40L receptor-ligand interaction and depletion of OX40L-positive cells. The use of a blocking, OX40L-specific mAb thus presents a promising strategy for the treatment of allergic diseases associated with pathologic Th2 immune responses.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2015

Combined Inhibition of Tumor Necrosis Factor α and Interleukin‐17 As a Therapeutic Opportunity in Rheumatoid Arthritis: Development and Characterization of a Novel Bispecific Antibody

Jens Fischer; Axel J. Hueber; Stacy Wilson; Margarete Galm; Wolfgang Baum; Christopher Kitson; Johannes Auer; Stefan Lorenz; Jörg Moelleken; Martin Bader; Alain C. Tissot; Seng-Lai Tan; Stefan Seeber; Georg Schett

Rheumatoid arthritis therapies that are based on inhibition of a single cytokine, e.g., tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) or interleukin‐6 (IL‐6), produce clinically meaningful responses in only about half of the treated patients. This study was undertaken to investigate whether combined inhibition of TNFα and IL‐17 has additive or synergistic effects in the suppression of mesenchymal cell activation in vitro and inflammation and tissue destruction in arthritis in vivo.


mAbs | 2013

Analytical FcRn affinity chromatography for functional characterization of monoclonal antibodies

Tilman Schlothauer; Petra Rueger; Jan Olaf Stracke; Hubert Hertenberger; Felix Fingas; Lothar Kling; Thomas Emrich; Georg Drabner; Stefan Seeber; Johannes Auer; Stefan Koch; Apollon Papadimitriou

The neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn) is important for the metabolic fate of IgG antibodies in vivo. Analysis of the interaction between FcRn and IgG in vitro might provide insight into the structural and functional integrity of therapeutic IgG that may affect pharmacokinetics (PK) in vivo. We developed a standardized pH gradient FcRn affinity liquid chromatography method with conditions closely resembling the physiological mechanism of interaction between IgG and FcRn. This method allows the separation of molecular IgG isoforms, degradation products and engineered molecules based on their affinity to FcRn. Human FcRn was immobilized on the column and a linear pH gradient from pH 5.5 to 8.8 was applied. FcRn chromatography was used in comparison to surface plasmon resonance to characterize different monoclonal IgG preparations, e.g., oxidized or aggregated species. Wild-type and engineered IgGs were compared in vitro by FcRn chromatography and in vivo by PK studies in huFcRn transgenic mice. Analytical FcRn chromatography allows differentiation of IgG samples and variants by peak pattern and retention time profile. The method can distinguish: 1) IgGs with different Fabs, 2) oxidized from native IgG, 3) aggregates from monomer and 4) antibodies with mutations in the Fc part from wild-type IgGs. Changes in the FcRn chromatographic behavior of mutant IgGs relative to the wild-type IgG correlate to changes in the PK profile in the FcRn transgenic mice. These results demonstrate that FcRn affinity chromatography is a useful new method for the assessment of IgG integrity.


PLOS ONE | 2013

A Novel Angiopoietin-2 Selective Fully Human Antibody with Potent Anti-Tumoral and Anti-Angiogenic Efficacy and Superior Side Effect Profile Compared to Pan-Angiopoietin-1/-2 Inhibitors

Markus Thomas; Yvonne Kienast; Werner Scheuer; Monika Bähner; Klaus Kaluza; Christian Gassner; Frank Herting; Ulrich Brinkmann; Stefan Seeber; Anita Kavlie; Martin Welschof; Stefan Ries; K. Michael Weidner; Jörg T. Regula; Christian Klein

There is increasing experimental evidence for an important role of Angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) in tumor angiogenesis and progression. In addition, Ang-2 is up-regulated in many cancer types and correlated with poor prognosis. To investigate the functional role of Ang-2 inhibition in tumor development and progression, we generated novel fully human antibodies that neutralize specifically the binding of Ang-2 to its receptor Tie2. The selected antibodies LC06 and LC08 recognize both rodent and human Ang-2 with high affinity, but LC06 shows a higher selectivity for Ang-2 over Ang-1 compared to LC08 which can be considered an Ang-2/Ang-1 cross-reactive antibody. Our data demonstrate that Ang-2 blockade results in potent tumor growth inhibition and pronounced tumor necrosis in subcutaneous and orthotopic tumor models. These effects are attended with a reduction of intratumoral microvessel density and tumor vessels characterized by fewer branches and increased pericyte coverage. Furthermore, anti-Ang-2 treatment strongly inhibits the dissemination of tumor cells to the lungs. Interestingly, in contrast to the Ang-2/Ang-1 cross-reactive antibody LC08 that leads to a regression of physiological vessels in the mouse trachea, the inhibition with the selective anti-Ang-2 antibody LC06 appears to be largely restricted to tumor vasculature without obvious effects on normal vasculature. Taken together, these data provide strong evidence for the selective Ang-2 antibody LC06 as promising new therapeutic agent for the treatment of various cancers.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A Robust High Throughput Platform to Generate Functional Recombinant Monoclonal Antibodies Using Rabbit B Cells from Peripheral Blood

Stefan Seeber; Francesca Ros; Georg Tiefenthaler; Klaus Kaluza; Valeria Lifke; Jens Fischer; Stefan Klostermann; Josef Endl; Erhard Kopetzki; Achal Pashine; Basile Siewe; Brigitte Kaluza; Josef Platzer; Sonja Offner

We have developed a robust platform to generate and functionally characterize rabbit-derived antibodies using B cells from peripheral blood. The rapid high throughput procedure generates a diverse set of antibodies, yet requires only few animals to be immunized without the need to sacrifice them. The workflow includes (i) the identification and isolation of single B cells from rabbit blood expressing IgG antibodies, (ii) an elaborate short term B-cell cultivation to produce sufficient monoclonal antigen specific IgG for comprehensive phenotype screens, (iii) the isolation of VH and VL coding regions via PCR from B-cell clones producing antigen specific and functional antibodies followed by the sequence determination, and (iv) the recombinant expression and purification of IgG antibodies. The fully integrated and to a large degree automated platform (demonstrated in this paper using IL1RL1 immunized rabbits) yielded clonal and very diverse IL1RL1-specific and functional IL1RL1-inhibiting rabbit antibodies. These functional IgGs from individual animals were obtained at a short time range after immunization and could be identified already during primary screening, thus substantially lowering the workload for the subsequent B-cell PCR workflow. Early availability of sequence information permits one to select early-on function- and sequence-diverse antibodies for further characterization. In summary, this powerful technology platform has proven to be an efficient and robust method for the rapid generation of antigen specific and functional monoclonal rabbit antibodies without sacrificing the immunized animal.


mAbs | 2016

Anti-tumoral, anti-angiogenic and anti-metastatic efficacy of a tetravalent bispecific antibody (TAvi6) targeting VEGF-A and angiopoietin-2

Werner Scheuer; Markus Thomas; Petra Hanke; Johannes Sam; Franz Osl; Diana Weininger; Monika Baehner; Stefan Seeber; Hubert Kettenberger; Jürgen Schanzer; Ulrich Brinkmann; K. Michael Weidner; Jörg T. Regula; Christian Klein

ABSTRACT Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-A blockade has been validated clinically as a treatment for human cancers. Angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) is a key regulator of blood vessel remodeling and maturation. In tumors, Ang-2 is up-regulated and an unfavorable prognostic factor. Recent data demonstrated that Ang-2 inhibition mediates anti-tumoral effects. We generated a tetravalent bispecific antibody (Ang-2-VEGF-TAvi6) targeting VEGF-A with 2 arms based on bevacizumab (Avastin®), and targeting Ang-2 with 2 arms based on a novel anti-Ang-2 antibody (LC06). The two Ang-2-targeting single-chain variable fragments are disulfide-stabilized and fused to the C-terminus of the heavy chain of bevacizumab. Treatment with Ang-2-VEGF-A-TAvi6 led to a complete abrogation of angiogenesis in the cornea micropocket assay. Metastatic spread and tumor growth of subcutaneous, orthotopic and anti-VEGF-A resistant tumors were also efficiently inhibited. These data further establish Ang-2-VEGF bispecific antibodies as a promising anti-angiogenic, anti-metastatic and anti-tumor agent for the treatment of cancer.


Journal of Virological Methods | 2001

Digital imaging microscopy of firefly luciferase activity to directly monitor differences in cell transduction efficiencies between AdCMVLuc and Ad5LucRGD vectors having different cell binding properties.

Sylvia Kratzer; Olaf Mundigl; Frank Dicker; Stefan Seeber

The luciferase reporter gene incorporated into adenoviral vectors is very useful for monitoring viral transduction of different cell types or for comparing the transduction efficiency of different viral constructs of one cell type. Luciferase protein expression can be detected and quantified with very high sensitivity from whole cells or organ extracts. However, its disadvantages become obvious when aiming at evaluation of transduction events at the single cell level. The results obtained from whole cell extracts cannot be directly correlated to single cell events. In this paper direct cellular luciferase imaging using cell permeable luciferin substrates is applied for comparative analysis of cellular transduction events by two adenoviral vectors with different cell binding properties. Using digital imaging microscopy we show a more than ten-fold increase in transduction efficiency by Ad5LucRGD vectors versus AdCMVLuc vectors on human A549 cells.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2015

TriFabs--Trivalent IgG-Shaped Bispecific Antibody Derivatives: Design, Generation, Characterization and Application for Targeted Payload Delivery.

Klaus Mayer; Anna-Lena Baumann; Michael Grote; Stefan Seeber; Hubert Kettenberger; Sebastian Breuer; Tobias Killian; Wolfgang Schäfer; Ulrich Brinkmann

TriFabs are IgG-shaped bispecific antibodies (bsAbs) composed of two regular Fab arms fused via flexible linker peptides to one asymmetric third Fab-sized binding module. This third module replaces the IgG Fc region and is composed of the variable region of the heavy chain (VH) fused to CH3 with “knob”-mutations, and the variable region of the light chain (VL) fused to CH3 with matching “holes”. The hinge region does not contain disulfides to facilitate antigen access to the third binding site. To compensate for the loss of hinge-disulfides between heavy chains, CH3 knob-hole heterodimers are linked by S354C-Y349C disulphides, and VH and VL of the stem region may be linked via VH44C-VL100C disulphides. TriFabs which bind one antigen bivalent in the same manner as IgGs and the second antigen monovalent “in between” these Fabs can be applied to simultaneously engage two antigens, or for targeted delivery of small and large (fluorescent or cytotoxic) payloads.


Archive | 2005

Anti-OX40L Antibodies

Joseph Endl; Elsie M. Eugui; Maria E. Fuentes; Yvo Graus; Aran Frank Labrijn; Martin Lanzendoerfer; Paul Parren; Frank Rebers; Ralf Schumacher; Stefan Seeber; Jan van de Winkel; Martine van Vugt


Archive | 2009

Bispecific anti-VEGF/anti-ANG-2 antibodies

Monika Baehner; Ulrich Brinkmann; Guy Georges; Remko Albert Griep; Sabine Imhof-Jung; Anita Kavlie; Hubert Kettenberger; Christian Klein; Joerg Thomas Regula; Wolfgang Schaefer; Juergen Michael Schanzer; Werner Scheuer; Stefan Seeber; Markus Thomas

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