William J. J. Finlay
Pfizer
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Publication
Featured researches published by William J. J. Finlay.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011
Wenwu Zhai; Jacob Glanville; Markus Fuhrmann; Li Mei; Irene Ni; Purnima Sundar; Thomas Van Blarcom; Yasmina Noubia Abdiche; Kevin Lindquist; Ralf Strohner; Dilduz Telman; Guido Cappuccilli; William J. J. Finlay; Jan Van den Brulle; David R. Cox; Jaume Pons; Arvind Rajpal
We present a method for synthetic antibody library generation that combines the use of high-throughput immune repertoire analysis and a novel synthetic technology. The library design recapitulates positional amino acid frequencies observed in natural antibody repertoires. V-segment diversity in four heavy (V(H)) and two kappa (V(κ)) germlines was introduced based on the analysis of somatically hypermutated donor-derived repertoires. Complementarity-determining region 3 length and amino acid designs were based on aggregate frequencies of all V(H) and V(κ) sequences in the data set. The designed libraries were constructed through an adaptation of a novel gene synthesis technology that enables precise positional control of amino acid composition and incorporation frequencies. High-throughput pyrosequencing was used to monitor the fidelity of construction and characterize genetic diversity in the final 3.6×10(10) transformants. The library exhibited Fab expression superior to currently reported synthetic approaches of equivalent diversity, with greater than 93% of clones observed to successfully display both a correctly folded heavy chain and a correctly folded light chain. Genetic diversity in the library was high, with 95% of 7.0×10(5) clones sequenced observed only once. The obtained library diversity explores a comparable sequence space as the donor-derived natural repertoire and, at the same time, is able to access novel recombined diversity due to lack of segmental linkage. The successful isolation of low- and subnanomolar-affinity antibodies against a diverse panel of receptors, growth factors, enzymes, antigens from infectious reagents, and peptides confirms the functional viability of the design strategy.
Journal of Immunology | 2012
Leeying Wu; Katarzyna Oficjalska; Matthew Lambert; Brian J. Fennell; Alfredo Darmanin-Sheehan; Deirdre Ní Shúilleabháin; Bénédicte Autin; Emma Cummins; Lioudmila Tchistiakova; Laird Bloom; Janet E. Paulsen; Davinder Gill; Orla Cunningham; William J. J. Finlay
Examination of 1269 unique naive chicken VH sequences showed that the majority of positions in the framework (FW) regions were maintained as germline, with high mutation rates observed in the CDRs. Many FW mutations could be clearly related to the modulation of CDR structure or the VH–VL interface. CDRs 1 and 2 of the VH exhibited frequent mutation in solvent-exposed positions, but conservation of common structural residues also found in human CDRs at the same positions. In comparison with humans and mice, the chicken CDR3 repertoire was skewed toward longer sequences, was dominated by small amino acids (G/S/A/C/T), and had higher cysteine (chicken, 9.4%; human, 1.6%; and mouse, 0.25%) but lower tyrosine content (chicken, 9.2%; human, 16.8%; and mouse 26.4%). A strong correlation (R2 = 0.97) was observed between increasing CDR3 length and higher cysteine content. This suggests that noncanonical disulfides are strongly favored in chickens, potentially increasing CDR stability and complexity in the topology of the combining site. The probable formation of disulfide bonds between CDR3 and CDR1, FW2, or CDR2 was also observed, as described in camelids. All features of the naive repertoire were fully replicated in the target-selected, phage-displayed repertoire. The isolation of a chicken Fab with four noncanonical cysteines in the VH that exhibits 64 nM (KD) binding affinity for its target proved these constituents to be part of the humoral response, not artifacts. This study supports the hypothesis that disulfide bond-constrained CDR3s are a structural diversification strategy in the restricted germline v-gene repertoire of chickens.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2012
William J. J. Finlay; Juan Carlos Almagro
Antibodies are the fastest-growing segment of the biologics market. The success of antibody-based drugs resides in their exquisite specificity, high potency, stability, solubility, safety, and relatively inexpensive manufacturing process in comparison with other biologics. We outline here the structural studies and fundamental principles that define how antibodies interact with diverse targets. We also describe the antibody repertoires and affinity maturation mechanisms of humans, mice, and chickens, plus the use of novel single-domain antibodies in camelids and sharks. These species all utilize diverse evolutionary solutions to generate specific and high affinity antibodies and illustrate the plasticity of natural antibody repertoires. In addition, we discuss the multiple variations of man-made antibody repertoires designed and validated in the last two decades, which have served as tools to explore how the size, diversity, and composition of a repertoire impact the antibody discovery process.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Heather H. Shih; Chao Tu; Wei Cao; Anne S. Klein; Renee Ramsey; Brian J. Fennell; Matthew Lambert; Deirdre Ní Shúilleabháin; Bénédicte Autin; Eugenia Kouranova; Sri Laxmanan; Steven P. Braithwaite; Leeying Wu; Mostafa Ait-Zahra; Anthony J. Milici; Jo Ann Dumin; Edward R. LaVallie; Maya Arai; Christopher John Corcoran; Janet E. Paulsen; Davinder Gill; Orla Cunningham; Joel Bard; Lydia Mosyak; William J. J. Finlay
Background: Truly phosphospecific antibodies are difficult to generate and are poorly understood. Results: Avian single chain Fv library selections yielded fully phosphospecific anti-phospho-tau antibodies, enabling the generation of a 1.9 Å co-crystal structure. Conclusion: Phosphospecific antibodies were readily generated and can exhibit unique epitope recognition mechanisms. Significance: High-affinity antibody phosphoepitope recognition has been defined, at high resolution, for the first time. Highly specific antibodies to phosphoepitopes are valuable tools to study phosphorylation in disease states, but their discovery is largely empirical, and the molecular mechanisms mediating phosphospecific binding are poorly understood. Here, we report the generation and characterization of extremely specific recombinant chicken antibodies to three phosphoepitopes on the Alzheimer disease-associated protein tau. Each antibody shows full specificity for a single phosphopeptide. The chimeric IgG pT231/pS235_1 exhibits a KD of 0.35 nm in 1:1 binding to its cognate phosphopeptide. This IgG is murine ortholog-cross-reactive, specifically recognizing the pathological form of tau in brain samples from Alzheimer patients and a mouse model of tauopathy. To better understand the underlying binding mechanisms allowing such remarkable specificity, we determined the structure of pT231/pS235_1 Fab in complex with its cognate phosphopeptide at 1.9 Å resolution. The Fab fragment exhibits novel complementarity determining region (CDR) structures with a “bowl-like” conformation in CDR-H2 that tightly and specifically interacts with the phospho-Thr-231 phosphate group, as well as a long, disulfide-constrained CDR-H3 that mediates peptide recognition. This binding mechanism differs distinctly from either peptide- or hapten-specific antibodies described to date. Surface plasmon resonance analyses showed that pT231/pS235_1 binds a truly compound epitope, as neither phosphorylated Ser-235 nor free peptide shows any measurable binding affinity.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2013
Ciara M. Mahon; Matthew Lambert; Jacob Glanville; Jason Wade; Brian J. Fennell; Mark Rh Krebs; Douglas Armellino; Sharon Yang; Xuemei Liu; Cliona M. O'Sullivan; Bénédicte Autin; Katarzyna Oficjalska; Laird Bloom; Janet E. Paulsen; Davinder Gill; Marc Damelin; Orla Cunningham; William J. J. Finlay
We have generated large libraries of single-chain Fv antibody fragments (>10(10) transformants) containing unbiased amino acid diversity that is restricted to the central combining site of the stable, well-expressed DP47 and DPK22 germline V-genes. Library WySH2A was constructed to examine the potential for synthetic complementarity-determining region (CDR)-H3 diversity to act as the lone source of binding specificity. Library WySH2B was constructed to assess the necessity for diversification in both the H3 and L3. Both libraries provided diverse, specific antibodies, yielding a total of 243 unique hits against 7 different targets, but WySH2B produced fewer hits than WySH2A when selected in parallel. WySH2A also consistently produced hits of similar quality to WySH2B, demonstrating that the diversification of the CDR-L3 reduces library fitness. Despite the absence of deliberate bias in the library design, CDR length was strongly associated with the number of hits produced, leading to a functional loop length distribution profile that mimics the biases observed in the natural repertoire. A similar trend was also observed for the CDR-L3. After target selections, several key amino acids were enriched in the CDR-H3 (e.g., small and aromatic residues) while others were reduced (e.g., strongly charged residues) in a manner that was specific to position, preferentially occurred in CDR-H3 stem positions, and tended towards residues associated with loop stabilization. As proof of principle for the WySH2 libraries to produce viable lead candidate antibodies, 114 unique hits were produced against Delta-like ligand 4 (DLL4). Leads exhibited nanomolar binding affinities, highly specific staining of DLL4+ cells, and biochemical neutralization of DLL4-NOTCH1 interaction.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Sue Townsend; Brian J. Fennell; James R. Apgar; Matthew Lambert; Barry McDonnell; Joanne Grant; Jason Wade; Edward Franklin; Niall Foy; Deirdre Ní Shúilleabháin; Conor Fields; Alfredo Darmanin-Sheehan; Amy King; Janet E. Paulsen; Timothy P. Hickling; Lioudmila Tchistiakova; Orla Cunningham; William J. J. Finlay
Significance Immunized animals are a key source of monoclonal antibodies used to treat human diseases. Before clinical use, animal antibodies are typically “humanized” by laborious and suboptimal methods that transfer their full target binding loops (a.k.a. CDRs) into human frameworks. We report an optimal method, where the CDRs from species such as rodents and chickens can be adapted to fit human frameworks in which we have clinical and manufacturing confidence. The Augmented Binary Substitution (ABS) process exploits the fundamental plasticity of antibody CDRs to ultrahumanize antibodies from key species in a single pass. ABS results in a final antibody that is much closer to human germ line in the frameworks and CDRs, minimizing immunogenicity risks in man and maximizing the therapeutic potential of the antibody. Although humanized antibodies have been highly successful in the clinic, all current humanization techniques have potential limitations, such as: reliance on rodent hosts, immunogenicity due to high non-germ-line amino acid content, v-domain destabilization, expression and formulation issues. This study presents a technology that generates stable, soluble, ultrahumanized antibodies via single-step complementarity-determining region (CDR) germ-lining. For three antibodies from three separate key immune host species, binary substitution CDR cassettes were inserted into preferred human frameworks to form libraries in which only the parental or human germ-line destination residue was encoded at each position. The CDR-H3 in each case was also augmented with 1 ± 1 random substitution per clone. Each library was then screened for clones with restored antigen binding capacity. Lead ultrahumanized clones demonstrated high stability, with affinity and specificity equivalent to, or better than, the parental IgG. Critically, this was mainly achieved on germ-line frameworks by simultaneously subtracting up to 19 redundant non-germ-line residues in the CDRs. This process significantly lowered non-germ-line sequence content, minimized immunogenicity risk in the final molecules and provided a heat map for the essential non-germ-line CDR residue content of each antibody. The ABS technology therefore fully optimizes the clinical potential of antibodies from rodents and alternative immune hosts, rendering them indistinguishable from fully human in a simple, single-pass process.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016
Chao Tu; Virginie Terraube; Amy Tam; Wayne Stochaj; Brian J. Fennell; Laura Lin; Mark Stahl; Edward R. LaVallie; Will Somers; William J. J. Finlay; Lydia Mosyak; Joel Bard; Orla Cunningham
Background: Antibody v-domains in scFv format often suffer from aggregation and stability issues that restrict formulation. Results: Structural and empirical analyses of an optimized scFv revealed that three VL-CDR3 mutations were sufficient to mediate significant stability and affinity improvements. Conclusion: scFv issues were resolved via removal of side-chain clashes at the VL/VH interface. Significance: CDR-restricted mutagenesis delivers stability-optimized molecules for high concentration dosing. Fully-human single-chain Fv (scFv) proteins are key potential building blocks of bispecific therapeutic antibodies, but they often suffer from manufacturability and clinical development limitations such as instability and aggregation. The causes of these scFv instability problems, in proteins that should be theoretically stable, remains poorly understood. To inform the future development of such molecules, we carried out a comprehensive structural analysis of the highly stabilized anti-CXCL13 scFv E10. E10 was derived from the parental 3B4 using complementarity-determining region (CDR)-restricted mutagenesis and tailored selection and screening strategies, and carries four mutations in VL-CDR3. High-resolution crystal structures of parental 3B4 and optimized E10 scFvs were solved in the presence and absence of human CXCL13. In parallel, a series of scFv mutants was generated to interrogate the individual contribution of each of the four mutations to stability and affinity improvements. In combination, these analyses demonstrated that the optimization of E10 was primarily mediated by removing clashes between both the VL and the VH, and between the VL and CXCL13. Importantly, a single, germline-encoded VL-CDR3 residue mediated the key difference between the stable and unstable forms of the scFv. This work demonstrates that, aside from being the critical mediators of specificity and affinity, CDRs may also be the primary drivers of biotherapeutic developability.
mAbs | 2018
Lindsay B. Avery; Jason Wade; Mengmeng Wang; Amy Tam; Amy King; Nicole Piche-Nicholas; Mania Kavosi; Steve Penn; David Cirelli; Jeffrey C. Kurz; Minlei Zhang; Orla Cunningham; Rhys Jones; Brian J. Fennell; Barry McDonnell; Paul Sakorafas; James R. Apgar; William J. J. Finlay; Laura Lin; Laird Bloom; Denise M. O'Hara
ABSTRACT Implementation of in vitro assays that correlate with in vivo human pharmacokinetics (PK) would provide desirable preclinical tools for the early selection of therapeutic monoclonal antibody (mAb) candidates with minimal non-target-related PK risk. Use of these tools minimizes the likelihood that mAbs with unfavorable PK would be advanced into costly preclinical and clinical development. In total, 42 mAbs varying in isotype and soluble versus membrane targets were tested in in vitro and in vivo studies. MAb physicochemical properties were assessed by measuring non-specific interactions (DNA- and insulin-binding ELISA), self-association (affinity-capture self-interaction nanoparticle spectroscopy) and binding to matrix-immobilized human FcRn (surface plasmon resonance and column chromatography). The range of scores obtained from each in vitro assay trended well with in vivo clearance (CL) using both human FcRn transgenic (Tg32) mouse allometrically projected human CL and observed human CL, where mAbs with high in vitro scores resulted in rapid CL in vivo. Establishing a threshold value for mAb CL in human of 0.32 mL/hr/kg enabled refinement of thresholds for each in vitro assay parameter, and using a combinatorial triage approach enabled the successful differentiation of mAbs at high risk for rapid CL (unfavorable PK) from those with low risk (favorable PK), which allowed mAbs requiring further characterization to be identified. Correlating in vitro parameters with in vivo human CL resulted in a set of in vitro tools for use in early testing that would enable selection of mAbs with the greatest likelihood of success in the clinic, allowing costly late-stage failures related to an inadequate exposure profile, toxicity or lack of efficacy to be avoided.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010
Brian J. Fennell; Alfredo Darmanin-Sheehan; S.E. Hufton; V. Calabro; Leeying Wu; M.R. Müller; Wei Cao; Davinder Gill; Orla Cunningham; William J. J. Finlay
Analytical Biochemistry | 2011
Barry McDonnell; Stephen Hearty; William J. J. Finlay; Richard O’Kennedy