Mol. Cells 2012; 34(6): 523-529
Published online November 22, 2012
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10059-012-0194-z
© The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology
Correspondence to : *Correspondence: ka10.kim@samsung.com (KAK); kwangho.cheong@samsung.com (KHC)
c-Met, the high affinity receptor for hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), is one of the most frequently activated tyrosine kinases in many human cancers and a target for cancer therapy. However, inhibitory targeting of c-Met with antibodies has proven difficult, because most antibodies have intrinsic agonist activity. Therefore, the strategy for reducing the agonism is critical for successful development of cancer therapies based on anti-c-Met antibodies. Here we developed a mechanism-based assay method for rapid screening of anti-c-Met antibodies, involving the determination of Akt phosphorylation and c-Met degradation for agonism and efficacy, respectively. Using the method, we identified an antibody, F46, that binds to human c-Met with high affinity (Kd = 2.56 nM) and specificity, and induces the degradation of c-Met in multiple cancer cells (including MKN45, a gastric cancer cell line) with minimal activation of c-Met signaling. F46 induced c-Met internalization in both HGF-dependent and HGF-independent cells, suggesting that the degradation of c-Met results from antibody-mediated receptor internalization. Furthermore, F46 competed with HGF for binding to c-Met, resulting in the inhibition of both HGF-mediated invasion and angiogenesis. Consistently, F46 inhibited the proliferation of MKN45 cells, in which c-Met is stitutively activated in an HGF-independent manner. Xenograft analysis revealed that F46 markedly inhibits the growth of ubcutaneously implanted gastric and lung tumors. These results indicate that F46, identified by a novel mechanism-based assay, induces c-Met degradation with minimal agonism, implicating a potential role of F46 in therapy of human cancers.
Keywords Akt, anti-c-Met antibody, cancer therapy, c-Met, HGF
Mol. Cells 2012; 34(6): 523-529
Published online December 31, 2012 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10059-012-0194-z
Copyright © The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology.
Young Mi Oh, Yun-Jeong Song, Saet Byoul Lee, Yunju Jeong, Bogyou Kim, Geun Woong Kim, Kyung Eun Kim, Ji Min Lee, Mi-Young Cho, Jaehyun Choi, Do-Hyun Nam1, Paul H Song, Kwang Ho Cheong*, and Kyung-Ah Kim*
Therapeutic Antibody Group, Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology, Yongin 446-712, Korea, 1Department of Neurosurgery, Samsung Biomedical Research Institute, Samsung Medical Center, Seoul 135-170, Korea
Correspondence to:*Correspondence: ka10.kim@samsung.com (KAK); kwangho.cheong@samsung.com (KHC)
c-Met, the high affinity receptor for hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), is one of the most frequently activated tyrosine kinases in many human cancers and a target for cancer therapy. However, inhibitory targeting of c-Met with antibodies has proven difficult, because most antibodies have intrinsic agonist activity. Therefore, the strategy for reducing the agonism is critical for successful development of cancer therapies based on anti-c-Met antibodies. Here we developed a mechanism-based assay method for rapid screening of anti-c-Met antibodies, involving the determination of Akt phosphorylation and c-Met degradation for agonism and efficacy, respectively. Using the method, we identified an antibody, F46, that binds to human c-Met with high affinity (Kd = 2.56 nM) and specificity, and induces the degradation of c-Met in multiple cancer cells (including MKN45, a gastric cancer cell line) with minimal activation of c-Met signaling. F46 induced c-Met internalization in both HGF-dependent and HGF-independent cells, suggesting that the degradation of c-Met results from antibody-mediated receptor internalization. Furthermore, F46 competed with HGF for binding to c-Met, resulting in the inhibition of both HGF-mediated invasion and angiogenesis. Consistently, F46 inhibited the proliferation of MKN45 cells, in which c-Met is stitutively activated in an HGF-independent manner. Xenograft analysis revealed that F46 markedly inhibits the growth of ubcutaneously implanted gastric and lung tumors. These results indicate that F46, identified by a novel mechanism-based assay, induces c-Met degradation with minimal agonism, implicating a potential role of F46 in therapy of human cancers.
Keywords: Akt, anti-c-Met antibody, cancer therapy, c-Met, HGF
Takafumi Suzuki, Jun Takahashi, and Masayuki Yamamoto
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