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Single Dose of CD45-ADC Resets the Immune System in Mice with MS – Multiple Sclerosis News Today

November 18th, 2019 4:48 am

A single dose of CD45-ADC, an investigational targeted therapy being developed to treat different types of autoimmune diseases, is enough to reset the normal function of the bodys immune system in a mouse model of multiple sclerosis (MS), and to delay onset of the disease.

Those findings were presented earlier this week in the poster Administration of a CD45 Antibody Drug Conjugate as a Novel, Targeted Approach to Achieve Immune System Reset: A Single Dose of CD45-targeted ADC Safely Conditions for Autologous Transplant and Ameliorates Disease in Multiple Models of Autoimmune Disease (abstract #120), at the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) Annual Meeting in Atlanta, Georgia.

CD45-ADC is an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) being developed by Magenta Therapeutics in collaboration with Heidelberg Pharma. The medication works by delivering amanitin a toxic compound that belongs to a group of natural poisons produced by some species of mushrooms to overactive immune cells containing the CD45 protein on their surface. That destroys them and restores the normal function of the immune system. (Of note, the CD45 protein is typically found on immune cells and stem cells.)

For that reason, CD45-ADC is currently being explored as a new form of targeted therapy for several autoimmune diseases, including MS.

New findings presented at the ACR meeting showed that in mice withexperimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis(EAE, a mouse model of MS), a single dose of CD45-ADC was sufficient to eliminate overactive immune cells, and to restore the normal function of the animals immune systems.

Moreover, investigators reported that treatment with CD45-ADC, followed by a stem cell transplant to repopulate the animals bodies with healthy immune cells, delayed the disease onset and halted the progression of disease activity in EAE mice.

According to the research team, immune reset through stem cell transplant in which disease-causing cells are replaced by healthy cells to rebuild the immune system has been shown to induce durable remission in patients with autoimmune diseases, including MS.

Given the encouraging results in animal models, the team developed an anti-human CD45-ADC that cross-reacts with non-human primates (NHP). Substantial depletion of both lymphocytes [white blood cells] and hematopoietic [blood] stem cells (HSCs) was observed at well-tolerated doses, the researchers wrote.

CD45-ADC also is being tested in mice models of systemic sclerosis (scleroderma) and inflammatory arthritis, two other autoimmune diseases, and it has shown promising results.

Overall, the results suggest that targeted immune depletion with a single treatment of CD45-ADC may be sufficient for auto-HSCT [hematopoietic stem cell transplant], and allow re-establishment of immune tolerance, the team concluded.

Millions of patients worldwide live with debilitating autoimmune diseases, with no options for curative therapy. Magenta is developing targeted medicines, such as CD45-ADC, to enable more patients with autoimmune diseases to undergo a one-time, curative immune reset, John Davis, MD, MPH, chief medical officer of Magenta, said in a press release:

The data presented at ACR provide important proof of concept for our immune reset platform across a broad range of diseases, including multiple sclerosis and systemic sclerosis, Davis said. We expect to declare a development candidate and progress this medicine into IND [investigational new drug]-enabling studies next year as we work to allow more patients to live their lives without autoimmune disease.

Magenta also announced it has exercised its right to become the exclusive holder of global development and marketing rights of any ADC targeting CD45 based on Heidelberg Pharmas proprietary amanitin toxin-linker platform technology.

Under the terms of the collaboration agreement established between Magenta and Heidelberg Pharma in 2018, Magenta is eligible to use Heidelberg Pharmas proprietary amanitin technology to generate up to four different ADC compounds based on an exclusive target of choice. In turn, Heidelberg Pharma is eligible to receive milestone payments.

Joana is currently completing her PhD in Biomedicine and Clinical Research at Universidade de Lisboa. She also holds a BSc in Biology and an MSc in Evolutionary and Developmental Biology from Universidade de Lisboa. Her work has been focused on the impact of non-canonical Wnt signaling in the collective behavior of endothelial cells cells that make up the lining of blood vessels found in the umbilical cord of newborns.

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Patrcia holds her PhD in Medical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases from the Leiden University Medical Center in Leiden, The Netherlands. She has studied Applied Biology at Universidade do Minho and was a postdoctoral research fellow at Instituto de Medicina Molecular in Lisbon, Portugal. Her work has been focused on molecular genetic traits of infectious agents such as viruses and parasites.

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Single Dose of CD45-ADC Resets the Immune System in Mice with MS - Multiple Sclerosis News Today

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