专利摘要:
the present invention provides compositions and methods for treating a condition or disease without the use of exogenous targeting sequences or chemical compositions. the present invention relates to single domain antibodies (sdabs), proteins and polypeptides comprising the sdabs that are directed against intracellular components that cause a condition or disease. the invention also includes nucleic acids encoding sdabs, proteins and polypeptides, and compositions comprising sdabs. the invention includes the use of the compositions, sdabs, and nucleic acids that encode sdabs for prophylactic, therapeutic, or diagnostic purposes.
公开号:BR112017008165B1
申请号:R112017008165
申请日:2015-10-23
公开日:2020-04-22
发明作者:Singh Sunanda
申请人:Singh Biotechnology Llc;
IPC主号:
专利说明:

(54) Title: SINGLE-DOMAIN ANTIBODY TARGETED AGAINST AN INTRACELLULAR COMPONENT AND ITS USE, IN VITRO METHODS TO MEASURE THE LEVELS OF THE REFERRED ANTIBODY AND TO DIAGNOSTIC A DISORDER MEASURED BY AN INTRACELLULAR COMPONENT, POLYEPTORIDATE AND POLYEPTORIDE COMPOSITE (51) Int.CI .: C07K 16/18; A61K 39/395.
(30) Unionist Priority: 07/02/2015 US 62 / 188,353; 4/16/2015 US 62 / 148,656; 10/23/2014 US 62 / 067,908; 08/27/2015 US 62 / 210,795.
(73) Holder (s): SINGH BIOTECHNOLOGY, LLC.
(72) Inventor (s): SUNANDA SINGH.
(86) PCT Application: PCT US2015057223 of 10/23/2015 (87) PCT Publication: WO 2016/065323 of 4/28/2016 (85) National Phase Start Date: 4/19/2017 (57) Summary: The present invention provides compositions and methods for treating a condition or disease without the use of exogenous targeting sequences or chemical compositions. The present invention relates to single domain antibodies (sdAbs), proteins and polypeptides comprising sdAbs that are directed against intracellular components that cause a condition or disease. The invention also includes nucleic acids that encode sdAbs, proteins and polypeptides, and compositions comprising sdAbs. The invention includes the use of the compositions, sdAbs, and nucleic acids that encode sdAbs for prophylactic, therapeutic, or diagnostic purposes.
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SINGLE-DOMAIN ANTIBODY TARGETED AGAINST AN INTRACELLULAR COMPONENT AND ITS USE, IN VITRO METHODS TO MEASURE THE LEVELS OF THE REFERRED ANTIBODY AND TO DIAGNOSTICATE A DISTRIBUTION MEDIATED BY AN INTRACELLULAR COMPONENT, POLYEPTIDE, ISOLATED AND COMPOUNDED ISOLORED COMPOSITE
REMISSIVE REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS [001] This international patent application claims the benefit of provisional US patent application 9 . 62 / 067,908, filed on October 23, 2014, US Provisional Patent Application No. 9 62 / 148,656, filed on April 16, 2015, US Provisional Patent Application No. 9 62 / 188,353 filed on July 2, 2015, and US provisional patent application No. 9 62 / 210,795, filed on August 27, 2015, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in full.
SEQUENCE LISTING [002] This application is being filed together with a sequence listing in electronic format. The sequence listing is provided as a file entitled Sequence_Listing_STP25.txt, created on September 30, 2015, last modified on October 22, 2015, which is 83,000 bytes in size. The information in the electronic format of the sequence listing is incorporated here in its entirety, as a reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION [003] The use of single domain antibodies (sdAbs) as single antigen binding proteins or as an antigen binding domain in a larger protein or polypeptide offers several significant advantages over the use of antibodies or fragments standard antibodies. The advantages of sdAbs include: only a single domain is needed to bind to an antigen with a high degree of affinity and high selectivity; the
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2/104 sdAbs can be expressed from a single gene and do not require post-translational modification; sdAbs are highly stable to heat, pH, proteases and other denaturing agents or conditions; sdAbs are cheap to prepare; and sdAbs can access targets and epitopes not accessible to conventional antibodies.
[004] There are several diseases or conditions, such as cancer, that are caused by aberrant intracellular or transmembrane components such as nucleotides and proteins. The elimination of aberrant components can be used to prevent or treat diseases or conditions. There are several pharmacological compounds available for treatment, but the compounds can be ineffective, not applicable or toxic to unaffected cells.
[005] Other treatments include the use of proteins or therapeutic agents that contain an exogenous targeting sequence so that the therapeutic agent can be recognized by receptors on the cell membrane, allowing the therapeutic agent to cross the cell membrane and enter the cell. When the therapeutic agent is inside the cell, it can interact with the target component in order to treat the disease. However, the use of an exogenous targeting sequence can limit the cell type that is targeted by the therapeutic agent, and adds the therapeutic agent to the cost of production.
[006] For the above reasons, there is a need for compositions and methods to treat or prevent a disease that do not depend on exogenous targeting sequences or chemical compositions to enter the cell, and that are effective in targeting only the affected cells in the body.
The present invention relates to single domain antibodies (sdAbs), to proteins and polypeptides comprising sdAbs. SdAbs are
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3/104 directed against intracellular components that cause a condition or disease. The invention also includes nucleic acids that encode sdAbs, proteins and polypeptides, and compositions comprising sdAbs. The invention includes the use of the compositions, sdAbs, proteins or polypeptides for prophylactic, therapeutic or diagnostic purposes. The invention also includes the use of monoclonal antibodies directed against the sdAbs of the invention.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION [008] One embodiment of the invention is a single domain antibody (sdAb) directed against an intracellular component. The intracellular component can be, for example, a protein, a nucleic acid, a lipid, a carbohydrate, STAT1, STAT2, STAT3, STAT4, STAT5a, STAT5b, STAT6, TNF-alpha, and KRAS.
[009] In another embodiment, the invention is directed to an anti-STAT3 sdAb. Optionally, the anti-STAT3 sdAb comprises an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 3 or SEQ ID NO: 4.
[0010] In another embodiment, the invention is directed to an isolated polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence encoding an anti-STAT sdAb, such as, for example, the polypeptide shown in SEQ ID NO: 3 or SEQ ID NO: 4.
[0011] In yet another embodiment, the invention is directed to a host cell, and the host cell expresses the amino acid sequence of the sdAb, such as, for example, the amino acid shown in SEQ ID NO: 3 or SEQ ID NO: 4.
[0012] One embodiment of the invention is a pharmaceutical composition comprising an sdAb or a polypeptide, and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. Optionally, the sdAb comprises an anti-STAT3 sdAb that comprises an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 3 or
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SEQ ID NO: 4, and the polypeptide comprises an isolated polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 3 or SEQ ID NO: 4.
[0013] Another embodiment of the invention is a method for diagnosing a STAT3-mediated disorder in an individual, the method comprising the steps of a) putting a biological sample in contact with the sdAb, or a polypeptide; b) determine the amount of STAT3 in the biological sample; and c) comparing the quantity determined in step (b) with a standard, a difference in the quantity indicating the presence of the disorder.
[0014] Another embodiment of the invention is a method for preventing or treating a disease or disorder, or preventing the recurrence of a STAT3-mediated disease, or for use in the treatment of cancer, or diseases caused by abnormal cell proliferation, comprising administration of an anti-STAT3 sdAb, or polypeptide, to an individual who needs it. Optionally, the sdAb comprises an anti-STAT3 sdAb comprising an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 3 or SEQ ID NO: 4 and the polypeptide comprises an isolated polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 3 or SEQ ID NO: 4.
[0015] One embodiment of the invention is an anti-TNF-alpha sdAb. Optionally, the anti-TNF-alpha sdAb comprises an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 5, SEQ ID NO: 6 or SEQ ID NO: 7. The invention also comprises an isolated polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 5, SEQ ID NO: 6 or SEQ ID NO: 7.
[0016] Another embodiment of the invention is a host cell that expresses the amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 5, SEQ ID NO: 6 or SEQIDNO: 7.
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5/104 [0017] In another embodiment, the invention is also a pharmaceutical composition comprising an sdAb or a polypeptide and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. Optionally, the sdAb comprises an anti-TNF-alpha sdAb comprising an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 5, SEQ ID NO: 6 or SEQ ID NO: 7 and the polypeptide comprises an isolated polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 5, SEQ ID NO: 6 or SEQ ID NO: 7.
[0018] Another embodiment of the invention is a method for diagnosing a TNF-alpha-mediated disorder in an individual, the method comprising the steps of a) bringing a biological sample into contact with an sdAb or a polypeptide; b) determine the amount of TNF alpha in the biological sample; and c) compare the quantity determined in step (b) with a standard, the difference in quantity indicating the presence of the disorder.
[0019] In one embodiment, the invention describes a method of preventing or treating a disease or disorder or the recurrence of a disease or disorder mediated by TNF-alpha, or for use in the treatment of cancer, or diseases caused by abnormal cell proliferation, comprising administering an anti-TNF-alpha sdAb, or a polypeptide, to a mammal that needs it. Optionally, the anti-TNF-alpha sdAb comprises an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 5, SEQ ID NO: 6 or SEQ ID NO: 7 and the polypeptide comprises an isolated polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 5, SEQ ID NO: 6 or SEQ ID NO: 7.
[0020] One embodiment of the invention is an anti-KRAS sdAb. Optionally, the anti-KRAS sdAb comprises an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 3 or SEQ ID NO: 2. In one aspect, the invention comprises an isolated polypeptide, the isolated polypeptide being
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6/104 comprises an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 2. In another aspect, the invention comprises a host cell that expresses the amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 2.
[0021] Another embodiment of the invention is a pharmaceutical composition, which comprises an sdAb or a polypeptide, and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. Optionally, the sdAb comprises an anti-KRAS sdAb that comprises an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 and the polypeptide comprises an isolated polypeptide that comprises an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 2.
[0022] A further embodiment of the invention is a method for diagnosing a KRAS-mediated disorder in an individual, the method comprising the steps of a) putting a biological sample in contact with the sdAb, or a polypeptide; b) determine the amount of KRAS in the biological sample; and c) comparing the quantity determined in step (b) with a standard, a difference in the quantity indicating the presence of the disorder. Optionally, the sdAb comprises an anti-KRAS sdAb that comprises an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 and the polypeptide comprises an isolated polypeptide that comprises an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 2.
[0023] The invention also comprises a method for treating a disease with the use of an anti-KRAS sdAb, the method comprising administering an effective amount of an anti-KRAS sdAb to an individual who needs it.
[0024] In one embodiment, the invention describes a method for preventing or treating a disease or disorder, or the recurrence of a KRAS-mediated disease or disorder, or for use in the treatment of cancer, or diseases caused by abnormal cell proliferation, comprising administration of an sdAb
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7/104 anti-KRAS, or a polypeptide, to an individual who needs it. Optionally, the anti-KRAS sdAb comprises an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 and the polypeptide comprises an isolated polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence shown in SEQ ID NO: 2.
[0025] In one embodiment, the invention describes a method for administering the sdAb of the invention, the method comprising intravenous administration, intramuscular administration, oral administration, rectal administration, intraocular administration, enteral administration, parenteral administration, subcutaneous administration transdermal, administered as eye drops, administered as a nasal spray, administered by inhalation or nebulization, topical administration, and administered as an implantable drug.
[0026] In another embodiment, the invention describes a method for treating a disease, preventing a disease or preventing the recurrence of a disease using the sdAb of the invention in combination with one or more compounds. Optionally, the one or more compounds is a translational inhibitor.
[0027] In another embodiment, the invention describes a method for measuring the levels of an sdAb, the method comprising the steps of a) generating a mouse monoclonal antibody directed against one or more domains of the sdAb; b) performing an immunoassay to determine the amount of sdAb in an individual; and c) quantifying the amount of sdAb in the individual.
[0028] These and other characteristics, aspects and advantages of the present invention will be better understood in relation to the description presented below, as well as the claims and the attached drawings, in which:
Figure 1 is a schematic map of the antiSTAT3 sdAb expression vector VHH13, pTT21-stt VHH13;
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Figure 2 is a schematic map of the antiSTAT3 sdAb expression vector VHH14, pTT21-stt VHH14;
Figure 3 depicts the results of an immunoprecipitation assay using the anti-STAT3 bacterial VHH13 STAT3 (SEQ ID NO: 3) and the anti-STAT3 bacterial VHH14 STAT3 (SEQ ID NO: 4);
Figure 4 depicts the results of an immunoprecipitation assay using the anti-STAT3 bacterial VHH13 STAT3 (SEQ ID NO: 3);
Figure 5 illustrates the growth inhibition of bacterial anti-STAT3 VHH13 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 3) in the MDA-MB-231 xenograft model, administered at 0.5 mg / kg / day;
Figure 6 illustrates the growth inhibition of bacterial anti-STAT3 VHH13 sdAb (SEQ. ID NO. 3) in the MDA-MB-231 xenograft model at doses in the range of 1 mg / kg twice daily at 2 mg / kg twice times a day or 2mg / kg / day;
Figure 7 illustrates the growth inhibition of bacterial anti-STAT3 VHH13 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 3) in the MDA-MB-231 xenograft model, administered at 0.5mg / kg / twice daily;
Figure 8 illustrates the growth inhibition of bacterial anti-STAT3 VHH13 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 3) in the DU145 xenograft model, administered at 5mg / kg / twice daily;
Figure 9 illustrates the growth inhibition of bacterial anti-STAT3 VHH13 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 3) in the PANC-1 xenograft model, administered at 5mg / kg / twice daily;
Figure 10 illustrates the growth inhibition of anti-STAT3 bacterial VHH13 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 3) in the MCF-7 xenograft model, administered at lmg / kg / three times a day;
Figure 11 illustrates the growth inhibition of anti-STAT3 bacterial VHH13 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 3) in the BT-474 xenograft model, administered to
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9/104 mg / kg / three times a day;
Figure 12 illustrates the cytotoxicity of TNF-alpha in U937 cells;
Figure 13 illustrates the cytotoxicity of staurosporine in U937 cells; and
Figure 14 illustrates the inhibition of TNF-alpha cytotoxicity by antiTNF-alpha sdAbs.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION [0029] As used herein, the following terms and variations thereof have the meanings given below, unless a different meaning is clearly intended by the context in which this term is used.
[0030] The terms one, one, and / and similar referents used here should be considered to cover both the singular and the plural unless their use in the context indicates otherwise.
[0031] The term antigenic determinant refers to the epitope on the antigen recognized by the antigen binding molecule (such as an sdAb or a polypeptide of the invention) and more particularly, by the antigen binding site of the antigen binding molecule. The terms antigenic determinant and epitope can also be used interchangeably. An amino acid sequence that can bind to, that has affinity for and / or that has specificity for a specific antigenic, epitope, antigen or protein is said to be against or directed against the antigenic, epitope, antigen or protein determinant.
[0032] As used here, the term comprise and variations of the term, as comprising and comprehending, are not intended to exclude other additives, components, whole numbers or steps.
[0033] It is contemplated that sdAbs, polypeptides and proteins described herein may contain so-called conservative amino acid substitutions, which can generally be described as substitutions of
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10/104 amino acid in which an amino acid residue is replaced by another amino acid residue of similar chemical structure and which has little or essentially no influence on the function, activity or other biological properties of the polypeptide. Conservative amino acid substitutions are well known in the art. Conservative substitutions are substitutions in which an amino acid within the following groups (a) to (e) is replaced by another amino acid within the same group: (a) aliphatic, non-polar or slightly polar small residues: Ala, Ser, Thr, Pro and Gly; (b) polar residues, negatively charged and their amides (uncharged): Asp, Asn, Glu and Gin; (c) polar residues, positively charged: His, Arg and Lys; (d) large aliphatic, non-polar residues: Met, Leu, lie, Vai and Cys; and (e) aromatic residues: Phe, Tyr and Trp. Other conservative substitutions include: Wing in Gly or Ser; Arg in Lys; Asn in Gin or His; Asp in Glu; Cys in Ser; Gin in Asn; Glu in Asp; Gly in Wing or Pro; His in Asn or Gin; He in Leu or Vai; He read in He or Vai; Lys in Arg, Gin or Glu; Met in Leu, Tyr or He; Phe in Met, Leu or Tyr; Ser in Thr; Thr in Ser; Trp in Tyr; Tyr in Trp; and / or Phe in Vai, He or Leu.
[0034] A domain as used herein refers, in general, to a globular region of an antibody chain, and in particular to a globular region of a heavy chain antibody, or to a polypeptide consisting essentially of this region globular.
[0035] The amino acid sequence and structure of an sdAb is typically made up of four structural regions or FRs, which are called structural region 1 or FR1; as structural region 2 or FR2; as structural region 3 or FR3; and as structural region 4 or FR4, respectively. Structural regions are interrupted by three complementarity determining regions or CDRs, which are called
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11/104 complementarity 1 or CDR1; as a complementarity determining region 2 or CDR2; and as a complementarity determining region 3 or CDR3, respectively.
[0036] As used herein, the term humanized sdAb means an sdAb that has one or more amino acid residues in the amino acid sequence of the naturally occurring VHH sequence replaced by one or more of the amino acid residues that occur at the corresponding position in a VH domain of a conventional human 4-chain antibody. This can be done by methods that are well known in the art. For example, sdAbs FRs can be replaced by human variable FRs.
[0037] As used here, an isolated nucleic acid or amino acid has been separated from at least one other component with which it is generally associated, as its source or medium, another nucleic acid, another protein / polypeptide, another biological component or macromolecule or contaminant, impurity or secondary component.
[0038] The term mammal is defined as an individual belonging to the Mammalia class and includes, without limitation, humans, domestic and farmed animals, and zoo animals, for sporting purposes, and pets, such as cows, horses, sheep , dogs and cats.
[0039] As used herein, pharmaceutically acceptable carrier is intended to include any and all solvents, dispersion media, coatings, antibacterial and antifungal agents, isotonic and retarding agents, and the like, compatible with pharmaceutical administration. Suitable vehicles are described in the most recent edition of Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences, a standard reference text in the field. Preferred examples of these vehicles or diluents include, but are not limited to, water, saline, Ringer's solutions, dextrose solution, PBS (saline
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Phosphate buffered 12/104), and 5% human serum albumin. Liposomes, cationic lipids and non-aqueous vehicles such as fixed oils can also be used. The use of these means and agents for pharmaceutically active substances is well known in the art. Except in cases where any conventional means or agents are incompatible with a therapeutic agent, as defined herein, their use in the composition of the present invention is contemplated.
[0040] A quantitative immunoassay refers to any means to measure an amount of antigen present in a sample by using an antibody. Methods for doing quantitative immunoassays include, but are not limited to, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), analyte-specific labeling and recapture assay (SALRA), liquid chromatography, mass spectrometry, fluorescence-activated cell separation, and the like.
[0041] The term solution refers to a composition that comprises a solvent and a solute and includes true solutions and suspensions. Examples of solutions include a solid, a liquid or a gas dissolved in a liquid and particulates or micelles suspended in a liquid.
[0042] The term specificity refers to the number of different types of antigens or antigenic determinants to which a specific antigen-binding molecule or antigen-binding protein molecule can bind. The specificity of an antigen-binding protein can be determined based on affinity and / or avidity. Affinity, represented by the equilibrium constant for the dissociation of an antigen with an antigen-binding protein (KD), is a measure of the binding strength between an antigenic determinant and an antigen-binding site on the antigen-binding protein : the lower the KD value, the stronger the binding strength between an antigenic determinant and the antigen binding molecule
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13/104 (alternatively, affinity can also be expressed as the affinity constant (KA), which is 1 / KD). As will be evident to someone skilled in the art, affinity can be determined depending on the specific antigen of interest. Greed is a measure of the strength of the bond between an antigen-binding molecule and the antigen. Avidity is related to the affinity between an antigenic determinant and its antigen-binding site on the antigen-binding molecule and the number of relevant binding sites present on the antigen-binding molecule. The specific binding of an antigen-binding protein to an antigen or antigenic determinant can be determined in any known way, such as, for example, Scatchard analysis and / or competitive binding assays, such as radioimmunoassays (RIA), enzyme immunoassays (EIA ) and competition tests of the sandwich type.
[0043] As used here, the term recombinant refers to the use of genetic engineering methods (for example, cloning, and amplification) used to produce the sdAbs of the invention.
[0044] A single domain antibody, sdAb or VHH can generally be defined as a polypeptide or protein that comprises an amino acid sequence that is comprised of four structural regions interrupted by three complementarity determining regions. This is represented as FR1-CDR1-FR2-CDR2-FR3-CDR3FR4. The sdAb of the invention also includes a polypeptide or protein that comprises the amino acid sequence of sdAb. Typically, sdAbs are produced in camelids like llamas, but they can also be generated synthetically using techniques that are well known in the art. As used here, the variable domains present in naturally occurring heavy chain antibodies will also be called VHH domains, in order to distinguish them from the heavy chain variable domains that are present in
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14/104 conventional 4-chain antibodies, called VH domains, and the variable light chain domains that are present in conventional 4-chain antibodies, called VL domains. VHH and sdAb are used interchangeably in the present invention. The numbering of amino acid residues in an sdAb or polypeptide is in line with the general numbering for the VH domains given by Kabat et al. (Sequence of proteins of immunological interest, US Public Health Services, NIH Bethesda, MD, publication η ρ 91). According to this numbering, the FR1 of an sdAb comprises amino acid residues at positions 1-30, the CDR1 of an sdAb comprises amino acid residues at positions 31-36, FR2 of an sdAb comprises amino acids at positions 36- 49, the CDR2 of an sdAb comprises the amino acid residues at positions 50-65, the FR3 of an sdAb comprises the amino acid residues at positions 66-94, the CDR3 of an sdAb comprises the amino acid residues at positions 95-102, and the FR4 of an sdAb comprises amino acid residues at positions 103-113.
[0045] The term synthetic refers to production by chemical or enzymatic synthesis in vitro.
[0046] The term target as used here, refers to any component, antigen, or portion that is recognized by sdAb. The term intracellular target refers to any component, antigen, or portion present within a cell. A transmembrane target is a component, antigen, or portion that is located within the cell membrane. An extracellular target refers to a component, antigen, or portion that is located outside the cell.
[0047] A therapeutic composition, as used here, means a substance that is intended to have a therapeutic effect, such as pharmaceutical compositions, genetic materials, biological agents, and other substances. Genetic materials include substances intended to have a therapeutic effect
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15/104 direct or indirect genetic, such as genetic vectors, regulatory genetic elements, structural genetic elements, DNA, RNA and the like. Biological agents include substances that are living matter or derived from living matter intended to have a therapeutic effect.
[0048] As used herein, the terms therapeutically effective amount and prophylactically effective amount refer to an amount that provides a therapeutic benefit in the treatment, prevention, or management of a disease or an evident symptom of the disease. The therapeutically effective amount can treat a disease or condition, a symptom of the disease, or a predisposition to a disease, for the purpose of healing, healing, alleviating, alleviating, altering, remedying, improving, improving, or affecting the disease, the symptoms of the disease, or the predisposition to the disease. The specific amount that is therapeutically effective can be readily determined by an ordinary medical professional and can vary depending on factors known in the art, such as, for example, the type of disease, the patient's history and age, the stage of the disease, and the administration of other therapeutic agents.
[0049] The present invention relates to single domain antibodies (sdAbs) that are directed against intracellular components, as well as proteins and polypeptides comprising the sdAbs and nucleotides that encode proteins and polypeptides. The invention can also refer to sdAbs that are directed against intercellular, transcellular and extracellular targets or antigens. The invention also includes nucleic acids that encode sdAbs, proteins and polypeptides, and compositions that comprise sdAbs. The invention includes the use of the compositions, sdAbs, proteins or polypeptides for prophylactic, therapeutic or diagnostic purposes.
[0050] sdAbs have several structural characteristics and properties
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16/104 functions that make sdAbs highly advantageous for use as antigen-binding domains or functional proteins. SdAbs bind functionally to an antigen in the absence of a variable domain of the light chain, and can function as a single, relatively small and functional structural unit, domain or protein. This distinguishes sdAbs from conventional antibody domains, which by themselves do not function as a protein or antigen-binding domain, but need to be combined with conventional antibody fragments such as Fab fragments or ScFv fragments in order to bind to an antigen .
[0051] sdAbs can be obtained using methods that are well known in the art. For example, a method for obtaining sdAbs includes (a) immunizing a camelid with one or more antigens, (b) isolating the peripheral lymphocytes from the immunized camelid by obtaining the total RNA and synthesizing the corresponding cDNAs, (c) building a library of fragments of cDNA encoding the VHH domains, (d) transcribing the cDNAs encoding the VHH domain obtained in step (c) into mRNA using PCR, converting the mRNA to the ribosome presentation format, and selecting the VHH domain by presentation ribosome, and (e) express the VHH domain in a suitable vector and optionally purify the expressed VHH domain.
[0052] Another method of obtaining the sdAbs of the invention is by preparing a nucleic acid that encodes an sdAb using techniques for nucleic acid synthesis, followed by expression of the nucleic acid in vivo or in vitro. In addition, the sdAb, polypeptides and proteins of the invention can be prepared using synthetic or semi-synthetic techniques to prepare proteins, polypeptides or other amino acid sequences.
[0053] The sdAbs of the invention will generally bind to all naturally occurring or synthetic analogs, variants, mutants, alleles, parts and
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17/104 fragments of the target, or at least the analogs, variants, mutants, alleles, parts and fragments of the target that contain one or more antigenic determinants or epitopes that are essentially the same as the antigenic determinant or epitope to which the sdAbs of the invention bind on the wild type target. The sdAbs of the invention can bind to these analogs, variants, mutants, alleles, parts and fragments with an affinity and / or specificity that is the same, or that is greater or less than the affinity and specificity with which the sdAbs of the invention bind to the wild type target. It is also contemplated within the scope of the invention that the sdAbs of the invention bind to some analogs, variants, mutants, alleles, parts and fragments of the target, but not to others. In addition, the sdAb of the invention can be humanized, and can be monovalent or multivalent, and / or multispecific. In addition, the sdAbs of the invention can bind to the phosphorylated form of the target protein as well as to the non-phosphorylated form of the target protein. SdAbs can be linked to other molecules such as albumin or other macromolecules.
[0054] Furthermore, it is within the scope of the invention that sdAbs are multivalent, that is, sdAb can have two or more proteins or polypeptides that are directed against two or more different epitopes of the target. In such a multivalent sdAb, the protein or polypeptide can be directed, for example, against the same epitopes, substantially equivalent epitopes or different epitopes. The different epitopes can be located on the same target or could be on two or more different targets.
[0055] It is also contemplated that the sequence of one or more sdAbs of the invention can be connected or joined with one or more linker sequences. The linker can be, for example, a protein sequence that contains a combination of serines, glycines and alanines.
[0056] It is also within the scope of the invention to use parts,
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18/104 fragments, analogs, mutants, variants, alleles and / or derivatives of the sdAbs of the invention, provided that they are suitable for the described uses.
[0057] Since the sdAbs of the invention are primarily intended for therapeutic and / or diagnostic use, they are directed against mammalian targets, preferably humans. However, it is possible for the sdAbs described here to cross-react with targets of other species, for example, with targets of one or more other species of primates or other animals (for example, mouse, rat, rabbit, pig or dog), and , in particular, in animal models for diseases and disorders associated with the disease associated with the targets.
In another aspect, the invention relates to a nucleic acid encoding an sdAb of the invention. Such a nucleic acid can be, for example, in the form of a genetic construct.
[0059] In another aspect, the invention relates to a host or host cell that expresses or is capable of expressing an sdAb of the invention, and / or that contains a nucleic acid encoding an sdAb of the invention. The sdAbs sequences can be used to be inserted into the genome of any organism to create a genetically modified organism (GMO). Examples include, but are not limited to, plants, bacteria, viruses and animals.
The invention further relates to methods for preparing or generating sdAbs, nucleic acids encoding sdAbs, host cells that express or are capable of expressing these sdAbs, products and compositions containing the sdAbs of the invention.
[0061] The invention additionally relates to sdAb applications and use, to the nucleic acids encoding sdAbs, host cells, products and compositions described herein. This type of product or composition can, for example, be a pharmaceutical composition for the treatment or prevention of
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19/104 a disease, or a product or composition to use diagnostics. SdAbs can be used in a variety of assays, for example, ELISA assays and mass spectrometry assays to measure serum and tissue levels of sdAbs.
[0062] In another aspect, a nucleic acid encoding one or more sdAb of the invention can be inserted into an organism's genome to treat or prevent disease.
[0063] The present invention relates, in general, to sdAbs, as well as to proteins or polypeptides that comprise or essentially consist of one or more of these sdAbs, which can be used for prophylactic, therapeutic and / or diagnostic purposes .
[0064] The methods and compositions detailed in the present invention can be used to treat the diseases described herein, and can be used with any dosage and / or formulation described herein or otherwise known, as well as with any route of administration described herein. or otherwise known to the element skilled in the art.
[0065] The sdAbs of the invention, in particular the anti-STAT3 VHH, the anti-KRAS VHH, and the anti-TNF-alpha VHH of the present invention, can be used for the treatment and prevention of malignant diseases including, but not limited to, limiting to: multiple myeloma, leukemias (HTLV-1 dependent, erythroleukemia, acute myeloid leukemia (AML), chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), and large granular lymphocyte leukemia (LGL), lymphomas (Burkitt / EBV-related, mycosis fungoides) , cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), large anaplastic cell lymphoma (ALCL), breast cancers, triple negative breast cancers, head and neck cancers, melanoma, ovarian cancers, lung cancers, pancreatic cancers, prostate cancers, sarcomas, osteosarcoma, Kaposi's sarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma, cancers
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10/204 hepatocellular, glioma, neuroblastoma, astrocytoma, colorectal cancers, Wilm's tumors, kidney cancers, bladder cancers, endometrial cancers, cervical cancers, esophageal cancers, cutaneous squamous cell cancers, basal cell cancers and any metastatic cancers. SdAbs can be used in cancer patients to help prevent or reduce weight loss or cachexia caused by cancer.
[0066] sdAb, in particular the anti-STAT3 and anti-TNF-alpha sdAbs of the present invention can also be used for the treatment and prevention of diseases such as, but not limited to: autoimmune diseases (for example , rheumatoid arthritis, ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, bacterial-induced colitis, asthma, scleroderma, lupus, encephalomyelitis, arteritis, vasculitis, glomerulonephritis, uveitis, uveoretinitis, multiple sclerosis), polycystic kidney disease, dermatological diseases (for example, psoriasis alopecia areata, atopic dermatitis, keloids / hypertrophic scars, lipoma, Padget's disease, and actinic keratosis), suppurative hidradenitis, transplantation (for example, solid organ, bone marrow, hand, face, limbs and any part of the body), muscular dystrophy and loss of muscle mass associated with cancers and aging, endometriosis, macular degeneration, retinal degeneration, stroke, epilepsy, traumatic brain and spine injuries, hypertension, hypertrophy cardiac, Alzheimer's disease, pulmonary arterial hypertension, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and ankylosing spondylitis. Additionally, sdAbs can target orphan diseases. Examples of these rare orphan diseases include, but are not limited to, triple negative breast cancers, pancreatic cancers, AML (acute myeloid leukemia), head and neck cancers, multiple myeloma, and chemoresistant cancers.
[0067] Viral infections can be treated by targeting intracellular viral proteins in infected cells. Viral proteins, like
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21/104 HIV reverse transcriptase, can block the life cycle. The sdAb of the invention can also target intracellular viral proteins like Ebola's VP24 and thus block Ebola's ability to shut down the host's antiviral immune response. The sdAbs of the invention can be used to target diseases when there is an overexpression of an intracellular molecule. Huntington's disease can be treated with sdAbs.
[0068] The sdAbs of the invention can be used with one or more compounds. For example, the sdAb of the invention can be used with JAK / STAT inhibitors such as curcumin, resveratrol, cucurbitacin A, B, E, I, Q, flavopyridol, deoxytrangomycin, cyclopentenone derivatives, Nacil-homoserine lactone, derivatives of indirectrubin, meisoindigo, tirfostins, compounds containing platinum (for example, IS3-295), peptideomimetics, antisense oligonucleotides, S3I-201, phosphotyrosine tripeptide derivatives, HIV protease inhibitors (eg, nelfinavir, indinavir, saquinavir, & ritornavir), JSI-124, XpYL, Ac-pYLPQTV-NH2, ISS 610, CJ-1383, pyrimethamine, metformin, atiprimod, S3I-M2001, STX-0119; N- [2- (1,2,4-oxadiazolyl) derivative] - 4 quinolinecarboxamide, S3I-1757, LY5; 5.8-dioxo-6 (pyridin-3-ylamino) -5.8, -dihydro-naphthalene-1-sulfonamide, withacinstin, Stattic, STA-21, LLL-3, LLL12, XZH5, SF-1066, SF- 1087.17o, cryptotanchinone, FLL32, FLL62, C188-9, BP-1108 and BP1075, galielalactone, JQ1, 5, 15 DPP, WP1066, niclosamide, SD1008, nifuroxazide, cryptotanchinone, BBI quinone, and ruxolitnib phosphate. The one or more compounds can increase the therapeutic response and increase the effectiveness of the sdAb of the invention. In addition, the effectiveness of sdAb can be increased by combining it with peptides, peptideomimetics, and other drugs, such as, but not limited to, cimetidine, atorvastatin, celecoxib, metformin and cimetidine. In addition, anti-STAT3 sdAbs can convert radio resistant cancers into radio sensitive cancers
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22/104 regarding radiotherapy.
[0069] It is also contemplated that one or more sdAbs of the invention can be combined, or the sdAbs of the invention can be combined with other sdAbs.
[0070] It is contemplated that certain sdAbs of the invention can cross the cell membrane and enter the cell without the aid of additional targeting protein sequences in the sdAb, and without the aid of exogenous compounds that direct the sdAb to bind to receptors for cell surface and cross the cell membrane.
[0071] After crossing the cell membrane, these sdAbs can target transmembrane or intracellular molecules or antigens. These intracellular or transmembrane targets can be, for example, proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, nucleic acids, mutated proteins, viral proteins and prions. SdAb targets can function as enzymes, cell structural proteins, intracellular portions of cell membrane molecules, molecules within organelle membranes, any type of RNA molecule, any regions of DNA or chromosome, methylated or unmethylated nucleic acids, partially assembled molecules within the cell's mechanism and synthesis, secondary messenger molecules and molecules within cell signaling mechanisms. Targets can include all molecules in the cytoplasm, nucleus, organelles, and cell membrane. Molecules destined for secretion or placement on the cell membrane can be targeted within the cytoplasm before they leave the cell.
[0072] Targets for sdAb can be in humans, animals, plants, fungi, parasites, protists, bacteria, viruses, prions, prokaryotic cells and eukaryotic cells. Some examples of inter- and intracellular signaling molecules and protein groups that can be targeted by the sdAbs of
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23/104 invention are: oncogene products, hormones, cytokines, growth factors, neurotransmitters, kinases (including tyrosine kinase, serine kinase, and threonine kinase), phosphatases, ubiquitin, cyclic nucleotides, cyclases (adenyl and guanyl), G proteins , phosphodiesterases, GTPase superfamily, immunoglobulins (antibodies, Fab fragments, ligands, sdAbs), immunoglobulin superfamily, inositol phosphate lipids, steroid receptors, calmodulin, CD group (eg CD4, CD8, CD28, etc. ), transcription factors, TGF-beta, TNF-alpha and beta, superfamily of TNF ligands, notch receptor signaling molecules, hedgehog receptor signaling molecules, Wnt receptor signaling molecules, toll-receptor signaling molecules like, caspases, actin, myosin, myostatin, 12 lipoxygenase, 15-lipoxygenase, lipoxygenase superfamily, reverse transcriptase, virus and its proteins, amyloid proteins, collagen, coupled receptors to protein G, normal mutated proteins, prions, Ras, Raf, Myc, Src, BCR / ABL, MEK, Erk, Mos, Tpl2, MLK3, TAK, DLK, MKK, p38, MAPK, MEKK, ASK, SAPK, JNK, BMK, MAP, JAK, PI3K, cyclooxygenase, STAT1, STAT2, STAT3, STAT4, STAT5a, STATSb, STAT6, Myc, p53, BRAF, NRAS, KRAS, HRAS and chemokines.
[0073] KRAS is a homologue of the Kirsten ras oncogene of the mammalian ras gene family. KRAS encodes a protein that is an element of the small GTPase superfamily. The protein is implicated in several malignancies, including lung adenocarcinoma, mucinous adenoma, ductal carcinoma of the pancreas, and colorectal carcinoma. Under normal conditions, the Ras family members influence the events of cell growth and differentiation in a signaling system based on subcellular membrane compartmentalization. However, oncogenic Ras can deregulate processes that control cell proliferation and apoptosis.
[0074] Anti-KRAS sdAbs were developed to have something like KRAS
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24/104 wild-type and mutated (G12D) in order to interrupt their role in malignant cells, such as cells involved in colorectal cancer, pancreatic cancer, biliary tract cancer, lung cancer, leukemia, and other metastatic malignancies. Without adhering to a specific mechanism, it is believed that anti-KRAS sdAb binds to KRAS and blocks KRAS downstream signaling in malignant cells. In addition, anti-KRAS sdAb can correctly treat malignancies that are resistant to biological antiEGFR agents (for example, cetuximab and panitumumab).
[0075] Using methods that are well known in the art, the recombinant human mutant KRAS protein (G12D) was used to generate sdAbs that are directed against or that can bind to a mutant KRAS or KRAS epitope (G12D), or other mutants of KRAS. In addition, sdAbs can be generated for other KRAS mutants. To generate anti-KRAS sdAbs, full-length recombinant human KRAS (Gene ID: 3845) was expressed in Escherichia coli.
[0076] Several sdAbs were obtained and selected. The DNA sequence of an anti-sdAb KRAS (G12D), called KRAS_13 (SEQ ID NO: 1) is shown below: 5'Gaggtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcagactggagggtctctgagactctcctgtgc agtttctggaaatatcggcagcagctactgcatgggctggttccgccaggctccagggaagaagcgcgaggcgg tcgcacgtattgtacgtgatggtgccactggctacgcagactacgtgaagggccgattcaccatctcccgagaca gcgccaagaacactctgtatctgcaaatgaacaggctgatacctgaggacactgccatctactactgtgcggca g cctgcccccaggttgtttga ctcaggcgatttgga attttggttatcggggccaggga the ccctggtca ccgtct cctca-3 '[0077] The sequence of anti-KRAS sdAb (G12D) amino acids (SEQ ID NO.
2), KRAS_13, is shown below, with CDRs underlined:
EVQLVESGGGSVQTGGSLRLSCAVSGNIGSSYCMGWFRQAPGKKREAVARIVRDG ATGYADYVKGRFTISRDSAKNTLYLQMNRLIPEDTAIYYCAADLPPGCLTQAIWNFGYRG
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QGTLVTVSS [0078] Additionally, the present invention comprises one or more mouse monoclonal antibodies that are directed against one or more domains of the anti-KRAS sdAb of the invention. The mouse monoclonal antibody can be generated by methods that are known to those skilled in the art, for example, the mouse monoclonal antibody can be produced by a mouse hybridoma. The mouse monoclonal antibody can be used in diagnostic assays, for example, the antibody can be used in an immunoassay such as an ELISA assay or mass spectrometry in order to measure the amount of anti-KRAS sdAb present in a patient's serum. The cytotoxicity of sdAbs KRAS (G12D) in PANC-1 human pancreatic cancer cells was tested, as described below.
[0079] STAT3 is a member of the transcription signal transducer and activator (STAT) protein family that perform both signal transduction and transcription activation functions. STAT3 is widely expressed and becomes activated by phosphorylation on tyrosine and / or serine as a DNA binding protein in response to various cytokines and growth factors such as EGF, IL-6, PDGF, IL-2 and G- CSF. STAT3 aphosphoprotein forms homodimers and heterodimers with other members of the STAT family and translocates to the nucleus in order to modulate the transcription of various genes, and as a result, plays an important role in many cellular processes such as cell growth, apoptosis, angiogenesis, immune evasion and survival.
[0080] An anti-STAT3 sdAb can be given to patients and other organisms to treat diseases caused by phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated STAT3, as well as to prevent disease development or disease recurrence. For example, patients who have undergone organ transplantation and bone marrow transplantation are at high risk for SCCA and BCCA
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26/104 cutaneous due to the immunosuppressive drugs they take. Administration of an anti-STAT3 sdAb can reduce or eliminate this risk. Patients treated for a malignancy who are at risk for relapse will benefit from treatment with anti-STAT3 sdAb. Based on family medical history and the type of HLA, some individuals will be at higher risk for some types of autoimmune diseases and may benefit from sdAbs treatment to reduce their risk of developing this autoimmune disease. The risk of breast cancer can be reduced by administering antiSTAT3 medication, such as GLG-302, as demonstrated in a recent study by the NCI.
[0081] In addition to inhibiting STAT3, the anti-STAT3 sdAb can also inhibit STAT1, STAT2, STAT4, STATSa, STAT5b, and STAT6 due to the high degree of homology between these molecules.
[0082] Recombinant human STAT3 protein has been used to produce anti-STAT sdAbs that have been directed against or that can bind to an STAT3 epitope. To generate the anti-STAT3 sdAbs, full-length recombinant human STAT3 (Gene ID: 6774) was expressed by baculovirus in Sf9 insect cells. The anti-STAT sdAbs have been cloned into vectors that can be expressed in bacterial and mammalian cells, as shown in figures 1 and 2.
[0083] The anti-STAT3 sdAb of the invention can be used to target STAT3 and all other STAT molecules within the cell in order to inhibit cell growth, such as, for example, suppressing cancer cell growth. In addition, anti-STAT3 sdAb can inhibit cell growth in other proliferative diseases such as psoriasis and macular degeneration through VEGF.
[0084] Without adhering to a specific mechanism of action, it is believed that the
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27/104 anti-STAT3 sdAb can eliminate cancer-induced immune suppression by reducing STAT3 levels in antigen presenting cells, such as host dendritic cells. Inhibition of STAT3 promotes an anti-cancer response by the patient's immune and adaptive and innate systems (ie, dendritic cells, macrophages, neutrophils, T cells, NK cells, and B cells).
[0085] Using methods that are well known in the art, several anti-STAT sdAbs have been obtained and selected for their ability to suppress cancer cell growth and induce apoptosis in cancer cell lines, as described below. The cytotoxicity and antiproliferative activities of the anti-STAT3 sdAbs were tested. In addition, the tolerance of anti-STAT3 sdAbs was tested in vitro and in vivo. The production of mouse monoclonal antibody directed against one or more domains of the anti-STAT sdAbs is described below.
[0086] The amino acid sequence of an anti-STAT3 sdAb, called VHH13 (SEQ ID NO. 3), is shown below:
HVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSÇMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG
ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQM N S LKP AND DTAM YYCATSR FDCYRGSWFNRYMYNSWGQGTQVTVSS [0087] The three CDRs are underlined.
[0088] The amino acid sequence of a second anti-STAT3 sdAb, called VHH14 (SEQ ID NO. 4), is shown below:
QVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCVASTYTGÇMGWFRQAPGKEREGVAA
LSSRGFAGHYTDSVKGRFSISRDYVKNAVYLQM NTVKPE DAAM YYCAARE
GWECGETWLDRTAGGHTYWGQGTLVTVSS [0089] Again, the three CDRs are underlined. The protein sequences of other anti-STAT3 sdAbs that have been obtained are as follows:
STAT3_10 (SEQ ID NO. 5):
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10/284 (1) DVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCVASTYTGCMGWFRQAPGKEREGVAA (48) LSSRGFAGHYTDSVKGRFSISRDYVKNAVYLQMNTVKPEDAAMYYCAARE (98) GWECGETWLDRTAGTQTV
STAT3_34 (SEQIDNO. 6):
(1) DVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCVASTYTGCMGWFRQAPGKEREGVAA (48) LSSRGFAGHYTDSVKGRFSISRDYVKNAVYLQMNTVKPEDAAMYYCAARE (98) GWECGETWLDRTAGGHTYWGQGTQ
STAT3_19 (SEQIDNO. 7):
(1) HVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCVASTYTGCMGWFRQAPGKEREGVAA (48) LSSRGFAGHYTDSVKGRFSISRDYVKNAVYLQMNTVKPEDAAMYYCAARE (98) GWECGETWLDRTAGGQTYTVGQGT
STAT3_14 (SEQID NO. 8):
(1) QVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCVASTYTGCMGWFRQAPGKEREGVAA (48) LSSRGFAGHYTDSVKGRFSISRDYVKNAVYLQMNTVKPEDAAMYYCAARE (98) GWECGETWLDRTAGGHTYWGQGTL
STAT3_35 (SEQIDNO. 9):
(1) QVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCVASTYTGCMGWFRQAPGKEREGVAA (48) LSSRGFAGHYTDSVKGRFSISRDYVKNAVYLQMNTVKPEDAAMYYCAARE (98) GWECGETWLDRTAGGHTYWGQGTL
STAT3 9 (SEQID NO. 10):
(1) QVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCVASTYTGCMGWFRQAPGKEREGVAA (48) LSSRGFAGHYTDSVKGRFSISRDYVKNAVYLQMNTVKPEDAAMYYCAARE (98) GWECGETWLDRTAGGHTYWGQGTL
STAT3 30 (SEQID NO. 11):
(1) QVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCVASTYTGCMGWFRQAPGKEREGVAA (48) LSSRGFAGHYTDSVKGRFSISRDYVKNAVYLQMNTVKPEDAAMYYCAARE (98) GWECGETWLDRTAGGHTYWGQGTL
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STAT3_23 (SEQ ID NO. 12):
(1) QVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCVASTYTGCMGWFRQAPGKEREGVAA (48) LSSRGFAGHYTDSVKGRFSISRDYVKNAVYLQMNTVKPEDAAMYYCAARE (98) GWECGETWLDRTAGSHTYWGQGTG
STAT3_24 (SEQ ID NO. 13):
(1) EVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCVASTYTGCMGWFRQAPGKEREGVAA (48) LSSRGFAGHYTDSVKGRFSISRDYVKNAVYLQMNTVKPEDAAMYYCAARE (98) GWECGETWLDRTAGGHTYWGQGLL
STAT3_36 (SEQ ID NO. 14):
(1) DVQLVESGGGSVQAGDSLRLSCVASTYTGCMGWFRQAPGKEREGVAA (48) LSSRGFAGHYTDSVKGRFSISRDYVKNAVYLQMNTVKPEDAAMYYCAARE (98) GWECGETWLDRTAGGHTYWGQGTL
STAT3_12 (SEQ ID NO. 15):
(1) QVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYTYNSWGG
STAT3_16 (SEQ ID NO. 16):
(1) QVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTNNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYMYNSWGG
STAT3_11 (SEQ ID NO. 17):
(1) EVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (lOl) FDCYRGSWFNRYTYNSWG
STAT3 20 (SEQ ID NO. 18):
(1) DVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR
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10/304 (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYMYNSWGQGTLVTVSS
STAT3_2 (SEQ ID NO. 19):
(1) DVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYTYNSWGQGG
STAT3_15 (SEQ ID NO. 20):
(1) DVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYTYNSWGQGG
STAT3_6 (SEQ ID NO. 21):
(1) HVQLVESEGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYMYNSWGQGG
STAT3_33 (SEQ ID NO. 22):
(1) QVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYTYNSWGG
STAT317 (SEQ ID NO. 23):
(1) QVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYTYNSWGG
STAT3_25 (SEQ ID NO. 24):
(1) EVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMSSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYTYNSWGQGG
STAT3_32 (SEQ ID NO. 25):
(1) DVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG
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10/314 (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYMYNSWGQGTQVTVSS
STAT3_13 (SEQ ID NO. 26):
(1) HVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYTYNSWGG
STAT3_39 (SEQ ID NO. 27):
(1) HVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYTYNSWGG
STAT3_4 (SEQ ID NO. 28):
(1) HVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYTYNSWGG
STAT3_29 (SEQ ID NO. 29):
(1) HVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGANGGRSCMGWFRQVPGKEREGVSG (51) ISTGGLITYYADSVKGRFTISQDNTKNTLYLQMNSLKPEDTAMYYCATSR (101) FDCYRGSWFNRYMYNSWGN
Stat3_VHH-10 (SEQ ID NO. 30): 5'gatgtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggaggctctctg agactctcctgtgtagcctctacatacaccggctgcatgggctggttccgccaggctcctggaaaggagc gcgagggagtcgcagctcttagtagccgtggttttgccgggcactataccgactccgtgaagggccgattctcca tctcccgagactacgtcaagaatgcggtgtatctgcaaatgaacactgtgaaacctgaggacgctgccatgtact actgtgcagcacgggagggatgggagtgcggtgagacctggttggaccggaccgccgggggccatacctactg gggccaggggacccaggtcaccgtctcctca-3 '
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Stat3_VHH-14 (SEQ ID NO. 31): 5'caggtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggaggctctc tgagactctcctgtgtagcctctacatacaccggctgcatgggctggttccgccaggctcctggaaaggag cgcgagggagtcgcagctcttagtagccgtggttttgccgggcactataccgactccgtgaagggccgattctcc atctcccgagactacgtcaagaatgcggtgtatctgcaaatgaacactgtgaaacctgaggacgctgccatgta ctactgtgcagcacgggagggatgggagtgcggtgagacctggttggaccggaccgccgggggccatacctact ggggccaggggaccctggtcaccgtctcctca-3 '
Stat3_VHH-12 (SEQ ID NO. 32): 5'caggtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggagggtctct gagactctcctgtgcagcctctggagccaatggtggtcggagctgcatgggctggttccgccaggttccag ggaaggagcgcgagggggtttctggtatttcaaccggtggtcttattacatactatgccgactccgtgaagggcc gattcaccatctcccaagacaacaccaagaacacgctgtatctgcaaatgaacagcctgaaacctgaggacact gccatgtactactgtgcgacgagtcggtttgactgctatagaggctcttggttcaaccgatatatgtataacagtt ggggccaggggaccctggtcaccgtctcctca-3 '
Stat3_VHH-13 (SEQ ID NO. 33): 5'catgtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggagggtctct gagactctcctgtgcagcctctggagccaacggtggtcggagctgcatgggctggttccgccaggttcca gggaaggagcgcgagggggtttctggtatttcaaccggtggtcttattacatactatgccgactccgtgaagggc cgattcaccatctcccaagacaacaccaagaacacgctgtatctgcaaatgaacagcctgaaacctgaggaca ctgccatgtactactgtgcgacgagtcggtttgactgctatagaggctcttggttcaaccgatatatgtataacagt tggggccaggggacccaggtcactgtctcctca-3 '
Stat3_VHH-20 (SEQ ID NO. 34): 5'gatgtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggagggtctct gagactctcctgtgcagcctctggagccaatggtggtcggagctgcatgggctggttccgccaggttccag ggaaggagcgcgagggggtttctggtatttcaaccggtggtcttattacatactatgccgactccgtgaagggcc gattcaccatctcccaagacaacaccaagaacacgctgtatctgcaaatgaacagcctgaaacctgaggacact gccatgtactactgtgcgacgagtcggtttgactgctatagaggctcttggttcaaccgatatatgtataacagtt
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33/104 ggggccaggggaccctggtcaccgtctcctca-3 '
Stat3_VHH-23 (SEQ ID NO. 35): 5'caggtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggaggctctct gagactctcctgtgtagcctctacatacaccggctgcatgggctggttccgccaggctcctggaaaggag cgcgagggagtcgcagctcttagcagccgtggttttgccgggcactataccgactccgtgaagggccgattctcc atctcccgagactacgtcaagaatgcggtgtatctgcaaatgaacactgtgaaacctgaggacgctgccatgta ctactgtgcagcacgggagggatgggagtgcggtgagacctggttggaccggaccgccgggagccatacctac tggggccaggggaccctggtca ccgtctcctca -3 '
Stat3_VHH-24 (SEQ ID NO. 36): ca 5'gaggtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggaggctctct gaga ctctcctgtgtagcctcta vane ccggctgcatgggctggttccgccaggctcctgga to AGGAG cgcgagggagtcgcagctcttagtagccgtggttttgccgggcactataccgactccgtgaagggccgattctcc atctcccgaga egtea eta aga atgeggtgtatetgea atga the AC ctgtga to the cctgagga cgctgcca tgta ctactgtgcagcacgggagggatgggagtgcggtgagacctggttggaccgaaccgccgggggccatacctac tggggccagggga ccctggtca ccgtctcctca-3 '
Stat3_VHH-25 (SEQ ID NO. 37): 5'gaggtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggagggtctctg agactctcctgtgcagcctctggagccaatggtggtcggagctgcatgggctggttccgccaggttccagg gaaggagcgcgagggggtttctggtatttcaaccggtggtcttattacatactatgccgactccgtgaagggtcg attcaccatctcccaagacaacaccaagaacacgctgtatctgcaaatgagcagcctgaaacctgaggacactg ccatgtactactgtgcgacgagtcggtttgactgctatagaggctcttggttcaaccgatatatgtataacagttg gggccaggggacccaggtcaccgtctcctca-3 '
Stat3_VHH-19 (SEQ ID NO. 38): 5'catgtgcagctggtggagtctggggggggctcggtgcaggctggaggctctctga gactctcctgtgtagcctctacatacaccggctgcatgggctggttccgccaggctcctggaaaggagcg cgagggagtcgcagctcttagtagccgtggttttgccgggcactataccgactccgtgaagggccgattctccatc tcccgagactacgtcaagaatgcggtgtatctgcaaatgaacactgtgaaacctgaggacgctgccatgtacta
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Stat3_VHH-32 (SEQ ID NO. 39): 5'gatgtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggagggtc tctgagactctcctgtgcagcctctggagccaatggtggtcggagctgcatgggctggttccgccaggttc cagggaaggagcgcgagggggtttctggtatttcaaccggtggtcttattacatactatgccgactccgtgaagg gccgattcaccatctcccaagacaacaccaagaacacgctgtatctgcaaatgaacagcctgaaacctgagga cactgccatgtactactgtgcgacgagtcggtttgactgctatagaggctcttggttcaaccgatatatgtataac agttggggccaggggacccaggtcaccgtctcctca-3 '
Stat3_VHH-33 (SEQ ID NO. 40): 5'caggtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggagggtct ctgagactctcctgtgcagcctctggagccaatggtggtcggagctgcatgggctggttccgccaggttcc agggaaggagcgcgagggggtttctggtatttcaaccggtggtcttattacatactatgccgactccgtgaaggg ccgattcaccatctcccaagacaacaccaagaacacgctgtatctgcaaatgaacagcctgaaacctgaggac actgccatgtactactgtgcgacgagtcggtttgactgctatagaggctcttggttcaaccgatatatgtataaca gttggggccaggggacccaggtcaccgtctcctca-3 '
Stat3_VHH-36 (SEQ ID NO. 41): 5'gatgtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggagactctctga gactctcctgtgtagcctctacatacaccggctgcatgggctggttccgccaggctcctggaaaggagcg cgagggagtcgcagctcttagtagccgtggttttgccgggcactataccgactccgtgaagggccgattctccatc tcccgagactacgtcaagaatgcggtgtatctgcaaatgaacactgtgaaacctgaggacgctgccatgtacta ctgtgcagcacgggagggatgggagtgcggtgagacctggttggaccggaccgccgggggccatacctactgg ggccaggggaccctggtcactgtctcctca-3 '
Stat3_VHH-ll (SEQ ID NO. 42): 5'gtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggagggtctctgag actctcctgtgcagcctctggagccaatggtggtcggagctgcatgggctggttccgccaggttccaggga aggagcgtgagggggtttctggtatttcaaccggtggtcttattacatactatgccgactccgtgaagggccgatt
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Stat3_VHH-6 (SEQ ID NO. 43): 5'gtgcagctggtggagtctgagggaggctcggtgcaggctggagggtctctgaga ctctcctgtgcagcctctggagccaatggtggtcggagctgcatgggctggttccgccaggttccagggaa ggagcgcgagggggtttctggtatttca ccggtggtcttatta the vane ctatgccga ctccgtga agggccga ttc accatctcccaagacaacaccaagaacacgctgtatctgcaaatgaacagcctgaaacctgaggacactgcca tgtactactgtgcgacgagtcggtttgactgctatagaggctcttggttcaaccgatatatgtataacagttgggg ccaggggaccctggtcaccgtctcctca-3 '
Stat3_VHH-l (SEQ ID NO. 44): 5'gtgcagctggtggagtctgggggaggctcggtgcaggctggagggtctctgaga ctctcctgtgcagcctctggagccaatggtggtcggagctgcatgggctggttccgccaggttccagggaa ggagcgcgagggggtttctggtatttca ccggtggtcttatta the vane ctatgccga ctccgtga agggccga ttc accatctcccaagacaacaccaataacacgctgtatctgcaaatgaacagcctgaaacctgaggacactgccat gtactactgtgcgacgagtcggtttgactgctatagaggctcttggttcaaccgatatatgtataacagttggggc caggggaccctggtcactgtctcctca-3 '[0091] Additionally, the present invention comprises one or more monoclonal mouse antibodies that are directed against a or more domains of the anti-STAT3 sdAb of the invention. The mouse monoclonal antibody can be generated by methods that are known to someone skilled in the art, for example, the mouse monoclonal antibody can be produced by a mouse hybridoma. The mouse monoclonal antibody can be used in diagnostic assays, for example, the antibody can be used in an immunoassay as an ELISA assay in order to measure the amount of anti-STAT3 sdAb present in a patient's serum. It must be appreciated that the method is not limited to anti-STAT3 sdAbs, and could be used
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36/104 to produce a mouse antibody targeted to any of the sdAbs of the present invention.
[0092] The TNF-alpha gene encodes a multifunctional proinflammatory cytokine that belongs to the Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF) superfamily. This cytokine is secreted mainly by macrophages. Cytokine is involved in the regulation of a wide spectrum of biological processes including growth regulation, differentiation, inflammation, viral replication, tumorigenesis, and autoimmune diseases; and in viral, bacterial, fungal, and parasitic infections. In addition to inducing hemorrhagic necrosis of tumors, TNF has been found to be involved in tumorigenesis, tumor metastasis, viral replication, septic shock, fever, inflammation, cachexia, and autoimmune diseases including Crohn's disease, and rheumatoid arthritis as well as graft-versus disease -host.
[0093] The present invention provides sdAbs, proteins, and polypeptides that are directed against TNF-alpha, in particular, against human TNF-alpha within the cell or cell membrane, in order to prevent the secretion of TNF-alpha by the cells.
[0094] It is contemplated that the sdAbs and anti-TNF-alpha polypeptides of the invention can be used for the prevention and / or treatment of diseases and disorders associated with and / or mediated by TNF-alpha, such as inflammation, rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's, ulcerative colitis, inflammatory bowel syndrome, multiple sclerosis, Addison's disease, autoimmune hepatitis, autoimmune parotitis, type 1 diabetes, epididymitis, glomerulonephritis, Graves' disease, Guillain-Barré syndrome, Hashimoto's disease, hemolytic anemia, systemic lupus erythematosus , male infertility, multiple sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, pemphigus, psoriasis, rheumatic fever, rheumatoid arthritis, sarcoidosis, scleroderma, Sjogren's syndrome, spondyloarthropathies, thyroiditis,
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37/104 vasculitis, and weight loss caused by cancer and cachexia.
[0095] TNF-alpha exists in different forms; there are the monomeric and multimeric forms, including the quarterly form. It is within the scope of the invention that the sdAbs, proteins and polypeptides of the invention bind to TNF-alpha in its different forms, i.e., monomeric or multimeric forms. Thus, when the sdAbs, proteins and polypeptides of the invention are directed against TNF-alpha, it should be understood that this also comprises sdAbs, proteins and polypeptides directed against TNF-alpha in their quarterly form.
[0096] TNF signal transduction is known to involve cross-linking by TNF receptors by a trimer of TNF molecules, which contains three receptor binding sites (see, for example, Peppel et al, J. Exp. Med., 174 (1991), 1483-1489).
[0097] Recombinant human TNF-alpha protein was used to generate sdAbs that are directed against or that can bind to an TNF-alpha epitope. To generate the anti-TNF-alpha sdAbs, full-length recombinant human TNF-alpha (Gene ID: 7124) was expressed in Escherichia coli and used as the target antigen.
[0098] Thirty-five sdAbs against the TNF-alpha protein were obtained. These anti-TNF-alpha antibodies were divided into three groups based on sequence homology.
[0099] The amino acid sequence of the first anti-TNF-alpha sdAb, called sdAb VHH66 TNF-alpha (SEQ. ID NO. 45), is shown below:
HVQLVESGGGSVEAGGSLRLSCAASGFRYAAYÇMGWFRQADGKERE
GVATIDIDGLTTHADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTLSLQMNDLKPEDTA
MYYCAADRDRCGSIWTYAYKYRG-QGTLVTVSS [00100] The three CDRs are underlined.
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38/104 [00101] The amino acid sequence of the second anti-TNF-alpha sdAb, called sdAb VHH69 TNF-alpha (SEQ ID NO. 46), is shown below:
EVQLVESGGGSVLAGGSLRLSCVASGFTSRYNYMAWFRQAPGKERE GVATIGTASGSADYYGSVKDRFTISQDNAKNTVYLQMNSLKPEDTA MYYCAARTYGTISLTPSDYRYWGQGTLVTVSS [00102] are the three CD's.
[00103] The amino acid sequence of the third anti-TNF-alpha sdAb, called sdAb VHH62 TNF-alpha (SEQ ID NO. 47), is shown below:
QVQLVESGGG PVQAG ETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPG H ECE LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCSWAQGTQGTLVTVSS are three [004]. Other anti-TNF-alpha sdAbs that have been found include the sequences below, again with the CDRs underlined:
TNF_2 (SEQID NO.48):
QVQLVESGGGSVEAGRSLRLSCAASGFRYAAYÇMGWFRQADGKERE
GVATIDIDGQTTHADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTLSLQMNDLKPEDTA
MYYCAADRDRCGSIWTYAYKYRGQGTQVTVSS
TNF_46 (SEQ ID NO. 49):
QVQLVESGGGSVEAGGSLRLSCAASGFRYAAYÇMGWFRQADGKERE
GVATIDIDGQTTHADSVKGRFTISRDNVKNTLSLQMNDLKPEDTA
MYYCAADRDRCGSIWTYAYKYRGQGTQVTVSS
TNF_71 (SEQ ID NO. 50):
QVQLVESGGGSVEAGGSLRLSCAASGFRYAAYÇMGWFRQADGKERE GVATIDIDGLTTHADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTLSLQMNDLKPEDTA MYYCAADRDRCGSIWTYAYKYRGQGTQVTVSS
TNF 21 (SEQ ID NO. 51):
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QVQLVESGGGSVEAGGSLRLSCAASGFRYAAYÇMGWFRQADGKERE
GVATIDIDGQTTHADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTLSLQMNDLKPEDTA
MYYCAADRDRCGSIWTYAYKYRGQGTQVTVSS
TNF_38 (SEQ ID NO. 52):
EVQLVESGGGSVEAGGSLRLSCAASGFRYAAYÇMGWFRQADGKERE GVATIDIDGQTTHADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTLSLQMNDLKPEDTA MYYCAADRDRCGSIWTYAYKYRGQGTQVTVSS
TNF_18 (SEQ ID NO. 53):
EVQLVESGGGSVEAGGSLRLSCAASGFRYAAYÇMGWFRQADGKERE GVATIDIDGLTTHADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTLSLQMNDLKPEDTA MYYCAADRDRCGSIWTYAYKYRGQGTLVTVSS
TNF_37 (SEQ ID NO. 54):
DVQLVESGGGSVEAGGSLRLSCAASGFRYAAYÇMGWFRQADGKERE GVATIDIDGQTTHADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTLSLQMNDLKPEDTA MYYCAADRDRCGSIWTYAYKYRGQGTLVTVSS
TNF_66 (SEQ ID NO. 55):
HVQLVESGGGSVEAGGSLRLSCAASGFRYAAYÇMGWFRQADGKERE GVATIDIDGLTTHADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTLSLQMNDLKPEDTA MYYCAADRDRCGSIWTYAYKYRGQGTLVTVSS
TNF_68 (SEQ ID NO. 56):
HVQLVESGGGSVEAGGSLRLSCAASGFRYAAYÇMGWFRQADGKERE GVATIDIDGLATHADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTLSLQMNDLKPEDTA MYYCAADRDRCGSIWTYAYKYRGQGTLVTVSS
TNF_78 (SEQ ID NO. 57):
HVQLVESGGGSVEAGGSLRLSCAASGFRYAAYÇMGWFRQADRKERE GVATIDIDGQTTHADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTLSLQMNDLKPEDTA MYYCAADRDRCGSIWTYAYKYRGQGTQVTVSS
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TNF_67 (SEQ ID NO. 58):
HVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGFRYAAYÇMGWFRQADGKVRE
GVATIDIDGQTTHADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTLSLQMNDLKPEDTA
MYYCAADRDRCGSIWTYAYKYRGQGTLVTVSS
TNF_6 (SEQ ID NO. 59):
QVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGFIDSFGVMAWFRQAPGKERE
GVAAVYRRAGDTYYADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTVYLQMNSLKPEDSA
MYYCAARTYGSVSSWTGYKYWG QGTQVTVSS
TNF_7 (SEQ ID NO. 60):
DVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGFIDSFGVMAWFRQTPGKERE
GVAAVYRRAGDTYYADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTVYLQMNSLKPEDSA
MYYCAARTYGSVSSWTGYKYWG QGTQVTVSS
TNF_13 (SEQ ID NO. 61):
DVQLVESGGGSVQVGGSLTLSCAVSGYTDSYGVMAWFRQAPGKERE GVASIYRNSGITYYPDSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTVLLQMNSLKPEDSA TYYCAVRSFGSVSTWAGYVYWGQGTQVTVSS
TNF_60 (SEQ ID NO. 62):
DVQLVESGGGSVQAGGSLRLSCAASGFIDSFGVMAWFRQAPGKERE GVAAVYRRAGDTYYADSVKGRFTISRDNAKNTVYLQMNSLKPEDSA MYYCAARTYGSVSSWTGYKYWG RGTQVTVSS
TNF_73 (SEQ ID NO. 63):
DVQLVESGGGSVRAGGSLRLSCTASGDTSKSDÇMAWFRQAPGKERE RVGAIYTRNGYTHYADSVNGRFTISQDNAKNALYLQMSGLKPEDTA MYYCAARFRIYGQCVEDDDIDYWGQGTLVTVSS
TNF_69 (SEQ ID NO. 64):
EVQLVESGGGSVLAGGSLRLSCVASGFTSRYNYMAWFRQAPGKERE GVATIGTASGSADYYGSVKDRFTISQDNAKNTVYLQMNSLKPEDTA
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MYYCAARTYGTISLTPSDYRYWGQGTLVTVSS
TNF_76 (SEQ ID NO. 65):
QVQVVEYGGGSVQAG ETVRLSCTASG FTFAEADMG WYRQAPG H EWE
LVSNITTEGITSEASSSYADSVRGRFTIFDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKHEDTA
VYYCAPDPYAYSTYREYCTWAQGTQGTLVTVSS
TNF_62 (SEQ ID NO. 66):
QVQLVESGGG PVQAG ETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPG H ECE LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCSWAQGTQGTLVTVSS
TNF_43 (SEQ ID NO. 67):
QVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE
LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA
VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCTWAQGTQGTLVTVSS
TNF_15 (SEQ ID NO. 68):
QVQPVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE
LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA
VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCTWAQGAQGTLVTVSS
TNF_11 (SEQ ID NO. 69):
QVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE
LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA
VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCSWAQGTQGTQVTVSS
TNF_17 (SEQ ID NO. 70):
QVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE
LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA
VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCTWAQGTQGTQVTVSS
TNF_63 (SEQ ID NO. 71):
QVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE
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LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA
VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCTWAQGTQGTLVTVSS
TNF_20 (SEQID NO. 72):
HVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCTWAQGTQGTQVTVSS
TNF_58 (SEQID NO. 73):
EVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCTWAQGTQGALVTVSS
TNF_27 (SEQID NO. 74):
EVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCTWAQGTQGTLVTVSS
TNF_28 (SEQID NO. 75):
EVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCSWAQGTQGTQVTVSS
TNF_4 (SEQID NO. 76):
EVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCTWAQGTQGTQVTVSS
TNF_14 (SEQID NO. 77):
DVQLVESRGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCTWAQGTQGTLVTVSS
TNF_3 (SEQIDNO. 78):
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DVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHVCE LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCSWAQGTQGTQVTVSS
TNF_1 (SEQ ID NO. 79):
DVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGLECE LVSTITTEGITSEASSYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSEYCTWAQGTQGTLVTVSS
TNF_45 (SEQ ID NO. 80):
DVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE LVSTITTEGITSEASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCTWAQGTQGTLVTVSS
TNF_22 (SEQ ID NO. 81):
DVQLVESGGGSVQAGETLRLSCTASGFTFAEADMGWYRQAPGHECE LVSTITTEGITSVASSYYADSVRGRFTISRDNAKNMVYLQMNSLKPEDTA VYYCAPDPYAYSTYSDYCTWAQGTQGTQVTVSS has been tested against the [00105] In addition, the present invention comprises one or more mouse monoclonal antibodies that are directed against one or more domains of the anti-TNF-alpha sdAb of the invention. The mouse monoclonal antibody can be generated by methods that are known to someone skilled in the art, as described above. The mouse monoclonal antibody can be used in diagnostic assays, for example, an immunoassay as an ELISA assay to measure the amount of anti-TNF-alpha sdAb present in a patient's serum.
[00106] RAF proteins are a family of specific serine / threonine kinases that serve as a central intermediary in the transmission of extracellular signals to the mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade,
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44/104 that controls cell growth, differentiation and survival. BRAF is a member of the RAF family that is activated by members of the Ras family through stimulation induced by growth factor. Active Ras can induce heterodimerization of cRaf and BRAF and this may explain the observed cooperativity of cRaf and BRaf in cells that respond to growth factor signals. Activation mutations in the BRAF gene are present in a large percentage of human malignant melanomas and in a proportion of colon cancers. The vast majority of these mutations cause a change from valine to glutamic acid at residue 599 within the BRAF activation segment.
[00107] Anti-BRAF sdAbs were developed to have something like wild-type and mutated BRAF in order to interrupt their role in malignant cells, such as cells involved in colon cancer and other malignancies.
[00108] Using methods that are well known in the art, the recombinant human BRAF protein was used to generate sdAbs that are directed against or that can bind to a BRAF epitope.
[00109] Additionally, the present invention comprises one or more mouse monoclonal antibodies that are directed against one or more domains of the anti-BRAF sdAb of the invention. The mouse monoclonal antibody can be generated by methods that are known to someone skilled in the art. The mouse monoclonal antibody can be used in diagnostic assays, for example, the antibody can be used in an immunoassay as an ELISA assay in order to measure the amount of antiBRAF sdAb present in a patient's serum.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: SDAB VHH13 ANTI-STAT3 (SEQ ID NO. 3) LINKS TO STAT3
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45/104 [00110] In this example, the affinity of two VHH targets against STAT3 was measured using the Octet-based marker-free binding assay. The anti-STAT3 VHH 13 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 3), anti-KRAS (negative control) and GST-STAT3 (16kDa monovalent antigen, Creative BioMart n and STAT3-1476H) were used as antigenic probes in this test. The GST-STAT3 protein was captured at 20 pg / mL in PBS using immersion in aminopropylsilane (APS) and reading biosensors, specifically intended for hydrophobic protein. The probes were then immersed in wells with the protein GST-STAT3, sdAb VHH anti-STAT3 13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) or anti-KRAS at an indicated concentration. The rate of association (on rate) of the antigen was measured. The sensors were stopped with 1% BSA in water. The probes were immersed in assay buffer (PBS) and the rate of dissociation (off rate) was measured.
[00111] The affinity, represented by the equilibrium constant for the dissociation of an antigen with an antigen binding protein (KD) was determined from the obtained affinity constant (KA), and the KD using the adjustment analysis program global 1: 1 Fortebio, as shown below in Table 1. Affinity was determined by measuring KD values for curves with R2 values> 0.95. The 250 nM VHH13 anti-STAT3 data point has been omitted since it is a point outside the curve. The affinity of the anti-STAT3 VHH13 sdAb (SEQ ID NO. 3) was found to be 1.16 x 10 ' 7 . The affinity of anti-KRAS VHH has not been determined.
TABLE 1
Local fit analysis, highlighted values used to determine affinity to be 1.16 x IO 7
Sensor type Sample identification Sample identification of ConeinVHH KD (M) Kon(1 / Ms) Koff(1 / s) The R 2 Total
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loading (nM) PHC(Aminopropylsilane) VHH13ANTI-STAT3 STAT3 20 pg / mL 1000 M63E-07 3.16E + 05 3.69E-02 0.995 PHC(Aminopropylsilane) VHH13ANTI-STAT3 STAT3 20Pg / mL 500 1.012E-07 4.04E + 05 4.09E-02 0.974 PHC(Aminopropylsilane) VHH13ANTI-STAT3 STAT3 20 pg / mL 250 <1.0E-12 4.69E + 91 5.11E-02 0.980 PHC(Aminopropylsilane) VHH13ANTI-STAT3 STAT3 20Pg / mL 125 1.474E-07 3.09E + 05 4.55E-02 0.991 PHC(Aminopropylsilane) VHH13ANTI-STAT3 STAT3 20Pg / mL 62.5 9,921E-09 2.71E + 05 2.69E-02 0.975 PHC(Aminopropylsilane) VHH13ANTI-STAT3 STAT3 20 pg / mL 31.3 1.5E-06 6.75E + 04 1.03E-01 0.956 PHC(Aminopropylsilane) ANTI-Kras STAT3 20pg / mL 1000 6.75E-08 1.19E + 04 8.01E-04 0.917 PHC(Aminopropylsilane) ANTI-Kras STAT3 20pg / mL 500 2.916E-08 1.65E + 04 4.60E-04 0.890 PHC(Aminopropylsilane) ANTI-Kras STAT3 20 pg / mL 250 4,324E-09 8.93E + 04 3.86E-04 0.276 PHC(Aminopropylsilane) ΑΝΤΙ-Kras STAT3 20Pg / mL 125 AT AT AT AT PHC(Aminopropylsilane) ANTI-Kras STAT3 20Pg / mL 62.5 AT AT AT AT PHC(Aminopropylsilane) ΑΝΤΙ-Kras STAT3 20Pg / mL 31.3 AT AT AT AT
EXAMPLE 2: IMMUNOPRECIPITATION STUDIES [00112] The specificity of sdAbs STAT3 was tested in human breast cancer cells. In this example, the human breast cancer cells MDA-MB-231 were cultured until 50% to 70% confluence. The cells were then disrupted in freshly prepared icy lysis buffer
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[00113] As illustrated in figure 3, the endogenous STAT3 immunoprecipitated with all sdAbs tested in different amounts. M is the Marker column containing the marker, column 1 contained STAT3 VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) produced and isolated from mammalian cells, column 2 contained STAT3 VHH14 (SEQ ID NO: 4) produced and isolated from mammalian cells mammal, column 3 contained STAT3 VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) produced and isolated from bacterial cells, column 4 contained STAT3 VHH14 (SEQ ID NO: 4) produced and isolated from mammalian cells, column 5 was the antibody to Positive STAT3, the column
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EXAMPLE 3: ANTI-STAT3 BACTERIAL VHH13 CONNECTS WITH A HIGH DEGREE OF AFFINITY TO CELLULAR LINES CONSTITUTIVELY ACTIVATED CONTAINING [00114] The specificity of bacterial anti-STAT3 VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) using humanly constituted cell line (STQ3 NO): PANC-1 and DU145) and murine (4T1) was tested. Commercial HeLa cells were also treated with gamma interferon (INFT) in order to induce phosphorylated STAT3. The null cell line for STAT3 PC-3 was used as a negative control.
[00115] The cells were cultured at 50% to 70% confluence and then disrupted in freshly prepared ice lysis buffer, as described above for 45 minutes on ice. The lysates were then centrifuged, the supernatant was collected, and the protein concentration was determined as described above. The total protein (1 mg) was incubated with 1.5 mg of Dynabeads (Invitrogen) containing bacterial anti-STAT3 VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) or negative control (KRAS, Creative Biolabs, Shirley, NY) for 1 hour at 4 ° C. The microspheres were then washed. After the final wash, 60 μί of lysis buffer was added and the resulting supernatant was subjected to Western blot analysis, as described in Example 2.
[00116] As illustrated in figure 4, endogenous STAT3 was immunoprecipitated by bacterial VHH13 STAT3 (SEQ ID NO: 3) in cell lines with constitutively activated STAT3: PANC-1 (column 1), DU145 (column 2), and 4T1 ( column 4). In addition, bacterial VHH13 STAT3 (SEQ ID NO: 3) bound to phospho-STAT3 in HeLa lysate (column 3). No band was observed for PANC-1 KRAS, column 3, and PC-3 (negative control), column 6.
EXAMPLE 4: CITOTOXICITY STUDIES OF ANTI-STAT3 SDABS IN
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CANCER CELL LINES MDA-MB-231 [00117] In this example, the antiproliferative effects of antiSTAT3 sdAbs were tested using the human breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231. For the experiments, the MDA-MB-231 cells were cultured until reaching a confluence of 90%. At this point, the cells were washed, trypsinized and counted using a Coulter counter (Beckman, Brea, CA). Proliferation studies were performed using the 3- [4,5-dimethylthiaolyl] -2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay. For this, the cells were seeded in a 96-well plate at a density of 5 x 10 3 per well, as indicated by the manufacturer (Roche Diagnostics Corporation, Indianapolis, IN). The cells were allowed to adhere for 24 hours and then the sdAbs were added at the appropriate concentrations (i.e., 0, 0.5,1,0,10,0, or 100 pg / ml). The cells were counted on day 3. For cells treated for 5 days, fresh medium containing the sdAbs was renewed on day 3. At the time of completion, 10 μl of MTT reagent (0.5 mg / mL) was added to each well , as indicated by the manufacturer. After an incubation period of 4 hours, 100 µl of solubilization solution was added and the plate was placed in the incubator overnight. All plates were read at a wavelength of 570 nm using the Biotek plate reader (Winooski, VT).
[00118] All data were analyzed using GraphPad InStat 3 (GraphPad Software, Inc., La Jolla, CA). The treatment groups were compared with the vehicle control group using unidirectional ANOVA. If a significant difference (p <0.05) is observed, the Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test was conducted.
[00119] Based on the MTT experiment, the bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO. 3) was found to be effective in inhibiting cell growth on days 3 and 5 after treatment, as shown in Tables 2 to 5
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TABLE 2
Mean absorbance (570nM) + S.E. day 3 after treatment with anti-STAT3 sdAbs in MDA-MB-231 cells
Group ofTreatment Control 0.5 pg / mL 1.0 pg / mL 10.0 pg / mL 100 pg / mL value ofP* H.VHH13 0.444 ±0.030 0.50 +0.043 0.545 +0.060 0.603 +0.025 0.272 +0.011 0.001 H.VHH14 0.404 ±0.011 0.485 ±0.040 0.402 ±0.017 0.588 +0.020 0.416 +0.030 0.002 B.VHH13 0.550 ±0.036 0.685 ±0.018 0.716 ±0.023 0.355 ±0.033 0.059 ±0.001 <0.0001 B.VHH14 0.593 ±0.014 0.666 ±0.022 0.644 ±0.045 0.456 ±0.048 0.255 ±0.005 <0.0001
* One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
TABLE 3
Effects of treatment with anti-STAT3 sdAb on cell proliferation of
MDA-MB-231 after 3 days of treatment
Group ofTreatment Pg / mL % inhibition p value * H.VHH13 0.5NS1.0NS10.0NS100.0 38.7 P <0.05 H.VHH14 0.5NS1.0 0.5 NS10.0NS
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100.0NS B.VHH13 0.5NS1.0NS10.0 35.5 P <0.001100.0 89.3 P <0.001 B.VHH14 0.5NS1.0NS10.0 23.1 P <0.05100.0 57.0 P <0.001
* One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
TABLE 4
Mean absorbance (570nM) ± S.E. on day 5 after treatment with anti-STAT3 sdAb in MDA-MB-231 cells
Group ofTreatment Control 0.5 pg / mL 1.0 pg / mL 10.0 pg / mL 100 pg / mL P value * H.VHH13 1,100 ±0.088 0.955 ±0.013 0.963 ±0.018 0.832 ±0.028 0.721 ±0.025 0.0012 H.VHH14 0.983 ±0.023 0.890 ±0.021 0.935 ±0.037 0.804 ±0.015 0.777 ±0.010 0.0007 B.VHH13 0.804 ±0.046 0.761 ±0.055 0.653 ±0.024 0.50 ±0.030 0.083 ±0.005 <0.0001 B.VHH14 0.677 ±0.015 0.733 ±0.038 0.794 ±0.023 0.640 ±0.011 0.549 ±0.023 <0.0001
* One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
TABLE 5
Effects of treatment with anti-STAT3 sdAb on cell proliferation of
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MDA-MB-231 after 5 days of treatment
Treatment Group pg / mL % inhibition p value * H.VHH13 0.5 13.2 NS1.0 12.5 NS10.0 24.4 P <0.01100.0 34.5 P <0.001 H.VHH14 0.5 9.5 NS1.0 4.9 NS10.0 18.2 P <0.001100.0 18.9 P <0.001 B.VHH13 0.5 5.4 NS1.0 18.8 NS10.0 37.1 P <0.001100.0 89.7 P <0.001 B.VHH14 0.5 0 NS1.0 0 NS10.0 5.5 NS100.0 18.9 P <0.05
* One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
EXAMPLE 5: CITOTOXICITY STUDIES OF ANTI-STAT3 SDABS IN BREAST CANCER (MDA-MB-231) AND PANCREATIC (PANC-1) HUMAN CELL LINES [00120] In this example, the antiproliferative effects of sdAbs anti2x2ddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddddk / 04/2020. p. 68/121
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STAT3 VHH13 (SEQ ID NO. 3) and VHH14 (SEQ ID NO. 4) were tested using the human breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231 and the human pancreatic cancer cell line PANC-1. For the experiments, the MDA-MB-231 and PANC-1 cells were cultured until reaching a 90% confluence. At this time, the cells were washed, trypsinized and counted using a Coulter counter (Beckman, Brea, CA). Proliferation studies were performed using the MTT assay described above. For cells treated for 5 days, fresh medium containing the anti-STAT3 sdAbs was renewed on day 3.
[00121] All data were analyzed using GraphPad InStat 3. The treatment groups were compared with the vehicle control group using unidirectional ANOVA. If a significant difference (p <0.05) is observed, the Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test was conducted.
[00122] Based on the MTT experiment, both VHH13 (SEQID NO.
3) as for VHH14 (SEQ ID NO. 4) were observed to inhibit cell growth in cancer cells MDA-MB-231 and PANC-1, as shown in Tables 6 to 13 below.
TABLE 6
Mean absorbance (570nM) ± S.E. on day 3 after sdAbs treatment in MDA-MB-231 cells
Group ofTreatment Experiment Control 10.0 pg / mL 100 pg / mL P value * B.VHH13 1 0.550 + 0.036 0.355 + 0.033 0.059 + 0.001 <0.00012 0.735 + 0.092 0.489 + 0.019 0.449 + 0.054 0.03553 0.627 + 0.033 0.432 + 0.060 0.078 + 0.001 0.00024 0.648 + 0.090 0.576 + 0.061 0.063 + 0.002 0.0011 Overall average 0.640 ± 0.038 0.463 ± 0.047 0.163 ± 0.10 0.0019
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B.VHH14 1 0.593 + 0.014 0.456 + 0.048 0.255 + 0.005 0.00052 0.624 + 0.046 0.499 + 0.018 0.357 + 0.019 0.00253 0.816 + 0.088 0.502 + 0.048 0.308 + 0.021 0.00264 0.729 + 0.051 0.559 + 0.041 0.287 +0.021 0.0007 Overall average 0.691 ± 0.051 0.50 ± 0.021 0.302 ± 0.043 <0.0001
* One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
TABLE 7
Mean absorbance (570nM) + S.E. on day 5 after treatment with anti-STAT3 sdAbs in MDA-MB-231 cells
Group ofTreatment Experiment Control 10.0 pg / mL 100 pg / mL p value * B.VHH13 1 0.804 ± 0.046 0.50 ± 0.030 0.083 ± 0.005 <0.00012 0.561 ± 0.024 0.417 ± 0.011 0.266 ± 0.015 <0.00013 0.970 ± 0.048 0.814 ± 0.052 0.105 ± 0.005 <0.00014 0.757 ± 0.118 0.665 ± 0.036 0.087 ± 0.004 0.011 Global average 0.773 ± 0.084 0.601 ± 0.088 0.135 ± 0.044 0.0005B.VHH14 1 0.677 ± 0.015 0.640 + 0.011 0.549 ± 0.023 0.00472 0.456 ± 0.037 0.338 + 0.023 0.274 ± 0.032 0.01663 0.983 ± 0.019 0.930 ± 0.044 0.578 ± 0.039 0.00044 1.092 ± 0.053 0.842 ± 0.052 0.499 ± 0.036 0.0004 Global average 0.802 ± 0.145 0.688 ± 0.131 0.475 ± 0.0690 0.2022
* One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
TABLE 8
Mean absorbance (570nM) ± S.E. on day 3 after treatment with anti-STAT3 sdAbs in PANC-1 cells
Group of Experiment Control 10.0 pg / mL 100 pg / mL p value *
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TreatmentB.VHH13 1 0.756 ± 0.045 0.432 ± 0.015 0.307 ± 0.012 <0.00012 1.347 ± 0.189 0.491 ± 0.087 0.169 ± 0.094 0.00193 1.025 ± 0.056 0.493 ± 0.029 0.166 ± 0.028 <0.0001 Overall average 1.043 ± 0.171 0.472 ± 0.020 0.214 ± 0.047 0.0034H.VHH13 1 1.541 ± 0.097 1.066 ± 0.153 0.732 ± 0.015 0.00462 1.611 ± 0.119 1.353 ± 0.119 0.762 ± 0.654 0.35273 1.074 ± 0.040 0.897 ± 0.154 0.700 ± 0.082 0.1092 Overall average 1.409 ± 0.169 1.105 ± 0.133 0.731 ± 0.181 0.0238H.VHH14 1 1,195 ± 0.205 0.920 ± 0.133 0.808 ± 0.239 0.41612 1.423 ± 0.038 1.183 ± 0.114 0.993 ± 0.088 0.03383 1.293 ± 0.169 1.163 ± 0.044 0.916 ± 0.088 0.1330 Overall average 1.304 ± 0.066 1.089 ± 0.085 0.906 ± 0.054 0.0188
* One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
TABLE 9
Mean absorbance (570nM) ± S.E. on day 5 after treatment with anti-STAT3 sdAbs in PANC-1 cells
Group ofTreatment Experiment Control 10.0 pg / mL 100 pg / mL p value * B.VHH13 1 0.687 ± 0.047 0.433 ± 0.036 0.243 ± 0.024 0.00042 1.670 ± 0.196 0.869 ± 0.053 0.211 ± 0.006 0.00043 1.389 ± 0.044 0.627 ± 0.073 0.203 ± 0.013 <0.0001 Overall average 1.249 ± 0.292 0.643 ± 0.126 0.219 ± 0.012 0.0208H.VHH13 1 1.462 ± 0.150 1.128 ± 0.105 0.839 ± 0.117 0.03492 1.792 ± 0.202 1.341 ± 0.095 0.911 + 0.079 0.01133 1.605 ± 0.289 1.161 ± 0.140 0.820 ± 0.005 0.0638
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Overall average 1.620 ± 0.096 1.210 ± 0.066 0.857 ± 0.028 0.0007H.VHH14 1 1.992 ± 0.105 1.859 ± 0.033 0.095 ± 0.003 <0, C0012 1.517 ± 0.050 1,165 ± 0.015 1,169 ± 0.050 0.00153 1.579 ± 0.134 1.081 ± 0.103 0.998 ± 0.049 0.0136 Overall average 1,696 ± 0.149 1.368 ± 0.247 0.754 ± 0.333 0.0967
* One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
TABLE 10
Average growth inhibition after 3 days of treatment with antiSTAT3 sdAbs on the proliferation of MDA-MB-231 cells
Group ofTreatment Experiment p value a 10.0 pg / mL p b value 100 pg / mL p b value B.VHH13 1 P <0.0001 35.5 P <0.001 89.3 P <0.0012 P = 0.03 33.5 NS 38.9 P <0.053 P = 0.0001 31.1 P <0.05 87.6 P <0.0014 P = 0.0001 11.1 NS 90.3 P <0.01 Overall average of% inhibition 27.876.5 B.VHH14 1 P <0.001 23.1 P <0.05 57.0 P <0.0012 P = 0.03 20.0 NS 42.8 P <0.013 P = 0.03 38.5 P <0.05 62.3 P <0.014 P = 0.006 23.3 NS 60.6 P <0.001 Overall average of% inhibition 26.255.7
The. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); B. post-test = Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
TABLE 11
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Average growth inhibition after 5 days of treatment with antiSTAT3 sdAbs on the proliferation of MDA-MB-231 cells
Group ofTreatment Experiment p value a 10.0 pg / mL p b value 100 pg / mL p b value B.VHH13 1 P <0.0001 37.1 P <0.001 89.7 P <0.0012 P <0.0001 25.7 P <0.001 52.6 P <0.0013 P <0.0001 16.1 NS 89.2 P <0.0014 P = 0.001 12.2 NS 88.5 P <0.01 Overall average of% inhibition 22.880.0 B.VHH14 1 P <0.0001 5.5 NS 18.9 P <0.052 P = 0.02 25.9 NS 39.9 P <0.053 P = 0.0004 5.4 NS 41.2 P <0.0014 P = 0.0004 22.9 P <0.05 54.3 P <0.001 Overall average of% inhibition 14.938.6
The. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); B. post-test = Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
TABLE 12
Average growth inhibition after 3 days of treatment with antiSTAT3 sdAbs on the proliferation of PANC-1 cells
Group ofTreatment Experiment p value a 10.0 pg / mL p b value 100 pg / mL p b value B.VHH13 1 P <0.0001 42.9 P <0.001 59.4 P <0.0012 P = 0.03 63.5 P <0.05 87.5 P <0.013 P <0.0001 51.9 P <0.001 83.8 P <0.001 Overall average of% inhibition 52.876.9
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H.VHH13 1 P = 0.005 30.8 P <0.05 52.5 P <0.012 P = 0.002 16.0 NS 52.7 P <0.013 P = 0.11 16.5 NS 34.8 NS Overall average of% inhibition 21.146.7 H.VHH14 1 P = 0.42 23.0 NS 32.4 NS2 P = 0.03 16.9 NS 30.2 P <0.053 P = 0.13 10.1 NS 29.2 NS Overall average of% inhibition 16.730.6
The. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); B. post-test = Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
TABLE 13
Average growth inhibition after 5 days of treatment with antiSTAT3 sdAbs on the proliferation of PANC-1 cells
Group ofTreatment Experiment p value a 10.0 pg / mL p b value 100 pg / mL p b value B.VHH13 1 P = 0.0004 37.0 P <0.01 64.6 P <0.0012 P = 0.0004 48.0 P <0.01 87.4 P <0.0013 P <0.0001 54.9 P <0.001 85.4 P <0.001 Overall average of% inhibition 46.679.1H.VHH13 1 P = 0.03 22.8 NS 42.6 P <0.052 P = 0.01 25.2 NS 49.2 P <0.013 P = 0.06 27.7 NS 48.9 NS Overall average of% inhibition 25.246.9
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H.VHH14 1 P = 0.08 26.8 NS 14.8 NS2 P = 0.002 23.2 P <0.01 22.9 P <0.013 P = 0.02 31.5 P <0.05 36.8 P <0.05 Overall average of% inhibition 27.224.8
The. Analysis of unidiredonal variance (ANOVA); B. post-test = Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
EXAMPLE 6: SDABS STAT3 ANTIPROLIFERATIVE ACTIONS IN HUMAN BREAST CANCER AND HUMAN PROSTATE CANCER LINES [00123] The antiproliferative effects of sdAb STAT3 VHH13 (SEQ ID NO. 3) were tested on the human breast cancer cell line MDB. 231 and DU145 human prostate cancer cell lines. For the experiments, the cancer cells were cultured until they reached 90% confluence. At this time, the cells were washed, trypsinized and counted using a Coulter counter (Beckman, Brea, CA). Proliferation studies were done using the MTT assay described above.
[00124] The antiproliferative properties of the bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO. 3) on MDA-MB-231 cells were compared to their actions on DU145 cells. As shown in Table 14, MDA-MB-231 cells treated with anti-STAT3 sdAbs (SEQ ID NO: 3) showed an average growth inhibition of 29.6 and 91.2 at 50.0 and 100 Pg / mL, respectively. In DU145 cells, a similar growth inhibition (31.2 and 92.1% for 50.0 and 100 pg / mL, respectively) was seen, as shown in Table 15.
TABLE 14
Antiproliferative actions of bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAbs VHH13 on breast cancer cells MDA-MB-231
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Experiment 1 Absorbance (% inhibition) Experiment 2 Absorbance (% inhibition) Experiment 3Absorbance(% inhibition) Mean absorbance (% inhibition) p 'value Control 0.93 1.25 1.46 1.2150 pg 0.82 (12.0) 0.99 (20.5) 0.64 (56.2) 0.82 (32.6) NS 100 pg 0.07 (93.1) 0.12 (90.1) 0.14 (90.5) 0.11 (91.0) <0.001
* One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
TABLE 15
Antiproliferative actions of VHH13 bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAbs on DU145 prostate cancer cells
Experiment 1 Absorbance (% inhibition) Experiment 2 Absorbance (% inhibition) Experiment 3 Absorbance (% inhibition) Mean absorbance (% inhibition) value ofP* Control 1.05 1.58 1.61 1.4150 pg 0.68 (35.7) 1/2 (55.5) 1.03 (35.8) 0.98 (30.5) NS 100 pg 0.13 (87.4) 0.12 (95.7) 0.06 (96.1) 0.10 (92.7) <0.001
* One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
EXAMPLE 7: ANT1PROLIFERATIVE EFFECTS OF SDABS STAT3 VHH13 (SEQ ID NO. 3) ON HUMAN CANCER CELL LINES [00125] To test the antiproliferative effects of sdAbs STAT3 VHH13 (SEQ ID NO. 3) with use of cell lines human cancer: MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-468, MCF-7, BT474, and DU145 as shown in Table 16.
[00126] All human cancer cell lines were obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (Manassas, VA). Cell lines were maintained and cultured in RPMI1640 (MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-468, MCF-7, BT474) or MEM-E (DU145) medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum, L
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61/104 2 mM glutamine and 1% antibiotic-antimycotic solution (10 units / mL penicillin, 10 pg / mL streptomycin and 25 pg / mL amphotericin B). The cells were maintained at 37 ° C in a humidified atmosphere of 5% CO2. Cell culture supplies were obtained from Life Technologies, Inc., (Grand Island, NY). The MTT reagent was purchased from Sigma Aldrich (St. Louis, MO).
[00127] For the experiments, the cancer cells were cultured until reaching 90% confluence. At this time, the cells were washed, trypsinized and counted using a Coulter counter (Beckman, Brea, CA). Proliferation studies were performed using the MTT assay described above.
[00128] The antiproliferative properties of bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAbs VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) were evaluated in five breast cancer cells representing various classifications (Table 34). As shown in Table 17, all cell lines 72 hours after treatment showed significant growth inhibition. The greatest inhibition of growth was noted at the dose of 100 and 200 pg / mL for all cell lines. The mean maximum inhibitory concentration (IC50) for growth in the tested cell lines were: 10.1 ± 2.4; 12.36 ± 1.5; 14.8 ± 1.6; and 25.2 ± 14.7 for cell lines MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-468, MCF-7, and BT474, respectively. These data suggest that triple negative breast cancer cell lines require the lowest concentration of sdAbs VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) to achieve IC50 compared to estrogen / progesterone positive cell lines (ie MCF-7) or the HER2 amplified cell lines (i.e., BT474).
TABLE 16
Characteristics of the breast cancer cell line
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Cell line Disease Immunological profile Classification MDA-MB-231 Adenocarcinoma ER; PR; HER2 ‘ Basal; low Claudina content MDA-MB-231 Adenocarcinoma ER, PR; Her2 ' Basal MDA-MB-231 Metastatic carcinoma ER, PR, HER2 ' unclassified BT474 Ductal carcinoma Her2 amplified Luminal B MCF-7 Adenocarcinoma ER + , PR + , HER2 + Luminal A
TABLE 17
Inhibition of breast cancer cell line characteristics by anti-STAT3 sdAbs VHH13 (SEQ ID NO. 3)
Cell line Treatment (pg / mL) Medium abs % inhibition P value BT474 0 0.634 0.39 0.322 49.3 P <0.0010.78 0.462 27.2 P <0.0011.56 0.502 20.8 P <0.013.13 0.446 29.7 P <0.0016.25 0.469 26.1 P <0.00112.5 0.363 42.7 P <0.00125 0.256 59.6 P <0.00150 0.145 77.2 P <0.001100 0.046 92.8 P <0.001 Cell line Treatment (pg / mL) Medium abs % inhibition Booing P200 0.040 93.8 P <0.001MCF-7 0 0.590
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0.39 0.818 0 0.78 0.785 0 1.56 0.823 0 3.13 0.689 0 6.25 0.435 22.1 NS12.5 0.327 41.6 P <0.0125 0.212 62.1 P <0.00150 0.057 89.9 P <0.001100 0.038 93.2 P <0.001200 0.040 92.9 P <0.001MDA-MB-468 0 0.253 0.39 0.311 0 0.78 0.289 0 1.56 0.201 20.6 3.13 0.223 11.9 6.25 0.230 9Λ 12.5 0.130 48.6 P <0.00125 0.067 73.5 P <0.00150 0.042 83.4 P <0.001100 0.038 85.0 P <0.001200 0.040 84.4 P <0.001MDA-MB-231 0 0.502 0.39 0.603 0 0.78 0.576 0
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1.56 0.570 0 3.13 0.445 11.4 P <0.0016.25 0.312 37.8 P <0.00112.5 0.224 55.4 P <0.00125 0.196 60.9 P <0.00150 0.130 74.2 P <0.001100 0.041 91.8 P <0.001200 0.042 91.7 P <0.001
[00129] The actions of the bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) were also evaluated in the human prostate cancer cell line DU145, as shown in Table 18. The bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO : 3) showed inhibition of dose-dependent growth in all cancer cells tested.
TABLE 18
Effect of anti-STAT3 VHH13 sdAbs on prostate cancer cell lines
Treatment (mg / mL) Medium abs % inhibition P value DU 145 0 0.771 DU 145 0.39 0.906 0DU 145 0.78 1,023 0DU 145 1.56 0.967 0DU 145 3.13 0.783 0DU 145 6.25 0.770 0DU 145 12.5 0.560 27.4 P <0.05 DU 145 25 0.359 53.5 P <0.001 DU 145 50 0.161 79.1 P <0.001
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DU 145 100 0.039 95.0 P <0.001 DU 145 200 0.039 95.0 P <0.001
EXAMPLE 8: MAXIMUM TOLERATED DOSE OF BACTERIAL ANTI-STAT3
VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) IN BALB / C MICE [00130] In this example, the tolerance of bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) was tested in test animals using the cancer cell line human breast MDA-MB-231. For the experiment, a total of 9 nude female BALB / C mice (6 to 7 weeks old) were divided into three groups according to body weights. (Table 19) Mice (n = 3) received vehicle (PBS) or bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) at 250 or 500 pg / kg body weight / day for five days. During the study, mortality / morbidity was assessed twice daily. Body weights were recorded on days 1, 4, and 6 of the study as well as on the study termination day (day 13). Toxicity was assessed by measurements of body weight and the behavior of the mouse compared to vehicle control mice. At the end of the treatment phase, the animals were followed for another week to observe any abnormalities in body weights and / or in general health after treatment.
TABLE 19
Experimental design of the maximum tolerated dose study
Group n 5 of mice Group ofTreatment Dose Via Frequency 1 3 PBS vehicle ... IP 5 days 2 3 Bacterial VHH13 250 pg / kg body weight IP 5 days 3 3 Bacterial VHH13 500 pg / kg body weight IP 15 days
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66/104 [00131] As shown in Table 20, there was no significant difference in body weights between groups, and bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ, 1D NO: 3) was not associated with any drug-related deaths in no dosage level. In addition, no behavioral changes were observed in animals treated with bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) compared to control mice.
TABLE 20
Average body weights ± S.E
Group Randomization Day 1 Day 4 6th Day 13 Vehicle 17.1 ± 0.06 17.1 ± 0.07 17.8 ± 0.12 18.1 ± 0.09 18.8 ± 0.20 250 pg / kg 17.1 ± 0.06 17.2 ± 0.03 17.2 ± 0.15 17.5 ± 0.15 18.1 ± 0.21 500 pg / kg 17.1 ± 0.17 17.1 + 0.09 17.8 ± 0.18 18.0 ± 0.20 18.5 + 0.18 p value * > 0.9999 0.52 0.05 0.07 0.11
* One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); Tukey-Kramer multiple comparison test
EXAMPLE 9: ANTI-STAT3 VHH13 BACTERIAL ACTIVITY (SEQ ID NO: 3) IN BALB / CE NUDE MICE XENOFAST IN HUMAN BREAST CANCER AND HUMAN PANCREATIC CANCER [00132] In this example, the anti-ST3 activity bacterial VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) was evaluated in mice using the human breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231. Briefly, the activity of bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) was evaluated using: model of human breast cancer xenograft MDA-MB-231 and model of human pancreatic cancer xenograft PANC-1. The administration schedules were as follows: group 1 (n = 6; PBS; IP) daily for 14 days [QDxl4]; and group 2 (n = 12; 500 pg / kg of body weight; PI), every day
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67/104 for 14 days [QDxl4]. An observation period of 5 days followed the administration of the drug.
[00133] Human breast cancer cell lines (MDAMB-231 and PANC-1) were obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) (Manassas, VA). MDA-MB-231 cells were grown in MEM (Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY) supplemented with 10% SFB (Atlanta Biologicals, Flowery Branch, GA) and penicillin-streptomycin-glutamine (Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY, USA). PANC-1 cells were cultured in RPMI-1640 medium (RPMI: Life Technologies, Grand Island, NY) supplemented with 10% SFB and penicillin-streptomycin-glutamine. The cells were cultured in the presence of 5% CO2 at 37 ° C in an incubator.
[00134] Mice Male athymic nude-nu Foxnl aged 4 to 5 weeks were purchased from Harlan along Laboratories (Indianapolis, Indiana). The animals were quarantined for one week and five mice per cage were housed with a 12 h light-dark cycle, and a relative humidity of 50%. Drinking water and diet were supplied to the animals ad libitum. All animals were housed under pathogen-free conditions and the experiments were carried out in accordance with the animal care use committee of the Instituto de Pesquisa I IT. For the MDA-MB231 xenograft study, cells (4 x 10 6 ) in a final volume of 100 pL of MEM medium were injected subcutaneously into the right flanks of the mice. For the PANC-1 xenograft study, cells (5 x 10 5 ) in a final volume of 100 pL of RPMI medium were injected subcutaneously into the right flanks of the mice. Tumor measurements for both models were started as soon as the tumors were palpable. After that, the tumors were measured twice a week. The animals were randomized when the tumors reached a size range of 75 to 175 mm 3 , and the control groups (n
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68/104 = 6) and treatment (n = 12) were randomized using the stratified random sampling algorithm. Treatment (bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3)) or vehicle (PBS) was started on the day after randomization. The treatment was well tolerated and was not associated with drug-related deaths. No significant loss of body weight was noted.
[00135] For the MDA-MB-231 xenograft study, the mean tumor size of randomization (± SE) was: 103.01 ± 11.89 and 102.61 ± 9.60 for the control groups and groups of treatment, respectively. Mean body weights (± S.E) at randomization were: 32.08 ± 0.76 and 30.27 ± 0.75 for group 1 and group 2, respectively. Table 21 shows the average body weights (± S.E) for the entire study.
TABLE 21
Average body weights + S.E
Group ofTreatment Dial 6th Day 9 Day 12 Day 16 Day 20 Vehicle 31.0 ± 0.83 32.1 ± 0.76 31.9 ± 0.66 32.1 ± 0.68 32.0 ± 0.71 32.5 ± 0.88 Anti-STAT3VHH13 29.2 ± 0.71 30.3 ± 0.75 30.4 ± 0.79 29.9 ± 0.72 30.6 ± 0.74 30.6 ± 0.77 p value * 0.16 0.18 0.27 0.09 0.28 0.17
* Two-tailed t-test [00136] On day 14 of dosing, the mean tumor size (± SE) for the control was 179.11 ± 19.39 versus 118.86 ± 15.94 for the treatment group. Mean body weights (± S.E) at the end were: 31.98 ± 0.71 and 30.55 ± 0.74 for group 1 and group 2, respectively. Table 22 summarizes the tumor volumes (± S.E) for the entire study. The mean% inhibition of tumor growth in the treatment group was 33.64%. Tumor doubling times were the
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Following 69/104: group 1: 44.27 days; and group 2: 61.06 days. Figure 5 illustrates the growth inhibition of anti-STAT3 bacterial VHH13 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 3) in the MDA-MB-231 xenograft model. The bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) showed significant growth inhibition (p = 0.047). Thus, the bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) has chemotherapeutic activity in the human MDA-MB-231 breast cancer model system.
TABLE 22
Individual tumor measurements (mm 3 ) for the xenograft model
MDA-MB-231
Group of the Animal Day 1 6th Day 9 Day 12 Day 16 Day 20 1 1 117.43 141.72 135.00 139.31 127.93 133.19 2 130.30 142.83 206.15 256.99 244.06 243.00 3 78.00 105.97 114.04 144.06 154.50 158.94 4 118.24 162.41 171.39 225.59 181.32 217.97 5 71.10 109.03 133.13 168.80 187.73 164.45 Average 103.01 132.39 151.94 186.95 179.11 183.51 S.E. 11.89 10.82 16.42 23.28 19.39 20.282 6 123.94 114.91 129.22 176.04 170.09 162.98 7 85.93 101.06 112.60 112.24 139.56 96.43 8 147.34 148.72 169.69 185.08 170.07 256.71 9 115.91 103.64 108.37 141.21 144.51 119.42 10 73.23 82.59 110.13 91.22 166.77 285.88 11 163.73 178.23 183.79 165.52 214.28 129.51 12 75.54 83.94 103.68 119.88 104.26 99.48 13 70.04 89.24 102.60 75.25 57.65 95.23 14 101.62 65.09 82.02 68.01 61.41 61.83 15 67.83 62.21 59.00 77.04 65.49 82.73 16 131.93 75.28 76.21 53.55 73.66 51.61 17 74.28 109.06 111.92 89.94 58.56 100.07
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Group N s Animals Day 1 6th Day 9 Day 12 Day 16 Day 20Average 102.61 101.16 112.44 112.92 118.86 128.49S.E. 9.6 9.8 10.3 12.9 15.9 21.1 P value 0.98 0.08 0.06 0.01 0.05 0.14
[00137] For the PANC-1 xenograft study, the mean tumor sizes (+ SE) at randomization were 107.01 ± 4.54 in the control groups and 110.58 ± 6.18 in the treatment group. The mean body weights (+ S.E) at randomization were: 29.0 ± 0.81 and 28.5 ± 0.70 for group 1 and group 2, respectively. Average body weights (± S.E) at the end were: 31.2 ± 0.99 and 30.1 ± 0.75 for group 1 and group 2, respectively. Table 23 summarizes the average body weights (± S.E) for the entire study. On day 14 of dosing, the average tumor size (± SE) for the control was 287.30 ± 33.94 versus 318.74 + 29.76 for the treatment group. Table 24 summarizes the tumor volumes (± S.E) for the entire study.
TABLE 23
Average body weights + S.E
Group ofTreatment 2/19 2/24 2/27 3/2 3/6 3/10 Vehicle control 31.0 ± 0.83 32.1 ± 0.76 31.9 ± 0.66 32.1 ± 0.68 32.0 ± 0.71 32.5 ± 0.88 Anti-STAT3 29.2 ± 0.71 30.3 ± 0.75 30.4 ± 0.79 29.9 ± 0.72 30.6 ± 0.74 30.6 ± 0.77
[00138] Tumor doubling times were as follows: group
1: 22.44 days; and group 2: 23.02 days. The bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) did not show significant growth inhibition in the PANC-1 human pancreatic cancer model system.
TABLE 24
Individual tumor measurements (mm 3 ) for the PANC-1 xenograft model
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Group Animal s 2/19 2/24 2/27 3/2 3/6 3/10 1 1 99.77 117.96 134.67 161.27 160.79 195.582 117.54 137.14 221.14 241.27 303.70 321.453 120.30 210.99 276.05 322.17 394.96 732.074 111.65 135.91 215.87 340.97 334.08 382.065 90.88 96.35 165.26 156.28 223.17 314.976 107.05 156.56 192.98 324.34 307.13 573.99 Average107.87 142.49 201.00 257.72 287.30 420.02 S.E.11.11 16.01 20.00 34.35 33.94 80.34 2 7 96.3 193.71 275.06 317.53 395.37 540.668 89.24 90.03 112.43 125.51 189.63 235.089 80.62 148.97 196.38 187.24 299.84 530.4610 108.03 144.14 234.46 240.39 288.75 421.6111 77.66 116.21 313.19 290.38 411.66 197.6712 129.68 143.20 290.67 224.92 261.44 343.0413 108.99 182.30 239.00 254.64 342.19 464.0014 123.27 171.03 223.34 226.88 248.69 324.3015 144.53 136.03 198.47 226.04 247.97 273.5816 120.96 136.48 226.43 338.06 564.71 883.8117 112.69 144.76 167.12 225.70 223.06 326.1918 134.95 189.64 193.14 248.01 351.63 364.44 Average110.58 149.71 222.47 242.11 318.74 408.74 S.E.6.18 8.79 15.90 16.30 29.76 53.25 P value0.78 0.67 0.43 0.64 0.53 0.91
EXAMPLE 10: STUDY WITH MDA-MB-231 XENOSHOLD [00139] In this example, the effectiveness of the bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ. ID NO: 3) in the human breast xenograft model MDA-MB231 was further evaluated. The administration schedules were as follows: group 1 (n = 4; PBS; IP) twice a day for 14 days [BIDx14];
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72/104 group 2 (n = 4; 1 mg / kg of body weight; PI), twice daily for 14 days [BIDxl4]; group 3 (n = 4; 2 mg / kg of body weight; PI) twice daily for 14 days [BIDxl4]; and group 4 (n = 4; 2 mg / kg of body weight; PI) once daily for 14 days [QDxl4]. An observation period of 7 days followed the administration of the drug.
[00140] The human breast cancer cell lines MDA-MB231 and nude female nude Foxnl mice atymic have been described above.
[00141] MDA-MB-231 cells at a density of 5x10 6 were injected subcutaneously into the right flank of the mice in a final volume of 100 μΙ_ in MEM medium. Tumor measurements were started as soon as the tumors were palpable. After that, the tumors were measured twice a week. The animals were randomized when the tumors reached a size range of 55 to 150 mm 3 using the stratified random sampling algorithm. Treatment (bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3)) or vehicle (PBS) was started on the day after randomization.
[00142] The average size (± SE) of the tumor at randomization was: 92.08 ± 13.24; 82.38 ± 5.17; 77.47 ± 7.17; and 104.71 ± 14.64 for groups 1, 2, 3, and 4 respectively. As shown in Table 25, the average body weights (± SE) at randomization were: 23.65 ± 0.72; 23.45 ± 0.66; 23.10 ± 0.20; and 22.45 ± 1.25 for groups 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively.
[00143] As shown in Table 26, on day 14 of the dosage, the mean tumor size (± SE) for the control group was 221.51 ± 57.32 versus 67.12 ± 10.66; 58.27 ± 22.54; and 131.44 ± 22.86; for treatment group 2, 3, and 4, respectively. At the end (day 42) the average tumor size (± S.E) was: 255.42 ± 65.46; 55.98 ± 6.94; 41.15 ± 13.21; and 145.51 ± 52.32; for groups 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively. Average body weights (± S.E) at the end were: 24.80 ± 0.49; 23.25 ± 1.20; 24.00 ± 0.32; and 23.2
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73/104 ± 1.46 for groups 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively. The maximum average% of net weight loss (day) was: 0.7 (36); 1.5 (23); 1.8 (36); and 2.2 (29) for groups 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively.
[00144] As also shown in Table 26, the average growth inhibition in the treatment groups was 78.3; 75.2; and 55.9; for groups 2, 3, and 4, respectively. Tumor doubling times were: group 1: 20.56 days; group 2: 34.54 days; group 3: 30.07 days; and group 4: 27.17 days. There was a growth delay of 13.99; 9.52, and 6.61 days for groups 2, 3 and 4, respectively. The% of the treatment / control values for the treatment groups were: group 2: -33.75 (tumor stasis); group 3: -54.4 (tumor regression); and group 4: 10.28 (tumor inhibition). Figure 6 illustrates the growth inhibition of anti-STAT3 bacterial VHH13 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 3) in the MDA-MB-231 xenograft model.
[00145] Administration of bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) was associated with significant inhibition of growth in group 2 (p = 0.02) [1 mg / kg; BID X 14] and group 3 (p = 0.02) [2 mg / kg; IDB x 14]. In addition, three out of four tumors showed significant regression. Based on these data, it is concluded that the bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) has chemotherapeutic activity in the model human breast cancer system MDA-MB-231.
TABLE 25
Average body weights ± S.E
Study Date / Day Administration Recovery 6/23 6/26 6/29 7/2 7/6 7/9 7/15 Group Schedule 20 23 26 29 33 36 42 1 PBS; BIDxl4 23.65 ± 23.85 ± 24.18 ± 24.05 ± 24.30 ± 24.13 ± 24.80 ±
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0.72 0.60 0.67 0.63 0.67 0.72 0.49 2 1 mg / kg; IDBxl4 23.45 ±0.66 23.10 ±0.68 23.13 ±0.74 23.13 ±0.95 23.08 ±1.01 23.13 ±1.09 23.25 ±1.20 3 2 mg / kg; IDBx 14 23.10 ±0.20 23.10 ±0.14 23.20 ±0.07 23.85 ±0.39 23.80 ±0.24 23.38 ±0.23 24.00 ±0.32 4 2 mg / kg; QDX14 22.45 ±1.25 22.35 ±1.32 22.58 ±1.46 22.08 ±1.44 22.73 ±1.47 22.55 ±1.46 23.20 ±1.38
TABLE 26
Individual tumor measurements (mm 3 ) for the xenograft model
MDA-MB-231
Group 1 N9 ofAnimal 6723/15(20) 6/26/15(23) 6/29/15(26) 2/7/15(29) 6/7/15(33) 7/9/15(36) 7/15/15(42)001 93.38 119.07 159.80 197.91 210.95 243.31 265.61002 116.07 241.31 313.16 339.13 362.30 390.48 426.32003 55.67 83.45 98.22 135.50 198.19 204.96 218.29004 104.82 112.09 118.44 111.07 114.61 115.31 111.45 Absolute average92.49 138.98 172.41 795.90 227.57 235.57 255.42 Relative average100.00% 150.27% 186.41% 211.82% 239.57% 257.89% 276.17% S.E. Average13.12 34.97 48.64 51.12 57.56 57.32 65.46 Average% inhibition MedianAbsolute99.10 115.58 139.12 166.71 204.57 224.13 241.95 MedianRelative100.00% 116.62% 140.38% 168.22% 206.42% 226.16% 244.14% S.E.Median13.66 37.49 52.30 53.83 52.48 57.91 65.92 median%
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inhibition Group 2 N9 ofAnimal 6/23/15(20) 6/26/15(23) 6/29/15(26) 2/7/15(29) 6/7/15(33) 7/9/15(36) 7/15/15(42)005 73.15 54.54 59.17 57.21 56.20 37.13 39.17006 80.11 76.56 80.34 88.75 99.09 87.42 72.18007 97.22 79.99 78.44 59.90 55.90 53.66 60.35008 81.21 53.58 54.34 67.43 57.30 29.02 52.23 Absolute average82.92 66.77 68.07 68.32 67.12 51.81 55.98 Relative average100.00% 79.79% 82.09% 82.39% 80.95% 62.48% 67.51% S.E. Average5.09 7.03 6.62 7.14 10.66 12.93 6.94 Average% inhibition10.34% 52.39% 60.52% 65.12% 69.70% 78.28% 78.08% MedianAbsolute80.66 65.55 68.80 63.66 56.75 45.40 56.29 MédianRelative100.00% 81.27% 85.30% 78.93% 70.36% 56.28% 69.79% S.E.Median5.25 7.04 6.63 7.63 12.23 13.45 6.94 Median% inhibition18.61% 43.28% 50.54% 61.81% 72.26% 79.75% 76.74% Group 3 Animal No. 9 6/23/15(20) 6/26/15(23) 6/29/15(26) 2/7/15(29) 6/7/15(33) 7/9/15(36) 7/15/15(42)009 56.41 43.61 33.13 31.76 34.11 50.33 18.94010 84.06 85.18 61.75 80.69 110.72 89.11 73.89011 82.87 54.78 34.92 54.38 78.47 78.68 51.30012 86.73 44.01 23.09 16.99 9.78 18.71 20.48 Absolute average77.52 56.89 38.22 45.95 58.27 59.27 41.15 Average100.00% 73.39% 49.31% 59.28% 75.17% 76.38% 53.09%
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relative S.E. Average7.08 9.78 8.26 13.90 22.54 15.79 13.21 Average% inhibition16.19% 59.06% 77.83% 76.54% 73.69% 75.18% 83.89% MedianAbsolute83.46 49.39 34.02 43.07 56.29 64.51 35.89 MedianRelative100.00% 59.18% 40.76% 51.60% 67.44% 77.29% 43.00% S.E.Median7.87 10.69 8.61 14.00 22.56 16.08 13.56 Median% inhibition15.78% 57.27% 75.54% 74.17% 72.49% 71.22% 85.17% Group 4 N9 ofAnimal 6723/15(20) 6/26/15(23) 6/29/15(26) 2/7/15(29) 6/7/15(33) 7/9/15(36) 7/15/15(42)013 88.56 108.35 105.80 102.94 183.39 159.78 291.06014 78.73 51.51 54.20 70.39 84.29 55.83 42.03015 113.20 85.29 69.30 103.16 103.20 87.15 130.64016 141.91 130.82 87.49 145.68 154.89 117.63 118.31 Absolute average105.60 93.99 79.20 105.54 131.44 105.10 145.51 Relative average100.00% 89.01% 75.00% 99.94% 124.47% 99.52% 137.79% S.E. Average14.11 16.94 11.18 15.44 22.86 22.17 52.32 Average% inhibition-14.18% 32.37% 54.06% 46.13% 40.66% 55.94% 43.03% MedianAbsolute100.88 96.82 78.40 103.05 129.05 102.39 124.47 MedianRelative100.00% 95.98% 77.71% 102.15% 127.92% 101.49% 123.38% S.E.Median14.37 17.02 11.19 15.50 22.90 22.22 53.72
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Median% inhibition-1.80% 16.23% 43.65% 38.19% 36.92% 54.32% 48.55%
EXAMPLE 11: EFFECTIVENESS OF VHH13 BACTERIAL ANTI-STAT3 SDAB (SEQ ID NO: 3) IN THREE MODELS OF HUMAN CANCER XENOXESTING [00146] In this example, the effectiveness of bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) was evaluated in the models of human xenograft of breast cancer MDA-MB-231, pancreatic PANC-1, and prostate DU145.
[00147] Nus-Foxnl ntJ athymic mice, MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells, PANC -1 pancreatic cancer cell lines and DU145 prostate cancer cells have been described above. The body weight of the mice ranged from 17 to 19 g (34 females) and 21 to 23 g (16 males) on day 1 of the study.
[00148] The cells in the early passages (4 to 10) were used for implantation in the mice and were collected during the growth of the logarithmic phase. MDA-MB-231 ( 5 x 10 6 ), DU145 ( 5 x 10 6 ), and PANC-1 (1.5 x 10 6 ) were injected subcutaneously into the right flank of the mice in a final volume of 100 pL of medium. Tumor measurements were started as soon as the tumors were palpable. After that, the tumors were measured twice a week.
[00149] Animals were randomized using the stratified random sampling algorithm when tumors reach a size range of: 74-120 mm 3 (MDA-MB-231), 89-146 mm 3 (DU145), or 60 -160 mm 3 (PANC-1). The treatment (containing bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) and called in the present invention SBT-100) or vehicle (PBS) was initiated day after randomization, called day 1.
[00150] VHH13 bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 3) was supplied as a pre-formulated solution at a concentration of 0.651
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78/104 mg / mL and was stored at -20 ° C until ready for use. The stock solution was diluted in sterile PBS pH 7.6 to provide 5 mg / kg in a dosage volume of 10 ml / kg. The working solution was prepared every 7 days, aliquoted in seven bottles and stored at 4 ° C. On each treatment day, only the necessary bottle was brought to room temperature. All remaining sdAb material was retained at 4 ° C, as needed for the next dose. On day 8, any remaining sdAb material was discarded and a new batch prepared.
[00151] Two groups (control and SBT-100) of mice per tumor model were administered according to the protocol shown in Table 27. The administration schedules were as follows: group 1 (n = 4; PBS) twice at day for 14 days [BIDxl4]; group 2 (n = 4; SBT-100.5 mg / kg body weight), twice daily for 14 days [BIDxl4]. Both the vehicle (PBS pH 7.6) and SBT100 were administered intraperitoneally (i.p.) twice daily, with an interval of six hours for 14 days. Dosing was carried out according to the individual weights of the animals. A 7-day recovery period followed administration.
TABLE 27
Experimental design of the xenograft study model
Model N 9 of inoculated cells / mouse Group Mouse N 9 Agent Dosage(mg / kg) Via Schedule MDA-MB-231 5 x 10 8 1 4 Control(PBS) 0 IP BIC x 14 2 4 SBT-100 5 IP BIC x 14 PANC-1 1.5 x 10 8 1 4 Control 0 IP BIC x 14
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(PBS) 2 4 SBT-100 5 IP BIC x 14 DU145 5 x 10 8 1 4 Control(PBS) 0 IP BIC x 14 2 4 SBT-100 5 IP BIC x 14
[00152] The Study Log Study Director Animal Study Management Software program (San Francisco, CA, USA) was used to randomize animals, collect data (for example, dosage, body weights, tumor measurements, clinical observations), and conduct analyzes of the data.
[00153] In the MDA-MB-231 tumor xenograft model, animals were randomized on day 23 after inoculation with an average tumor size (± SE) of: 77.98 ± 21.58 and 84.71 ± 5 , 56 for groups 1 and 2, respectively. Mean body weights (± S.E) at randomization were: 20.04 ± 0.62 and 23.7 ± 1.84 for groups 1 and 2, respectively. Table 28 summarizes the average body weights (+ S.E) for the entire study. On the last day of administration (day 14), the average tumor size (± SE) for the control group was 168.28 ± 51.57 versus 83.81 + 22.65 for mice treated with SBT-100. Table 29 summarizes the tumor volumes (± S.E) for the entire study. At the time of termination (day 28), the average tumor size (± S.E) was: 270.49 ± 112.35 and 91.72 ± 33.17, for groups 1 and 2, respectively. Mean body weights (± S.E) at the end of randomization were: 25.36 ± 1.07 and 24.25 ± 1.68 for groups 1 and 2, respectively. At the end of the study, the mean inhibition of tumor growth in the group treated with SBT-100 was 85.8% (p = 0.006). Figure 7 illustrates the average tumor volume. Tumor doubling times were 25.78 days versus 111.6 days for group 1 and group 2, respectively.
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The treatment / control% for group 2 was 13.35 (tumor inhibition).
TABLE 28
Average body weights for mice in MDA-MB-231
Phase
Administration Recovery
Group IDanimal 8/28 9/1 9/4 9/8 9/11 9/15 9/18 Control 001 23.40 24.80 24.60 25.00 24.70 23.30 25.10 Control 002 22.40 22.50 22.60 22.70 22.80 20.60 23.10 Control 003 23.70 24.80 25.20 24.80 24.30 23.30 25.20 Control 004 23.70 24.70 25.10 25.30 24.90 22.90 25.40 Average23.30 24.20 24.38 24.45 24.18 22.53 24.70 Median23.55 24.75 24.85 24.90 24.50 23.10 25.15 SD0.62 1.13 1.21 1.18 0.95 1.30 1.07 % in0.00 3.82 4.56 4.89 3.73 -3.38 5.97 change SBT-100 005 21.70 21.70 21.70 22.40 22.60 21.40 22.20 SBT-100 006 25.00 24.30 24.30 24.70 25.30 24.40 25.00 SBT-100 007 22.60 23.00 23.10 23.10 23.80 22.80 23.70 SBT-100 008 25.50 25.30 25.50 26.10 25.80 25.60 26.10 Average23.70 23,575 23.65 24,075 24,375 23.55 24.25 Median23.80 23.65 23.7 23.9 24.55 23.6 24.35 SD1.84 1.56 1.63 1.66 1.46 1.84 1.68 %in0.00 -0.45 -0.15 1.65 2.96 -0.63 2.38 change
TABLE 29
Tumor volumes for MDA-MB-231
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Phase Pre-administration Administration Recovery Group Animal ID 8/21 8/24 8/27 8/28 9/1 9/4 9/8 9/11 9/15 9/18 Control 001 51.00 55.80 80.94 76.35 83.66 94.11 110.78 129.99 162.81 184.15 Control 002 75.19 77.22 121.13 120.73 145.12 179.21 203.15 234.88 308.70 428.44 Control 003 57.04 57.81 75.32 81.06 93.25 114.27 181.87 242.48 295.93 408.67 Control 004 42.92 51.67 106.54 92.23 116.96 142.60 191.58 213.48 286.91 303.19 Average56.54 60.63 95.98 92.59 109.75 132.55 171.84 205.10 263.59 331.11 Median54.02 56.80 93.74 86.64 105.10 128.44 186.72 223.76 291.42 355.93 SD13.71 11.36 21.58 19.91 27.42 36.92 41.63 51.57 67.78 112.35 SBT-100 005 72.25 64.45 80.02 74.07 56.81 49.44 68.70 73.40 93.32 116.07 SBT-100 006 61.50 63.08 80.67 79.60 71.92 67.08 87.54 115.80 116.97 120.44 SBT-100 007 37.41 35.15 91.93 91.85 50.02 50.32 46.10 63.85 66.57 80.57 SBT-100 008 43.80 56.95 86.22 79.94 59.23 60.19 54.10 82.57 79.47 49.78 Average53.74 54.91 84.71 81.37 59.49 56.76 64.11 83.81 89.08 91.72 Median52.65 60.02 83.45 79.77 58.02 55.25 61.40 77.81 86.40 9832 SD16.00 13.57 5.56 7.49 9.16 8.43 18.21 22.65 21.56 33.17 % T / C0.0 32.3 84.0 81.6 13.6 5.9 9.2 20.7 17.6 13.4 Value ofP0.800 0.542 0.351 0.332 0.013 0.007 0.003 0.005 0.003 0.006
[00154]
In the DU145 tumor xenograft model, animals were randomized on day 17 after inoculation with an average tumor size (+ SE) of: 111.87 ± 20.53 and 111.23 ± 25.16 for groups 1 and 2 respectively. Mean body weights (± S.E) at randomization were:
29.10 ± 1.94 and 30.68 ± 1.56 for groups 1 and 2, respectively. Table 30 summarizes the average body weights (± S.E) for the entire study. On the last day of administration (day 14), the average tumor size (± SE) for the control group was 621.81 ± 276.25 versus 364.14 + 51.64 for the mice
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82/104 treated with SBT-100. Table 31 summarizes the tumor volumes (± S.E) for the entire study. At the end (day 28), the average tumor size (±
S.E) was: 819.42 ± 351.88 and 601.83 + ± 131.51, for groups 1 and 2, respectively. The average body weights (± S.E) at the end of randomization were: 29.20 ± 2.33 and 29.60 ± 1.04 for groups 1 and 2, respectively. At the end of the study, the mean inhibition of tumor growth in the group treated with SBT-100 was 26.6% (p = 0.29). Figure 8 illustrates the average tumor volume. Tumor doubling times were 14.57 days versus 18.19 days for group 1 and group 2, respectively. The treatment / control% for group 2 was 74.8.
TABLE 30
Average body weights for mice in DU 145
Phase
Administration Recovery
Group Animal ID 9/4 9/8 9/11 9/15 9/18 9/22 9/25 Control 001 29.60 28.10 29.30 28.40 28.30 29.00 29.90 Control 002 29.70 30.10 31.20 30.10 30.40 29.90 30.00 Control 003 30.80 30.10 31.00 31.70 31.20 31.10 31.10 Control 004 26.30 25.70 26.60 25.20 26.10 26.20 25.80 Average29.10 28.50 29.53 28.85 29.00 29.05 29.20 Median29.65 29.10 30.15 29.25 29.35 29.45 29.95 SD1.94 2.09 2.13 2.78 2.29 2.09 2.33 %in0.00 -2.07 1.46 -0.99 -0.37 -0.19 0.27 change SBT-100 005 30.90 30.20 27.90 29.80 29.90 30.50 30.10 SBT-100 006 28.40 26.20 27.30 26.90 27.50 29.10 28.50
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SBT-100 007 31.70 31.20 31.50 30.40 30.70 31.20 30.80 SBT-100 008 31.70 29.70 30.20 28.20 28.10 28.80 29.00 Average30.68 29.33 29.23 28.83 29.05 29.90 29.60 Median31.30 29.95 29.05 29.00 29.00 29.80 29.55 SD1.56 2.17 1.97 1.58 1.50 1.14 1.04 % in0.00 -4.47 -4.47 -6.00 -5.23 -2.39 -3.40 change
TABLE 31
Tumor volumes for DU145
Pre-administration Phase Administration Recovery Group Animal ID 8/24 8/27 8/31 9/3 9/4 9/8 9/11 9/15 9/18 9/22 9/25 Control 001 39.18 41.27 38.41 923O 9332 121.16 203.79 310.41 409.15 43031 45039 Control 002 45/55 35.99 6438 9530 10333 135.42 225.62 327.76 478.14 534.48 599.97 Control 003 46.65 2237 88.76 12738 141/49 213.24 384.15 930.74 1,023.13 1,084.09 1.19833 Control 004 17/56 36.44 65.73 13130 13833 22733 289.78 338.79 57633 926.90 102730 Average3638 34/52 64/47 11137 11932 17436 27534 47633 62131 74335 819/42 Median42J1 36.22 6536 111.74 121/58 17433 257.70 333.27 527/49 730.69 81338 SD13.67 8.12 2038 2033 2432 53.70 8031 302.77 27635 3II37 35138 SBT-100 005 3330 2332 35.67 86/52 8931 15 132 145.67 386.92 32535 47431 49833 SBT-100 006 59.44 41/50 54.21 9836 12139 148.44 206.10 357.62 391.02 518.25 588.67 SBT-100 007 423O 35.11 7730 144.06 145.78 115.05 106.70 248.12 31634 454.78 52833 SBT-100 008 6937 50.18 7133 11638 118.70 134.16 14732 32032 423.45 604.72 790.96 Average51.23 37/40 59.75 III33 113.77 I3739 I513O 32832 364.14 513/51 60133 Median5037 38/56 62.72 107/42 120/55 14130 146.60 33832 358/43 49638 558.75 SD16.13 11.25 1830 2536 2337 16.76 4038 5937 5134 6635 13131
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84/104% T / C 03 -263 29Λ 783 81.7 65.4 424 70.6 563 693 743
Value of 0.226 0.643 0.747 0370 0380 0.238 0334 0372 0.116 0.197 0.291
P [00155] In the PANC-1 tumor xenograft model, animals were randomized on day 22 after inoculation with an average tumor size (± SE) of: 78.74 ± 40.21 and 93.84 ± 36, 31 for groups 1 and 2, respectively. Mean body weights (± S.E) at randomization were: 22.50 ± 1.47 and 24.23 ± 1.63 for groups 1 and 2, respectively. Table 32 summarizes the average body weights (± S.E) for the entire study. On the last day of administration (day 14), the average tumor size (± SE) for the control group was 204.95 + 178.90 versus 159.03 + 28.01 for the SBT-100 treated mice. Table 33 summarizes the tumor volumes (+ S.E) for the entire study. At the time of termination (day 28), the average tumor size (± S.E) was: 284.77 ± 288.88 and 203.02 ± 30.34, for groups 1 and 2, respectively. The average body weights (± S.E) at the end of randomization were: 27.38 ± 1.07 and 26.23 ± 1.19 for groups 1 and 2, respectively. At the end of the study, the mean inhibition of tumor growth in the group treated with SBT-100 was 41.78% (p = 0.35). Figure 9 illustrates the average tumor volume. Tumor doubling times were 18.51 days versus 35.70 days for group 1 and group 2, respectively. The% treatment / control for group 2 was 52.79.
TABLE 32
Average body weights for mice in PANC-1
Phase
Group IDanimal Administration Recovery 9/9 9/11 9/15 9/18 9/22 9/25 9/29 Control 001 26.50 26.60 25.80 27.10 25.70 26.10 27.20
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Control 002 24.30 24.60 23.90 25.10 24.40 25.00 25.60 Control 003 27.60 26.50 26.30 26.20 26.10 27.50 28.20 Control 004 25.10 25.30 24.20 25.10 24.70 25.90 26.90 Average22.50 22.80 23.04 24.30 24.58 25.90 27.38 Median25.80 25.90 25.00 25.65 25.20 26.00 27.05 SD1.47 0.97 1.18 0.97 0.81 1.03 1.07 % in0.00 -0.39 -3.15 0.12 -2.41 1.05 4.33 change SBT-100 005 22.60 22.80 21.40 22.50 22.60 22.90 24.80 SBT-100 006 26.00 25.10 24.90 25.70 25.10 25.40 27.10 SBT-100 007 23.10 22.30 22.40 22.70 23.10 23.50 25.70 SBT-100 008 25.20 25.00 25.20 25.40 26.20 25.40 27.30 Average24.23 23.80 23.48 24.08 24.25 24.30 26.23 Median24.15 23.90 23.65 24.05 24.10 24.45 26.40 SD1.63 1.46 1.87 1.71 1.69 1.29 1.19 %in0.00 -1.71 -3.14 -0.63 0.13 0.39 8.39
change
TABLE 33
Tumor volumes for PANC-1
Phase
Group Animal ID Pre-administration Administration Recovery 9/25 9/29 8/31 9/3 9/8 9/9 9/11 9/15 9/18 9/22 Control 001 5431 56.79 9433 9437 94.69 123.90 135.77 206.74 22031 22331 Control 002 4638 75.43 81.99 81.62 88.44 130.01 151.06 14032 145.62 20232 Control 003 0.00 2730 5730 59.60 99.77 107.02 14233 14035 168.68 18737 Control 004 0.00 0.00 152.17 159.98 227.02 38034 502.06 51433 574.44 781.45 Average2036 32Λ5 78.74 8031 104.18 15139 189.83 20435 22631 284> 77
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Median2349 4245 8841 8739 97.23 12635 146.64 17335 I943O 21336 SD29/15 3343 40.21 4348 6632 130/48 179.63 17830 20036 28838 SBT-100 005 39.60 64.75 76.44 78.07 5734 93.17 112.98 140.09 17332 24534 SBT-100 006 4031 3737 6837 73.13 76.46 II33O 130.49 19236 20535 189.42 SBT-100 007 85.71 9137 147.61 149.02 123.95 116.01 I573O 17139 175.68 2OO37 SBT-100 008 48.72 55.19 82.73 83.18 8630 102.48 105.65 132.19 13633 17534 Average5338 6242 9334 95.85 86.21 10634 12365 I5933 I7332 20332 Median4431 5937 7939 8032 8138 10739 121.73 15539 I743O 19549 SD2132 7737 3631 3539 2734 10/49 2335 2831 2840 3034 % T / C03 03 423 44.2 1/27 4/4 383 49.7 513 523 Value of0.174 0310 0.927 0317 0.296 0.272 0386 0350 O343 O355 P
EXAMPLE 12: EFFECTIVENESS OF SDAB ANTI-STAT3 BACTERIAL VHH13 (SEQ ID
NO: 3) IN THE ER + / PR + HUMAN BREAST TUMOR XENOFEST MODEL (MCF-7) [00156] This example demonstrates the efficacy of bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) in the tumor tumor xenograft model human breast MCF-7 in nude mice.
[00157] Nude female atypical mice (Crl: NU (Ncr) -Foxnl nude , Charles River) were twelve weeks old with a body weight (BW) range of 23.0 to 30.1 g on day 1 of the study. The animals were fed and housed, as described above.
[00158] MCF-7 human breast carcinoma cells were obtained and cultured as described above, and used for mouse xenograft. Three days before tumor cell implantation, estrogen pellets (0.36 mg estradiol, release for 60 days, Innovative Research of America, Sarasota, FL) were implanted subcutaneously between the scapulas of each test animal using a trocar. sterilized.
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87/104 [00159] Tumor cells used for implantation were collected during the logarithmic phase of growth and resuspended in phosphate buffered saline (PBS) at a concentration of 1 χ 10 8 cells / mL. On the day of implantation, each test mouse received 1 χ 10 7 MCF- 7 cells (0.1 ml cell suspension) implanted subcutaneously on the right flank and tumor growth was monitored as the average size reaching the target range of 100 to 150 mm 3 . Twenty-one days later, designated as day 1 of the study, the animals were classified into two groups each consisting of four mice with individual tumor volumes in the range of 108 to 144 mm 3 and the average tumor volumes of the group from 117 to 123 mm 3 .
[00160] VHH13 bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 3) was supplied as a ready-to-use pre-formulated solution at a concentration of 0.41867 mg / mL in 1 mL aliquots and was stored at 20 ° C until needed. The 0.41867 mg / ml solution provided a dosage of 1 mg / kg in a dosage volume of 23.88 ml / kg. On each day of treatment, only the necessary vials of bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) were thawed to room temperature. All remaining dosing suspensions were retained at 4 ° C, as needed for the next dose.
[00161] Two groups of athymic nude mice were administered according to the protocol shown in Table 34. All doses of vehicle (control) and bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) were administered intraperitoneally (ip) three times a day, six hours apart for 14 days, with two doses being applied on day 1 and one dose applied on the morning of the 15th (tid x 14, first day 2 doses). The volume of administration for the vehicle and bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) was 0.478 mL per 20 grams of body weight (23.88 mL / kg) and was staggered
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88/104 for the body weight of each individual animal. Group 1 received the vehicle and served as the performance test group for grafting and tumor progression, as well as the control. Group 2 was administered with the bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ, ID NO: 3) at 1 mg / kg.
TABLE 34
Outline of the protocol for the study
Group n Treatment regime Agent mg / kg Route Schedule 1 4 Vehicle - ip tid x 14 first day 2 doses 2 4 VHH13 1 ip tid x 14 first day 2 doses
[00162] Tumors were measured twice a week, and each animal was euthanized when its neoplasia reached the predetermined outcome volume (1000 mm 3 ) or at the end of the study, day 39, whichever came first. When a tumor reached the outcome volume, the animal was documented as euthanized for tumor progression (TP), with the aim of euthanasia. The time to outcome (TTE) for each mouse was calculated using the following equation:
log 10 (outcome volume) - b
TTE = ----------------------- m TTE is expressed in days, the volume in the outcome is expressed in mm 3 , b is the intercept in is the line slope obtained by linear regression of a log growth tumor data set. The data set consists of the first observation that exceeded the outcome volume used in the analysis and the three consecutive observations that immediately preceded obtaining the outcome volume. The TTE
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89/104 calculated is generally less than the date of PT, and on this day the animal was euthanized to measure the size of the tumor. Animals that did not reach the outcome volume were assigned a TTE value equal to the last day of the study (D39). Any animal classified as having died of treatment-related causes (RT) was assigned a TTE value equal to that of the day of death. Any animal classified as having died from causes unrelated to treatment (NTR) was excluded from the TTE calculations.
[00163] Treatment effectiveness was determined from tumor growth retardation (TGD), which is defined as the increase in median TTE, in days, for a treatment group compared to the control group:
TGD = T - C [00164] The percentage increase in the median TTE in relation to the control group, is
T-C% TGD = -% 100 where:
T = median TTE for a treatment group, and
C = median TTE for the designated control group.
[00165] The effectiveness of the treatment in each group can be indicated by the median tumor volume, MTV (n), which was defined as the median tumor volume on the last day of the study (D39) in the number of remaining animals (n) whose tumors did not reach the outcome volume.
[00166] The effectiveness of the treatment can also be determined from the incidence and the magnitude of the regression responses observed during the study. Treatment can cause partial regression (PR) or complete regression (CR) of the tumor in an animal. In a PR response, the tumor volume was 50% or less of its volume in the Dl for three measurements
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90/104 consecutive during the course of the study, and equal to or greater than 13.5 mm 3 for one or more of these three measurements. In a CR response, the tumor volume was less than 13.5 mm 3 for three consecutive measurements over the course of the study. Any animal with a CR response at the end of a study was further classified as a tumor-free survivor.
[00167] The animals were weighed daily for the first five days and then twice a week for the remainder of the study. The mice were observed frequently for health and for obvious signs of any adverse side effects related to TR treatment, and notable clinical observations were recorded. Individual body weight loss was monitored per protocol, and any animal with weight loss greater than 30% for one measurement, or greater than 25% for three measurements, should be euthanized for health as a death from RT. If the average body weight of the group is recovered, the dosage may be restarted in that group, but on an administration schedule with a lower or less frequent dose. Acceptable toxicity was defined as an average body weight loss of less than 20% during the study and a maximum death from RT among ten treated animals, or 10%. Any dosage regimen that results in greater toxicity is considered above the maximum tolerated dose (BAT). A death should be classified as TR if it is attributable to the side effects of treatment, as evidenced by clinical signs and / or necropsy, or it could also be classified as TR if it was caused by unknown causes during the administration period or within a period 14 days after the last dose. A death was classified as NTR if there was evidence that the death was related to the tumor model and not treatment-related. NTR deaths are further categorized as NTRa (caused by accident or human error), NTRm (caused by
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91/104 tumor confirmed by necropsy by invasion or metastasis), and NTRu (by unknown causes).
[00168] The Prism 6.07 program (GraphPad) for Windows was used for graphic analysis. Statistics were not used due to the small sample size.
[00169] A scatter plot was constructed to show the TTE values for individual mice, by group; this plot shows NTR deaths that have been excluded from all other figures. The tumor volumes of the individual animal and the group median were plotted as time functions. When an animal withdrew from the study because of tumor size or death from RT, its final recorded tumor volume was included with the data used to calculate the median volume at subsequent time points. A Kaplan-Meier graph was constructed to show the percentage of animals in each group remaining in the study as a function of time. The tumor growth curves were truncated after two deaths from RT occurred in the same group. The mean changes in body weight in the group over the course of the study were plotted as percentage change ± SEM, since day 1. Those for tumor growth curves and changes in body weight were truncated after more than half of the mice assessed in a group have left the study. Figure 10 illustrates the average tumor volume in the study.
[00170] Table 35 provides the average body weight losses, deaths from TR and NTR for the mice. Clinical signs were recorded when observed, as shown in Tables 36 to 38. No death from RT occurred during the study. Losses in body weight were variable, severe for one animal in each group, and resulted from effects of estrogen. Clinical observations including weight loss, dilated uterine tubes and
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92/104 crystals in the bladder were present in both groups and were also attributed to the effects of estrogen. Estrogen toxicity resulted in two untreated deaths in each group. The treatment evaluated in the study was acceptably tolerated.
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TABLE 35
Summary of response
Group N Treatment regime Median ofTTE T.C % TCO MTV (n)D39 Regressions Average body weight Nadir Deaths Agent mg / kg Via Schedule PR CR TPS TR NTR 1 2 Vehicle - iP Tid x 14 firstday 2 servings 23.2 - - - 0 0 0 -15.6% day 25 0 2 2 2 VHH13 1 lp Tid x 14 first day 2 doses 32.9 0.7 42 - 0 0 0 -21.8% day 32 0 2
TABLE 36
Body weight
Body weightGroup 1: Vehicle (ip, tid x 14 first day 2 doses) Date 7/27/15 7/28/15 7/29/15 7/30/15 7/31/15 3/8/15 6/8/15 8/10/15 8/13/15 8/17/15 20 / V15 8/24/15 8/27/15 8/31/15 3/9/15 Study Day 1 2 3 4 5 8 11 15 18 22 25 29 32 36 39 N * animal Pesofe) Weight (g) Pesofe) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Pesofe) Pesofe) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) 1 27.50 28.60 28.1029.40 NIRa on 1/8/15
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2 2630 2730 27.40 2930 27.40 2630 26.40 2650 26.60 2720 TP on 8/17/15 3 30.10 31.00 3050 2730 31.10 2950 2820 26.00 2250 23.60 2330 TPem2Q / 8/15 4 23.00 2420 24.40 3030 25.00 Ntrem 3/8/15 Mecfia 26> 7 273 273 273 282 282 273 263 243 253 233 STDEV 23 23 23 22 23 13 13 03 23 23n 4 4 4 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 1Group 2: VHH13 (lmg / kg ip, tid xl4 first day, 2 doses) Date 7/27/15 7/28/15 7/29/15 7/30/15 7/31/15 3/8/15 6/8/15 8/10/15 8/13/15 8/17/15 8/20/15 8/24/15 8/27/15 31 / S / 15 3/9/15 Study Day 1 2 3 4 5 8 11 15 18 22 25 29 32 36 39 In the animal Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Weight (g) Pesofg) 1 2830 2930 2850 29.60 2830 28.70 2730 2830 2820 2830 29.00 2830 ΊΡ on 8/24/15 2 2530 27.00 26.40 26.40 2630 2530 2530 26.00 2450 2130 20.10 2X10 2130 2330 2430 3 2730 25.40 2330 MTRu on 7/30/15 4 27.60 2750 27.10 2730 2720 2630 26.10 Ntrem 8/8/15 Mecfia 273 273 265 273 1/27 272 263 272 263 253 246 25 213 233 243 STDEV 13 13 13 V 13U 13 23 43 63 53 n 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1
93/104 94/104
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TABLE 37
Tumor measurement
Gauge MeasureGroup 1: Vehicle (ip, tid x 14 first day 2 doses) Date 7/27/15 7/30/15 3/8/15 6/8/15 8/10/15 8/13/15 8/17/15 8/20/15 8/24/15 8/27/15 8/31/15 3/9/15 Study Day 1 4 8 11 15 18 22 25 29 32 36 39 N9 Anirral P L P L P L P L P L P L P L P LL P L P L P L 1 6 6 7 8 NTRa on 1/8/15 2 5 9 7 9 8 12 9 13 10 13 10 13 12 15 TP on 8/17/15 3 6 7 7 10 9 10 10 12 11 12 11 12 11 13 12 14 TP on 8/20/15 4 6 8 7 11 NTRu on 3/8/15Group 2: VHH13 (lmg / kg ip, tid xl4 first day, 2 doses) Date 7/27/15 7/30/15 3/8/15 6/8/15 8/10/15 8/13/15 8/17/15 8/20/15 8/24/15 8/27/15 8/31/15 3/9/15 Study Day 1 4 8 11 15 18 22 25 29 32 36 39 N9 Anirral P L P L P L P L P L P L P L P L P L P L P L P L 1 6 6 7 8 8 10 9 10 9 10 9 10 10 11 12 12 13 13 TP on 8/24/15 2 6 6 6 7 7 8 7 8 8 9 8 9 9 10 9 10 10 10 10 10 12 12 13 13
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3 6 7 NTRu on 7/30/15 4 6 7 6 8 7 10 8 10 NTRu on 8/8/15
TABLE 38
Tumor volume
Tumor VolumeGroup 1: Vehicle (ip, tid x 14 first day 2 doses) Date 7/27/15 14 3/8/15 6/8/15 8/10/15 8/13/15 8/17/15 8/20/15 8/24/15 8/27/15 8/21/15 3/9/15 Study Day7/30/15 8 11 15 18 22 25 29 32 36 39 N and animal VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 } VT (mm 3 ) 1196 NTRa on 1/8/15 2 108 221 384 527 650 1080 TP on 8/17/15 3 113 245 405 600 726 787 1008 TP on 8/20/15 4 126 270 NTRu on 3/8/15 Average 122.6 232.8 394.5 563.3 688 933.3 1008WITHOUT 8.1 15.8 10.5 36.8 38 38 146.8n 4 4 222221
95/104 96/104
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Group 2: VHH13 (lmg / kg ip, tid x! 4 first day, 2 doses) Date 7/27/15 14 3/8/15 6/8/15 8/10/15 8/13/15 8/17/15 8/20/15 8/24/15 8/27/15 8/21/15 3/9/15 Study Day 8 11 15 18 22 25 29 32 36 39 N9 animal VT (mm 3 ) 7/30/15 VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) VT (mm 3 ) 1 108 196 320 405 405 405 550 864 1099 TP on 8/24/15 2 108 126 196 196 288 288 405 405 500 500 864 1099 3 126 NTRu on 7/30/15 4 126 144 245 320 NTRu on 8/8/15 Average 117 155.3 253.7 307 346.5 346.5 477.5 634.5 799.3 500 864 1098.5 WITHOUT 5.2 21 36.1 60.7 58.5 58.5 72.5 229.5 299.5 n 4 3 3 322222111
97/104
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98/104 [00171] Because two of the four mice in the control group and also in the treatment group died due to estrogen toxicity, no statistical conclusions can be drawn. With the available data, median tumor growth and mean tumor volume were reduced in the treatment group compared to the control group. This difference was present during the 14 days of treatment, but also until the 25th of the study. It took the control group 25 days to reach a tumor volume of 1000 mm 3 , while the treatment group took 36 days to reach a tumor volume of 1000 mm 3 . This suggests that the bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) slows the growth of the MCF-7 tumor in vivo. Throughout the study, both the control group and the treatment group maintained similar weights. This suggests that the bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) did not cause toxicity with respect to weight loss.
EXAMPLE 13: TREATMENT OF HER2 + HUMAN BREAST CANCER (BT474) WITH SDAB ANTI-STAT3 BACTERIAL VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) IN XENOENXERTO MICE [00172] In this example, the efficacy of bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ IDHH NO13) : 3) was determined in the BT474 human breast tumor xenograft in SCID CB.17 mice.
[00173] Two groups of SCID CB.17 mice aged 8 to 12 weeks containing xenografts of 1 mm 3 tumor fragments of BT474 on their flanks were treated according to the protocol shown in Table 39 when the tumors reached a size average of 100 to 150 mm 3 . All doses of vehicle (PBS control) and bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) (shown in Table 39 as SB-01) were administered intraperitoneally (ip) three times a day, six hours apart for 14 days, with two doses being given on day 1 (tid x 14, first day 2
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99/104 doses). The volume of administration for the vehicle and bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) was 0.478 mL per 20 grams of body weight (23.88 mL / kg) and was scaled to the body weight of each individual animal . Group 1 received the vehicle and served as the performance test group for grafting and tumor progression, as well as the control. Group 2 was administered with the bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) at 1 mg / kg.
TABLE 39
Study protocol
Group N Scheme 1 Agent Vehicle mg / kg Via Schedule 1# 4 Vehicle- ip Tid x 14 first day 2 doses 2 4 SB-011 Ip tid x 14 first day 2 doses
[00174] During the first 14 days of the study, the treatment group received anti-STAT3 B VHH13 and the control group received only the vehicle. As shown in Table 40, during this time, the treatment group maintained and gained weight throughout the study while the control group had lower weights throughout the study. This suggests that the treatment group did not experience toxicity with bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) with respect to weight loss. Both the average tumor volume and the median tumor volume of the groups were similar, and exactly the same on day 15 of the study. On day 59 of the study, both groups reached a tumor volume of 700 mm 3 . This suggests that the bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) did not reduce the growth of BT474 tumors in vivo compared to the control group. Figure 11 illustrates the average tumor volume of the group.
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TABLE 40
Summary of BT474 response
Group N Treatment Regime MedianTTE T-C % TGD SignalStat MTV (n)Day 60 PR CR TFS PRAÇANadir TR NTRm NTR Agent Vehicle Mg / kg Via Schedule NTR 1" 4 Vehicle- IP tid x 14 first day 2 doses 49.2 - -288 (2) 0 0 0 -9.1%(3) 0 0 0 2 4 SB-011 IP tid x 14 first day 2 doses 60.0 10.8 22550 (3) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
#-Group control
100/104
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101/104
EXAMPLE 14: PRODUCTION OF MOUNTAIN MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY AGAINST SDAB ANTI-STAT3 BACTERIAL VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) [00175] In this example, mouse monoclonal antibodies were generated against the sdAb of the invention. The animals used were female BALB / c mice aged 8 to 10 weeks. A water-soluble adjuvant was used (CBL). The HAT and HT used were Sigma-Aldrich.
[00176] The bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3) was used to immunize three mice and make hybridoma cell lines. The mice were immunized three times each with water-soluble adjuvant. In a mouse, the serum titer reached 1/51200. The mouse was sacrificed and the hybridoma cell lines were made by spleen cells in fusion with the Sp2 / 0 myeloma cell line.
[00177] The fused cells were seeded in 96-well plates by limited dilution. The fused cells were cultured in the presence of HAT, and 651 individual clones were tested. Of the 651 individual clones, 27 positive clones were identified, which specifically bound to the bacterial anti-STAT3 sdAb antigen VHH13 (SEQ ID NO: 3).
EXAMPLE 15: CITOTOXICITY OF KRAS SINGLE-DOMAIN ANTIBODIES (G12D) IN HUMAN PANCREATIC CANCER CELLS PANC-1 [00178] This example demonstrates the antiproliferative effects of anti-KRAS sdAb (GI2D) (SEQ ID NO: 2) with use PANC-1 human pancreatic cancer cell line. For the experiments, PANC-1 cells were cultured until reaching a confluence of 90%. At this time, proliferation studies were performed using the MTT assay, as described above.
[00179] The antiproliferative properties of sdAB anti-KRAS (G12D)
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102/104 (SEQ ID NO: 2) in PANC-1 cells three days after treatment are shown in Table 41. PANC-1 cells treated with anti-KRAS sdAb (G12D) (SEQ ID NO: 2) showed an inhibition of average growth of 19.9 and 37.7 to 50.0 and 100 pg / mL, respectively.
TABLE 41
Antiproliferative actions of sdAb Anti-KRAS (G12D) (SEQ ID NO: 2) on PANC-1 cancer cells
Mean abs ± SE % inhibition Control 1.00E + 0650 μg / mL 0.225+ 0.006 19.9 100 pg / mL 1.00E + 06 37.7
[00180] Thus, anti-KRAS sdAb (G12D) (SEQ ID NO: 2) showed inhibition of dose-dependent growth in PANC-1 human pancreatic cancer cells.
EXAMPLE 16: IN VITRO GROWTH INHIBITION BY SDAB ANTI TNFAlFA [00181] This example demonstrates the development of the method for determining the concentration of TNF-alpha and the assessment of inhibition of TNF-alpha function. The concentration of TNF-alpha necessary to show measurable modulation of activity in the human lung lymphoblastic cell line U937 was evaluated by quantifying the present ATP, which signal the presence of metabolically active cells using the Promega's Cell Titer- cell viability assay. GJo® Luminescent Cell Viability assay.
[00182] U937 cells were seeded and a 96-well microculture plate made of transparent polystyrene (Corning® Costar® 96-well flat bottom plate, Catalog No. 3997) in a total volume of 90 pL / well. After 24 hours of incubation in a humidified incubator at 37 ° C with S%
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103/104
CÜ2 and 95% air, 5 μΙ_ of 20X TNF-alpha serially diluted in culture medium were added to each well in duplicate (response to 10 pt dosage, highest concentration of 20 ng / mL). In addition, 5 μΙ_ of staurosporine 20X diluted in culture medium was added to each well in duplicate (concentration of 1 nM).
[00183] After 24 hours of culture in the presence of the test agents, the concentration of the compound necessary to show measurable modulation of TNF-alpha activity in the U937 cell line, as assessed by quantification of the present ATP. The percentage of cell growth was calculated in relation to untreated control wells. All tests were done in duplicate at each concentration level.
[00184] The ECso value for the test agents was estimated using the Prism 6.05 program by adjusting the curve data using the following four-parameter logistic equation:
Max - Min
where Max is the maximum% of absorbance of the control, Min is the minimum% of absorbance of the control at the highest agent concentration, Y is the% of absorbance of the control, X is the agent concentration, IC50 is the agent concentration that inhibits cell growth by 50% compared to control cells, and n is the slope of the curve.
[00185] Figures 12 and 13 demonstrate that TNF-alpha is cytotoxic to U937 cells. The IC50 for TNF-alpha against U937 is 95.10 pg / mL. The TNF-alpha curve shows a dose-titrated death effect.
[00186] Figure 14 demonstrates that TNF-alpha cytotoxicity against U937 is inhibited by the three different anti-TNF-alpha VHHs. When anti-TNF-alpha sdAb VHH62 (SEQ ID NO: 47), anti-TNF-alpha sdAb 66 (SEQ ID NO: 45), and sdAb
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104/104 anti-TNF-alpha VHH69 (SEQ ID NO: 46) were incubated with a constant dose of TNF-alpha, EC50, all three anti-TNF-alpha VHHs inhibit the death of U937 by TNF-alpha. The IC50 of the anti-TNF-alpha sdAb VHH62 (SEQ ID NO: 47) was approximately 713.6 µg / ml. The IC50 of the anti-TNF-alpha sdAb VHH69 (SEQ ID NO: 46) was greater than 208.055 µg / ml. The IC50 of the anti-TNF-alpha sdAb VHH66 (SEQ ID NO: 45) cannot be determined because it completely inhibited the cytotoxicity of TNF-alpha from concentrations of about 1x10 2 µg / mL to 1 X 10 2 µg / ml of anti-TNF-alpha VHH66 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 45). In this concentration range of anti-TNF-alpha VHH66 sdAb (SEQ ID NO: 45), there is an increase in U937 cell growth, and thus, complete inhibition of TNF-alpha activity.
[00187] Although the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain preferred modalities, other modalities are possible. The steps revealed for the present methods, for example, are not intended to limit nor are they meant to indicate that each step is necessarily essential to the method, but instead are just exemplary steps. Therefore, the scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description of the preferred modalities contained in this disclosure. All references cited in the present invention are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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1/3
权利要求:
Claims (13)
[1]
1. Single domain antibody (sdAb) directed against an intracellular component, characterized by the fact that it comprises the amino acid sequence as set out in SEQ ID NO: 3.
[2]
2. SdAb according to claim 1, characterized by the fact that it is multispecific for two or more antigens.
[3]
3. Use of the sdAb defined in claim 1, characterized by the fact that it is for the manufacture of a medicine for the treatment of a disease.
[4]
4. Use according to claim 3, characterized by the fact that the disease comprises one or more diseases selected from the group that includes multiple myeloma, leukemias, lymphomas, breast cancers, triple-negative breast cancers, head cancers and neck, melanoma, ovarian cancers, lung cancers, pancreatic cancers, prostate cancers, sarcomas, osteosarcoma, Kaposi's sarcoma, Ewing's sarcoma, hepatocellular cancers, glioma, neuroblastoma, astrocytoma, colorectal cancers, Wilm's tumors, renal cancers , bladder cancers, endometrial cancers, cervical cancers, esophageal cancers, squamous skin cell cancers, basal cell cancers, metastatic cancers, autoimmune diseases, polycystic kidney disease, skin diseases, suppurative hidradenitis, transplantation, muscular dystrophy and associated muscle mass loss cancer and aging, endometriosis, macular degeneration, retinal degeneration, stroke, epilepsy, traumatic brain and spinal cord injuries, hypertension, cardiac hypertrophy, Alzheimer's disease, pulmonary arterial hypertension, type 2 diabetes mellitus, ankylosing spondylitis and viral infections.
[5]
5. Use according to claim 3, characterized by the fact that sdAb is used in combination with one or more compounds.
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2/3
[6]
6. Use according to claim 5, characterized by the fact that the one or more compounds are a transcriptional inhibitor.
[7]
7. In vitro method for measuring the levels of an sdAb in a sample from an individual, characterized by the fact that it comprises the steps of:
a) generating a mouse monoclonal antibody directed against the sdAb defined in claim 1;
b) perform a quantitative immunoassay with the mouse monoclonal antibody and the sample to determine the amount of sdAb in the subject; and
c) quantify the amount of sdAb in the individual.
[8]
8. Method according to claim 7, characterized in that the quantitative immunoassay comprises an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), analyte-specific labeling and recapture assay (SALRA), liquid chromatography, mass spectrometry, cell separation fluorescence activated or a combination thereof.
[9]
9. In vitro method for diagnosing a disorder mediated by an intracellular component in an individual, characterized by the fact that it comprises the steps of:
a) contacting a biological sample from the individual with the sdAb defined in claim 1;
b) determine the amount of the intracellular component in the biological sample; and
c) compare the quantity determined in step (b) with a standard and determine the difference in quantity between the sample and the standard diagnosis of the disorder.
[10]
10. Isolated polypeptide, characterized by the fact that it comprises the amino acid sequence as established in SEQ ID NO: 3.
[11]
11. Composition, characterized by the fact that it comprises sdAb
Petition 870200042919, of 03/04/2020, p. 12/14
3/3 defined in claim 1 or 2, or a polypeptide defined in claim 10, in combination with a suitable vehicle.
[12]
Composition according to claim 11, characterized in that it still comprises one or more additional compounds.
[13]
Composition according to claim 12, characterized in that the one or more compounds comprise a transcriptional inhibitor.
Petition 870200042919, of 03/04/2020, p. 12/151
1/14 íeolfdXcml} lac promoter operator 17 sH :: l sttVHHU c <myc
His6 .yjí:

PTT21-SU VI-ÍH13 terminatorT7 origin fl
CoIEl Origin
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优先权:
申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题
US201462067908P| true| 2014-10-23|2014-10-23|
US62/067,908|2014-10-23|
US201562148656P| true| 2015-04-16|2015-04-16|
US62/148,656|2015-04-16|
US201562188353P| true| 2015-07-02|2015-07-02|
US62/188,353|2015-07-02|
US201562210795P| true| 2015-08-27|2015-08-27|
US62/210,795|2015-08-27|
PCT/US2015/057223|WO2016065323A2|2014-10-23|2015-10-23|Single domain antibodies directed against intracellular antigens|
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