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Dive into the research topics where Sunil Bhakta is active.

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Featured researches published by Sunil Bhakta.


Nature Biotechnology | 2008

Site-specific conjugation of a cytotoxic drug to an antibody improves the therapeutic index

Jagath R. Junutula; Helga Raab; Suzanna Clark; Sunil Bhakta; Douglas D. Leipold; Sylvia Weir; Yvonne Chen; Michelle Simpson; Siao Ping Tsai; Mark S. Dennis; Yanmei Lu; Y. Gloria Meng; Carl Ng; Jihong Yang; Chien C Lee; Eileen T. Duenas; Jeffrey Gorrell; Viswanatham Katta; Amy Kim; Kevin McDorman; Kelly Flagella; Rayna Venook; Sarajane Ross; Susan D. Spencer; Wai Lee Wong; Henry B. Lowman; Richard Vandlen; Mark X. Sliwkowski; Richard H. Scheller; Paul Polakis

Antibody-drug conjugates enhance the antitumor effects of antibodies and reduce adverse systemic effects of potent cytotoxic drugs. However, conventional drug conjugation strategies yield heterogenous conjugates with relatively narrow therapeutic index (maximum tolerated dose/curative dose). Using leads from our previously described phage display–based method to predict suitable conjugation sites, we engineered cysteine substitutions at positions on light and heavy chains that provide reactive thiol groups and do not perturb immunoglobulin folding and assembly, or alter antigen binding. When conjugated to monomethyl auristatin E, an antibody against the ovarian cancer antigen MUC16 is as efficacious as a conventional conjugate in mouse xenograft models. Moreover, it is tolerated at higher doses in rats and cynomolgus monkeys than the same conjugate prepared by conventional approaches. The favorable in vivo properties of the near-homogenous composition of this conjugate suggest that our strategy offers a general approach to retaining the antitumor efficacy of antibody-drug conjugates, while minimizing their systemic toxicity.


Nature Biotechnology | 2012

Conjugation site modulates the in vivo stability and therapeutic activity of antibody-drug conjugates

Ben-Quan Shen; Keyang Xu; Luna Liu; Helga Raab; Sunil Bhakta; Margaret Kenrick; Kathryn Parsons-Reponte; Janet Tien; Shang-Fan Yu; Elaine Mai; Dongwei Li; Jay Tibbitts; Jakub Baudys; Ola Saad; Suzie J. Scales; Paul J. Mcdonald; Philip E. Hass; Charles Eigenbrot; Trung Nguyen; Willy Solis; Reina N. Fuji; Kelly Flagella; Darshana Ramesh Patel; Susan D. Spencer; Leslie A. Khawli; Allen Ebens; Wai Lee Wong; Richard Vandlen; Surinder Kaur; Mark X. Sliwkowski

The reactive thiol in cysteine is used for coupling maleimide linkers in the generation of antibody conjugates. To assess the impact of the conjugation site, we engineered cysteines into a therapeutic HER2/neu antibody at three sites differing in solvent accessibility and local charge. The highly solvent-accessible site rapidly lost conjugated thiol-reactive linkers in plasma owing to maleimide exchange with reactive thiols in albumin, free cysteine or glutathione. In contrast, a partially accessible site with a positively charged environment promoted hydrolysis of the succinimide ring in the linker, thereby preventing this exchange reaction. The site with partial solvent-accessibility and neutral charge displayed both properties. In a mouse mammary tumor model, the stability and therapeutic activity of the antibody conjugate were affected positively by succinimide ring hydrolysis and negatively by maleimide exchange with thiol-reactive constituents in plasma. Thus, the chemical and structural dynamics of the conjugation site can influence antibody conjugate performance by modulating the stability of the antibody-linker interface.


mAbs | 2014

Site-specific antibody drug conjugates for cancer therapy

Siler Panowski; Sunil Bhakta; Helga Raab; Paul Polakis; Jagath R. Junutula

Antibody therapeutics have revolutionized the treatment of cancer over the past two decades. Antibodies that specifically bind tumor surface antigens can be effective therapeutics; however, many unmodified antibodies lack therapeutic activity. These antibodies can instead be applied successfully as guided missiles to deliver potent cytotoxic drugs in the form of antibody drug conjugates (ADCs). The success of ADCs is dependent on four factors—target antigen, antibody, linker, and payload. The field has made great progress in these areas, marked by the recent approval by the US Food and Drug Administration of two ADCs, brentuximab vedotin (Adcetris®) and ado-trastuzumab emtansine (Kadcyla®). However, the therapeutic window for many ADCs that are currently in pre-clinical or clinical development remains narrow and further improvements may be required to enhance the therapeutic potential of these ADCs. Production of ADCs is an area where improvement is needed because current methods yield heterogeneous mixtures that may include 0–8 drug species per antibody molecule. Site-specific conjugation has been recently shown to eliminate heterogeneity, improve conjugate stability, and increase the therapeutic window. Here, we review and describe various site-specific conjugation strategies that are currently used for the production of ADCs, including use of engineered cysteine residues, unnatural amino acids, and enzymatic conjugation through glycotransferases and transglutaminases. In addition, we also summarize differences among these methods and highlight critical considerations when building next-generation ADC therapeutics.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2010

Engineered Thio-Trastuzumab-DM1 Conjugate with an Improved Therapeutic Index to Target Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2–Positive Breast Cancer

Jagath R. Junutula; Kelly Flagella; Richard A. Graham; Kathryn Parsons; Edward Ha; Helga Raab; Sunil Bhakta; Trung Nguyen; Debra L. Dugger; Guangmin Li; Elaine Mai; Gail Lewis Phillips; Hajime Hiraragi; Reina N. Fuji; Jay Tibbitts; Richard Vandlen; Susan D. Spencer; Richard H. Scheller; Paul Polakis; Mark X. Sliwkowski

Purpose: Antibody drug conjugates (ADCs) combine the ideal properties of both antibodies and cytotoxic drugs by targeting potent drugs to the antigen-expressing tumor cells, thereby enhancing their antitumor activity. Successful ADC development for a given target antigen depends on optimization of antibody selection, linker stability, cytotoxic drug potency, and mode of linker-drug conjugation to the antibody. Here, we systematically examined the in vitro potency as well as in vivo preclinical efficacy and safety profiles of a heterogeneous preparation of conventional trastuzumab-mcc-DM1 (TMAb-mcc-DM1) ADC with that of a homogeneous engineered thio-trastuzumab-mpeo-DM1 (thioTMAb-mpeo-DM1) conjugate. Experimental Design and Results: To generate thioTMAb-mpeo-DM1, one drug maytansinoid 1 (DM1) molecule was conjugated to an engineered cysteine residue at Ala114 (Kabat numbering) on each trastuzumab-heavy chain, resulting in two DM1 molecules per antibody. ThioTMAb-mpeo-DM1 retained similar in vitro anti–cell proliferation activity and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) binding properties to that of the conventional ADC. Furthermore, it showed improved efficacy over the conventional ADC at DM1-equivalent doses (μg/m2) and retained efficacy at equivalent antibody doses (mg/kg). An improved safety profile of >2-fold was observed in a short-term target-independent rat safety study. In cynomolgus monkey safety studies, thioTMAb-mpeo-DM1 was tolerated at higher antibody doses (up to 48 mg/kg or 6,000 μg DM1/m2) compared with the conventional ADC that had dose-limiting toxicity at 30 mg/kg (6,000 μg DM1/m2). Conclusions: The engineered thioTMAb-mpeo-DM1 with broadened therapeutic index represents a promising antibody drug conjugate for future clinical development of HER2-positive targeted breast cancer therapies. Clin Cancer Res; 16(19); 4769–78. ©2010 AACR.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2008

Rapid identification of reactive cysteine residues for site-specific labeling of antibody-Fabs

Jagath R. Junutula; Sunil Bhakta; Helga Raab; Karen E. Ervin; Charles Eigenbrot; Richard Vandlen; Richard H. Scheller; Henry B. Lowman

Cysteines with reactive thiol groups are attractive tools for site-specific labeling of proteins. Engineering a reactive cysteine residue into proteins with multiple disulfide bonds is often a challenging task as it may interfere with structural and functional properties of the protein. Here we developed a phage display-based biochemical assay, PHESELECTOR (Phage ELISA for Selection of Reactive Thiols) to rapidly screen reactive thiol groups on antibody fragments without interfering with their antigen binding, using trastuzumab-Fab (hu4D5Fab) as a model system. The solvent accessibility values for all the amino acid residues in the hu4D5Fab were calculated using available crystal structure information. Serine, alanine and valine residues with highest solvent accessibility values were selected and tested to compare structure-based design with the PHESELECTOR biochemical method. Cysteine substitutions at partially solvent-accessible alanine or valine residues exhibited better thiol reactivity values than substitutions at serine residues. The poor correlation between fractional solvent accessibility and thiol reactivity of the engineered hu4D5Fab variants indicated the value of PHESELECTOR biochemical assay to identify reactive thiol groups on the antibody-Fab surface. Mass spectrometric analysis of biotinylated ThioFab (Fab with engineered cysteine) variants confirmed that conjugation occurred only at the engineered cysteine thiols of either light or heavy chains. ThioFabs with engineered cysteine residues in the constant domains (CL and CH(1)) should allow universal application for site-specific conjugation of antibody-Fabs.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Site-Specific Trastuzumab Maytansinoid Antibody–Drug Conjugates with Improved Therapeutic Activity through Linker and Antibody Engineering

Thomas H. Pillow; Janet Tien; Kathryn Parsons-Reponte; Sunil Bhakta; Hao Li; Leanna Staben; Guangmin Li; Josefa Chuh; Aimee Fourie-O’Donohue; Martine Darwish; Victor Yip; Luna Liu; Douglas D. Leipold; Dian Su; Elmer Wu; Susan D. Spencer; Ben-Quan Shen; Keyang Xu; Katherine R. Kozak; Helga Raab; Richard Vandlen; Gail Lewis Phillips; Richard H. Scheller; Paul Polakis; Mark X. Sliwkowski; John A. Flygare; Jagath R. Junutula

Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) have a significant impact toward the treatment of cancer, as evidenced by the clinical activity of the recently approved ADCs, brentuximab vedotin for Hodgkin lymphoma and ado-trastuzumab emtansine (trastuzumab-MCC-DM1) for metastatic HER2+ breast cancer. DM1 is an analog of the natural product maytansine, a microtubule inhibitor that by itself has limited clinical activity and high systemic toxicity. However, by conjugation of DM1 to trastuzumab, the safety was improved and clinical activity was demonstrated. Here, we report that through chemical modification of the linker-drug and antibody engineering, the therapeutic activity of trastuzumab maytansinoid ADCs can be further improved. These improvements include eliminating DM1 release in the plasma and increasing the drug load by engineering four cysteine residues into the antibody. The chemical synthesis of highly stable linker-drugs and the modification of cysteine residues of engineered site-specific antibodies resulted in a homogeneous ADC with increased therapeutic activity compared to the clinically approved ADC, trastuzumab-MCC-DM1.


Pharmaceutical Research | 2015

Mechanism-Based Pharmacokinetic/Pharmacodynamic Model for THIOMAB™ Drug Conjugates

Siddharth Sukumaran; Kapil Gadkar; Crystal Zhang; Sunil Bhakta; Luna Liu; Keyang Xu; Helga Raab; Shang-Fan Yu; Elaine Mai; Aimee Fourie-O’Donohue; Katherine R. Kozak; Saroja Ramanujan; Jagath R. Junutula; Kedan Lin

ABSTRACTPurposeTHIOMAB™ drug conjugates (TDCs) with engineered cysteine residues allow site-specific drug conjugation and defined Drug-to-Antibody Ratios (DAR). In order to help elucidate the impact of drug-loading, conjugation site, and subsequent deconjugation on pharmacokinetics and efficacy, we have developed an integrated mathematical model to mechanistically characterize pharmacokinetic behavior and preclinical efficacy of MMAE conjugated TDCs with different DARs. General applicability of the model structure was evaluated with two different TDCs.MethodPharmacokinetics studies were conducted for unconjugated antibody and purified TDCs with DAR-1, 2 and 4 for trastuzumab TDC and Anti-STEAP1 TDC in mice. Total antibody concentrations and individual DAR fractions were measured. Efficacy studies were performed in tumor-bearing mice.ResultsAn integrated model consisting of distinct DAR species (DAR0-4), each described by a two-compartment model was able to capture the experimental data well. Time series measurements of each Individual DAR species allowed for the incorporation of site-specific drug loss through deconjugation and the results suggest a higher deconjugation rate from heavy chain site HC-A114C than the light chain site LC-V205C. Total antibody concentrations showed multi-exponential decline, with a higher clearance associated with higher DAR species. The experimentally observed effects of TDC on tumor growth kinetics were successfully described by linking pharmacokinetic profiles to DAR-dependent killing of tumor cells.ConclusionResults from the integrated model evaluated with two different TDCs highlight the impact of DAR and site of conjugation on pharmacokinetics and efficacy. The model can be used to guide future drug optimization and in-vivo studies.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2013

Engineering THIOMABs for Site-Specific Conjugation of Thiol-Reactive Linkers

Sunil Bhakta; Helga Raab; Jagath R. Junutula

Antibody conjugates are used in many therapeutic and research applications and are generated by chemically linking a cysteine or lysine residue to potent chemotherapeutic drugs or other functional groups through a flexible linker. Recently, we have engineered THIOMABs (antibodies with engineered reactive cysteine residues) for site-specific conjugation and showed that these antibody conjugates display homogeneous labeling with optimal in vitro and in vivo characteristics. Here, we describe protocols for engineering, selection, and site-specific conjugation of THIOMABs with thiol-reactive linkers.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2014

Development of a semi-automated high throughput transient transfection system

Aaron B. Bos; Joseph N. Duque; Sunil Bhakta; Farzam Farahi; Lindsay A. Chirdon; Jagath R. Junutula; Peter D. Harms; Athena W. Wong

Transient transfection of mammalian cells provides a rapid method of producing protein for research purposes. Combining the transient transfection protein expression system with new automation technologies developed for the biotechnology industry would enable a high throughput protein production platform that could be utilized to generate a variety of different proteins in a short amount of time. These proteins could be used for an assortment of studies including proof of concept, antibody development, and biological structure and function. Here we describe such a platform: a semi-automated process for PEI-mediated transient protein production in tubespins at a throughput of 96 transfections at a time using a Biomek FX(P) liquid handling system. In one batch, 96 different proteins can be produced in milligram amounts by PEI transfection of HEK293 cells cultured in 50 mL tubespins. Methods were developed for the liquid handling system to automate the different processes associated with transient transfections such as initial cell seeding, DNA:PEI complex activation and DNA:PEI complex addition to the cells. Increasing DNA:PEI complex incubation time resulted in lower protein expression. To minimize protein production variability, the methods were further optimized to achieve consistent cell seeding, control the DNA:PEI incubation time and prevent cross-contamination among different tubespins. This semi-automated transfection process was applied to express 520 variants of a human IgG1 (hu IgG1) antibody.


mAbs | 2014

An improved and robust DNA immunization method to develop antibodies against extra-cellular loops of multi-transmembrane proteins

Meredith Hazen; Sunil Bhakta; Rajesh Vij; Steven Randle; Dara Y. Kallop; Vicki Chiang; Isidro Hotzel; Bijay S. Jaiswal; Karen E. Ervin; Bing Li; Robby M. Weimer; Paul Polakis; Richard H. Scheller; Jagath R. Junutula; Jo-Anne Hongo

Multi-transmembrane proteins are especially difficult targets for antibody generation largely due to the challenge of producing a protein that maintains its native conformation in the absence of a stabilizing membrane. Here, we describe an immunization strategy that successfully resulted in the identification of monoclonal antibodies that bind specifically to extracellular epitopes of a 12 transmembrane protein, multi-drug resistant protein 4 (MRP4). These monoclonal antibodies were developed following hydrodynamic tail vein immunization with a cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter-based plasmid expressing MRP4 cDNA and were characterized by flow cytometry. As expected, the use of the immune modulators fetal liver tyrosine kinase 3 ligand (Flt3L) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor positively enhanced the immune response against MRP4. Imaging studies using CMV-based plasmids expressing luciferase showed that the in vivo half-life of the target antigen was less than 48 h using CMV-based plasmids, thus necessitating frequent boosting with DNA to achieve an adequate immune response. We also describe a comparison of plasmids, which contained MRP4 cDNA with either the CMV or CAG promoters, used for immunizations. The observed luciferase activity in this comparison demonstrated that the CAG promoter-containing plasmid pCAGGS induced prolonged constitutive expression of MRP4 and an increased anti-MRP4 specific immune response even when the plasmid was injected less frequently. The method described here is one that can be broadly applicable as a general immunization strategy to develop antibodies against multi-transmembrane proteins, as well as target antigens that are difficult to express or purify in native and functionally active conformation.

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