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Review
. 2020:147:303-317.
doi: 10.1016/bs.acr.2020.04.007. Epub 2020 Jun 12.

Eph receptors as cancer targets for antibody-based therapy

Affiliations
Review

Eph receptors as cancer targets for antibody-based therapy

Fenny H F Tang et al. Adv Cancer Res. 2020.

Abstract

Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) are integral membrane sensors that govern cell differentiation, proliferation and mobility, and enable rapid communication between cells and their environment. Of the 20 RTK subfamilies currently known, Eph receptors are the largest group. Together with their corresponding ephrin ligands, Eph receptors regulate a diverse array of physiologic processes including axonal guidance, bone remodeling, and immune cell development and trafficking. Deregulation of Eph signaling pathways is linked to cancer and other proliferative diseases and, because RTKs play critical roles in cancer development, the specific targeting of these molecules in malignancies provides a promising treatment approach. Monoclonal antibodies targeting RTKs represent a potentially attractive modality for pharmaceutical development due to their relatively high target specificity and low off-target binding rates. Therefore, new technologies to generate antibodies able to target RTKs in their native in vivo context are likely to facilitate pre-clinical and clinical development of antibody-based therapies. Our group has recently reported a platform discovery methodology termed Selection of Phage-displayed Accessible Recombinant Targeted Antibodies (SPARTA). SPARTA is a novel and robust stepwise method, which combines the attributes of in vitro screenings of a naïve human recombinant antibody library against known tumor targets with those features of in vivo selections based on tumor-homing capabilities of a pre-enriched antibody pool. This unique approach overcomes several rate-limiting challenges to generate human monoclonal antibodies amenable to rapid translation into medical applications.

Keywords: Antibody-based therapy; EphA5; Ephrin; Ephrin receptor; Lung cancer; Monoclonal antibody; Phage display; Receptor tyrosine kinase; Yeast display.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest F.I.S., R.P. and W.A. are inventors on patent applications (methods and compositions of matter) related to this work. R.P and W.A. are founders of PhageNova Bio. R.P. is the Chief Scientific Officer and a paid consultant for PhageNova Bio. F.I.S., R.P. and W.A. are entitled to royalties if licensing or commercialization occurs. These arrangements are managed in accordance with the established institutional conflict of interest policies of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. The other authors declare that they have no competing interests.

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