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1.
Nat Chem Biol ; 19(9): 1127-1137, 2023 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37024727

ABSTRACT

The interleukin-4 (IL-4) cytokine plays a critical role in modulating immune homeostasis. Although there is great interest in harnessing this cytokine as a therapeutic in natural or engineered formats, the clinical potential of native IL-4 is limited by its instability and pleiotropic actions. Here, we design IL-4 cytokine mimetics (denoted Neo-4) based on a de novo engineered IL-2 mimetic scaffold and demonstrate that these cytokines can recapitulate physiological functions of IL-4 in cellular and animal models. In contrast with natural IL-4, Neo-4 is hyperstable and signals exclusively through the type I IL-4 receptor complex, providing previously inaccessible insights into differential IL-4 signaling through type I versus type II receptors. Because of their hyperstability, our computationally designed mimetics can directly incorporate into sophisticated biomaterials that require heat processing, such as three-dimensional-printed scaffolds. Neo-4 should be broadly useful for interrogating IL-4 biology, and the design workflow will inform targeted cytokine therapeutic development.


Subject(s)
Cytokines , Interleukin-4 , Animals , Signal Transduction
2.
Nat Biotechnol ; 41(4): 532-540, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36316485

ABSTRACT

The therapeutic potential of recombinant cytokines has been limited by the severe side effects of systemic administration. We describe a strategy to reduce the dose-limiting toxicities of monomeric cytokines by designing two components that require colocalization for activity and that can be independently targeted to restrict activity to cells expressing two surface markers. We demonstrate the approach with a previously designed mimetic of cytokines interleukin-2 and interleukin-15-Neoleukin-2/15 (Neo-2/15)-both for trans-activating immune cells surrounding targeted tumor cells and for cis-activating directly targeted immune cells. In trans-activation mode, tumor antigen targeting of the two components enhanced antitumor activity and attenuated toxicity compared with systemic treatment in syngeneic mouse melanoma models. In cis-activation mode, immune cell targeting of the two components selectively expanded CD8+ T cells in a syngeneic mouse melanoma model and promoted chimeric antigen receptor T cell activation in a lymphoma xenograft model, enhancing antitumor efficacy in both cases.


Subject(s)
Cytokines , Melanoma , Mice , Animals , Humans , Interleukin-2/therapeutic use , CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes , Immunotherapy , Melanoma/drug therapy
3.
Science ; 377(6604): 387-394, 2022 07 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35862514

ABSTRACT

The binding and catalytic functions of proteins are generally mediated by a small number of functional residues held in place by the overall protein structure. Here, we describe deep learning approaches for scaffolding such functional sites without needing to prespecify the fold or secondary structure of the scaffold. The first approach, "constrained hallucination," optimizes sequences such that their predicted structures contain the desired functional site. The second approach, "inpainting," starts from the functional site and fills in additional sequence and structure to create a viable protein scaffold in a single forward pass through a specifically trained RoseTTAFold network. We use these two methods to design candidate immunogens, receptor traps, metalloproteins, enzymes, and protein-binding proteins and validate the designs using a combination of in silico and experimental tests.


Subject(s)
Deep Learning , Protein Engineering , Proteins , Binding Sites , Catalysis , Protein Binding , Protein Engineering/methods , Protein Folding , Protein Structure, Secondary , Proteins/chemistry
4.
Immunity ; 53(4): 840-851.e6, 2020 10 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33053332

ABSTRACT

Activating precursor B cell receptors of HIV-1 broadly neutralizing antibodies requires specifically designed immunogens. Here, we compared the abilities of three such germline-targeting immunogens against the VRC01-class receptors to activate the targeted B cells in transgenic mice expressing the germline VH of the VRC01 antibody but diverse mouse light chains. Immunogen-specific VRC01-like B cells were isolated at different time points after immunization, their VH and VL genes were sequenced, and the corresponding antibodies characterized. VRC01 B cell sub-populations with distinct cross-reactivity properties were activated by each immunogen, and these differences correlated with distinct biophysical and biochemical features of the germline-targeting immunogens. Our study indicates that the design of effective immunogens to activate B cell receptors leading to protective HIV-1 antibodies will require a better understanding of how the biophysical properties of the epitope and its surrounding surface on the germline-targeting immunogen influence its interaction with the available receptor variants in vivo.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal/immunology , Antigens/immunology , B-Lymphocytes/immunology , Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies/immunology , Epitopes, B-Lymphocyte/immunology , HIV Antibodies/immunology , HIV-1/immunology , Receptors, Antigen, B-Cell/immunology , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Antibodies, Neutralizing/immunology , Cell Line , Female , Germ Cells/immunology , HEK293 Cells , HIV Infections/immunology , Humans , Male , Mice, Transgenic
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