The Chemistry Behind ADCs
<p>(<b>a</b>) The general structure of an ADC and the key considerations when combining the different components. (<b>b</b>) Schematic representation of the uptake of the ADC and the release of the payload inside a cancer cell.</p> "> Figure 2
<p>Structure of auristatine E (AE), monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE), and commercially approved auristatin-based ADCs: Target Antigen.</p> "> Figure 3
<p>Auristatine terminal amino acid sites: N-terminus, P1 and C-terminus, P5.</p> "> Figure 4
<p>Seattle Genetics’s linker-payload combination including <span class="html-italic">N</span>-dimethyl auristatine and an ammonium linkage.</p> "> Figure 5
<p>Novel drug linkers containing P2 or P4 linkage.</p> "> Figure 6
<p>Methylene alkoxy carbamate (MAC) self-immolative unit for alcohol conjugation.</p> "> Figure 7
<p>Structure of azastatins.</p> "> Figure 8
<p>The structure of maytansine and its conjugable derivatives DM1 and DM4.</p> "> Figure 9
<p>Chemical linkage of DM1 and DM4 through a disulfide or sulfide bond.</p> "> Figure 10
<p>Maytansine-derived drug-linker precursors.</p> "> Figure 11
<p>Structure of Tubulysins and principal points of attachment.</p> "> Figure 12
<p>Examples of Tut attached Tubulysin payloads.</p> "> Figure 13
<p>Examples of phenyl attached tubulysin linkers payloads.</p> "> Figure 14
<p>Examples of Tubulysin payloads attached to linkers through the Mep group.</p> "> Figure 15
<p>Two approaches for introducing handle in Cryptomycin.</p> "> Figure 16
<p>Examples of cryptophycin-derived linker-payload precursors.</p> "> Figure 17
<p>Identification of linker attachment points of the pyrrole based KSP inhibitor and examples of linker-payload conjugates prepared by Bayer.</p> "> Figure 18
<p>Vectorization of imidazole-based KSP inhibitors.</p> "> Figure 19
<p>Attachment of linkers to PBD and IBD payloads.</p> "> Figure 20
<p>PBD dimer/linkers attachment using a common iodobenzene intermediate.</p> "> Figure 21
<p>Activation of duocamycin derivatives and mechanism of action of alkylation of N3 adenine in the minor groove of DNA.</p> "> Figure 22
<p>Structure of the ADCs developed by Synthon (SYD985) and Medarex (BMS9336561).</p> "> Figure 23
<p>Structure of camptothecin, irinotecan and its metabolite SN-38.</p> "> Figure 24
<p>The vectorization points of SN38 and representative linker-payload conjugates.</p> "> Figure 25
<p>Structures of exatecan and its derivatives, DXd(1) and DXd(2), as well as the derived conjugates.</p> "> Figure 26
<p>Elimination of the ring F by Immunogen and design of new related camptothecin L/P.</p> "> Figure 27
<p>Structure of calicheamicins and the design of the two marketed ADCs Mylotarg<sup>®</sup> and Besponsa<sup>®</sup>.</p> "> Figure 28
<p>Mechanism of di radical formation from activated calicheamicin.</p> "> Figure 29
<p>Research of a suitable handle on Uncialamycin.</p> "> Figure 30
<p>Cleavable and non-cleavable linker-payload conjugates.</p> "> Figure 31
<p>Linking of an uncialamycin analog through its phenol group.</p> "> Figure 32
<p>Attachment sites on a typical Bcl-xL inhibitor and some reported payload-linker conjugates.</p> "> Figure 33
<p>Structure of thailanstatin A.</p> "> Figure 34
<p>Unexpected Diels Alder reaction between the diene present in the thailanstatine structure and bioconjugation motif, maleimide.</p> "> Figure 35
<p>Thailanstatine-based payload-linker conjugate bearing amine spacer on the carboxylic acid and an iodo acetamide end group to avoid intramolecular cyclisation.</p> "> Figure 36
<p>Pfizer’s “linker less” thailanstatin ADC.</p> "> Figure 37
<p>(<b>a</b>) Structures of the bicyclic octapeptide toxins α-amanitin and β-amanitin and their amino acid constituent numbering (<b>b</b>) Conjugation sites available in amatoxin for coupling to antibodies through linkers</p> "> Figure 38
<p>Structure of Heidelberg Pharma’s ADC precursor.</p> "> Figure 39
<p>Structure of an OHPAS-linked α-Amanitin payload.</p> "> Figure 40
<p>NAMPT inhibitors as payloads for ADCs.</p> "> Figure 41
<p>Structure of carmaphycin A and B.</p> "> Figure 42
<p>Evolution of carmaphycin B in order to install a suitable amine handle and examples of non-cleavable and cleavable ADCs precursors.</p> "> Figure 43
<p>Structure of trastuzumab emtansine (Kadcyla<sup>®</sup>).</p> "> Figure 44
<p>(<b>a</b>) Schematic structure of disulfide-containing linker and its reaction with thiols, like GSH to release payload. (<b>b</b>) Schematic representation of maytansinoid ADC linker highlighting the role of alpha-methyl groups (R1 to R4). (<b>c</b>) Linker structure of SAR-3419 containing the DM4 payload and the SPDB linker.</p> "> Figure 45
<p>(<b>a</b>) Hydrolysis of hydrazone in acidic conditions (<b>b</b>) Cleavage of acyl hydrazone linker present in IMMU-110, releasing doxorubicin.</p> "> Figure 46
<p>Release mechanism from the dipeptide-PABC-doxorubicin conjugate. Doxorubicin, linked by its primary amine, is not present for clarity.</p> "> Figure 47
<p>Chemical structure of Loncastuximab tesirine.</p> "> Figure 48
<p>Chemical structure of trastuzumab deruxtecan.</p> "> Figure 49
<p>Schematic structure and postulated release mechanism of phosphate (<span class="html-italic">n</span> = 1) and pyrophosphate (<span class="html-italic">n</span> = 2) linkers. Conjugation type to antibody and payload (budesonide) not represented for clarity. Budesonide is linked by its primary alcohol.</p> "> Figure 50
<p>Chemical structure and release mechanism of pyrophosphate diester linkers.</p> "> Figure 51
<p>(<b>a</b>) Chemical structure of β-glucuronic linker and corresponding release mechanism. Drugs contains primary (doxorubicin) or secondary amine (MMAE, MMAF) (<b>b</b>) Chemical structure and release mechanism of DMED-containing β-Glucuronidase cleavable linker. Drug structures are omitted for clarity.</p> "> Figure 52
<p>Chemical structure of β-galactosidase linker and mechanism of release.</p> "> Figure 53
<p>Chemical structure of sulfatase-cleaved linker and the corresponding release mechanism. Both drug structure and antibody omitted for clarity (rebridging conjugation).</p> "> Figure 54
<p>Sulfonyl acrylate reagent reacting with lysine residues of native mAb.</p> "> Figure 55
<p>Linchpin directed conjugation on histidine residues performed by multitasking group reagent.</p> "> Figure 56
<p>Hypothetic mechanism of linchpin technology for site-specific conjugation on lysine residues based on F<sub>k</sub><sup>1</sup>-spacer-F<sub>k</sub><sup>2</sup> reagent.</p> "> Figure 57
<p>Site-specific conjugation approach on histidine residues by cationic metal-organic Pt<sup>II</sup>-based linker: (<b>a</b>) initial approach generating chlorido semi-final complex. (<b>b</b>) Improved approach through iodido semi-final complex.</p> "> Figure 58
<p>Rebridging conjugation strategy for modification of native antibodies using rebridging reagents.</p> "> Figure 59
<p>(<b>a</b>) Fucose modification by oxidation with periodate or by metabolic engineering of thiolated analogue. (<b>b</b>) Enzymatic addition of terminal sialic acids followed by periodate oxidation or incorporation of azido modified sialic acid. (<b>c</b>) Incorporation of azido- or keto- functionalized galactose. (<b>d</b>) Endoglycosidase homogenizing the glycan structure and incorporation of an azide anchor enabling copper-free cycloaddition.</p> "> Figure 60
<p>(<b>a</b>) Cysteine residue in pentapeptide Cys-X-Pro-X-Arg oxidized to formylglycine by FGE generating bioothogonal handle. (<b>b</b>) Microbial transglutaminase (MTGase) strategy on glutamine at position 295 and improved approach by incorporation of additional mutation N297Q. (<b>c</b>) Sortase-mediated conjugation exploiting glycine-functionalised payloads. (<b>d</b>) Tyrosine oxidation by mushroom tyrosinase generating biorthogonal handle for strain-promoted cycloaddition. For clarity, the reaction (<b>a</b>) and (<b>c</b>) is only depicted in one heavy chain.</p> ">
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. ADC Payloads and Their Attachment to the Linker
2.1. Microtubule-Disrupting Drugs
2.1.1. Auristatins
2.1.2. Maytansinoid Derivatives (DM2, DM4)
2.1.3. Tubulysins
2.1.4. Cryptomycins
2.1.5. Antimitotic EG5 Inhibitors
2.2. DNA Damaging Drugs
2.2.1. Pyrrolobenzodiazepines and Indolinobenzodiazepine
2.2.2. Duocarmycins
2.2.3. Camptothecin
2.2.4. Calicheamicin
2.3. Innovative Drugs
2.3.1. Apoptosis Inducers (Bcl-xL Inhibitors)
2.3.2. Thailanstatin and Analogues
2.3.3. Amatoxins
2.3.4. Inhibition of the Nicotinamide Phosphoribosyltransferase (NAMPT)
2.3.5. Carmaphycins
3. Linker Types
3.1. Non-Cleavable Linkers
3.2. Cleavable Linkers
3.2.1. Non-Enzymatic Linkers
3.2.2. Enzymatic Cleavage
Cathepsin-B
Phosphatase and Pyrophosphatase
β-Glucuronidases
β-Galactosidase
Sulfatase
4. Bioconjugation
4.1. Chemistry Based Site-Specific Modification of Native Antibodies
4.1.1. Conjugation to Endogenous Amino Acids
4.1.2. Disulphide Rebridging Strategies
4.1.3. Conjugation to Glycan
4.2. Site-Specific Bioconjugation of Engineered Antibodies
4.2.1. Enzymatic Approaches
4.2.2. Cysteine Engineering: Thiomab Technology
4.2.3. Conjugation to Engineered Unnatural Amino Acids/SelenomAb
5. Overview of the ADCs in Late-Stage Clinical Development
6. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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ADC | Target | Payload | Linker | Indication |
---|---|---|---|---|
gemtuzumab ozogamicin (Mylotarg, 1) | CD33 | Calicheamicin | Cleavable, Hydrazone | Acute myeloid leukemia |
brentuximab vedotin (Adcetris, 2) | CD30 | MMAE 1 | Cleavable, Peptide | Hodgkin leukemia; Systemic anaplastic large-cell lymphoma |
trastuzumab emtansine (Kadcyla, 3) | HER2 | DM1 | Non-cleavable, Thioether | Breast cancer |
inotuzumab ozogamicin (Besponsa, 4) | CD22 | Calicheamicin | Cleavable, Hydrazone | B-cell Acute lymphocytic leukemia |
polatuzumab vedotin (Polivy, 5) | CD79b | MMAE | Cleavable, Peptide | Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma |
enfortumab vedotin (Padcev, 6) | Nectin-4 | MMAE | Cleavable, Peptide | Urothelial cancer |
trastuzumab deruxtecan (Enhertu, 7) | HER2 | deruxtecan | Cleavable, Peptide | Breast cancer |
sacituzumab govitecan (TRODELVY, 8) | TROP-2 | SN-38 | Cleavable, Peptide | Breast cancer |
belantamab mafodotin (BLENREP, 9) | BCMA | MMAF | Non-cleavable, Thioether? | Multiple myeloma |
moxetumomab pasudotox (Lumoxiti, 10) | CD22 | PE38 | Fusion protein | Hairy cell leukemia |
tagraxofusp (Elzonris, 11) | IL-3 | Diphteria toxin | Fusion protein | Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm |
ibritumomab tiuxetan (ZEVALIN, 12) | CD20 | 90-yttrium | tiuxetan | Multiple hematological disorders |
R1 | R2 | R3 | R4 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
AstraZeneca | Et | Ac | (CH2)4NH2 | |
Bristol-Myers Squibb | nPr | Me | (CH2)4NH2CONH2 | |
Pfizer | Me | CONHEt | H |
ADC Name | Target | Payload | Linker | Phase |
---|---|---|---|---|
BAT8001 | HER-2 | Maytansinoid | non-cleavable | 3 |
disitamab vedotin | HER-2 | MMAE | Val-Cit-PABA | 3 |
DS-1062a | TROP-2 | DXd | Gly-Gly-Phe-Gly | 3 |
loncastuximab Tesirine | CD19 | SG3199 | Val-Ala-PABA | 3 |
mirvetuximab soravtansine | FOLR-α | DM4 | sulfo-SPDB 1 | 3 |
ZRC-3256 2 | HER-2 | DM1 | SMCC 3 | 3 |
ANG1005 4 | LRP1 | Paclitaxel | covalent | 3 |
SAR408701 | CEACAM5 | DM4 | SPDB 5 | 3 |
TAA013 | HER-2 | DM1 | SMCC 3 | 3 |
trastuzumab duocarmazine | HER-2 | seco-DUBA | Val-Cit-PABA | 3 |
tisotumab vedotin | TF | MMAE | Val-Cit-PABA | 3 |
ARX788 | HER-2 | Amberstatin269 | oxime | 2/3 |
ABBV-3373 | TNF-α | Steroid | Ala-Ala-PABA | 2 |
anetumab ravtansine | MSLN | DM4 | SPDB 5 | 2 |
BA3011 | Axl | MMAE | cleavable | 2 |
camidanlumab Tesirine | CD25 | SG3199 | Val-Ala-PABA | 2 |
labetuzumab Govitecan | CEACAM5 | SN-38 | CL2A 6 | 2 |
ladiratuzumab vedotin | LIV-1 | MMAE | Val-Cit | 2 |
MRG003 | EGFR | MMAE | Val-Cit-PABA | 2 |
naratuximab emtansine | CD37 | DM1 | SMCC 3 | 2 |
patritumab Deruxtecan | HER-3 | DXd | Gly-Gly-Phe-Gly | 2 |
praluzatamab ravtansine | CD166 | DM4 | SPDB 5 | 2 |
telisotuzumab vedotin | c-MET | MMAE | Val-Cit-PABA | 2 |
VLS-101 | ROR1 | MMAE | Val-Cit-PABA | 2 |
ADC Name | Target | Payload | Linker | Phase |
---|---|---|---|---|
cintredekin besudotox 1 | IL-13R | Pseudomonas exotoxin A | fusion | 3 |
E7777 2 | IL-2R | Diptheria Toxin A,B | fusion | 3 |
oportuzumab monatox 3 | EpCAM | Pseudomonas exotoxin A | fusion | 3 |
T-Guard 4 | CD7 and CD3 | Ricin A | undisclosed | 3 |
naptumomab estafenatox 5 | 5T4 | Staphylococcal Enterotoxin E | fusion | 2/3 |
Proxinium 6 | EpCAM | Pseudomonas exotoxin A | fusion | 2/3 |
EP-100 7 | LHRH | CLIP-71 | fusion | 2 |
L-DOS47 8 | CEACAM6 | Urease | SIAB | 2 |
LMB-2 9 | CD25 | Pseudomonas exotoxin | fusion | 2 |
MDNA55 10 | IL-4R | Pseudomonas exotoxin A | fusion | 2 |
MT-3724 11 | CD20 | Shiga-like toxin A | fusion | 2 |
Resimmune 12 | CD3 | Diphtheria toxin | fusion | 2 |
RO6927005 13 | MSLN | Pseudomonas exotoxin A | fusion | 2 |
ADC Name | Target | Payload | Linker | Phase |
---|---|---|---|---|
TLX250-CDx | carbonic anhydrase IX | 89-Zr | DOFA 1 | 3 |
IMMU-107 | MUC-1 | 90-Y | DOTA 2 | 3 |
Iomab-B | CD45 | 131-Iodine | direct iodination | 3 |
131I-8H9 | B7-H3 | 131-Iodine | direct iodination | 2/3 |
111In-J591 | PSMA | 111-In | DOTA 2 | 2 |
177Lu-DOTA-girentuximab | carbonic anhydrase IX | 177-Lu | DOTA 2 | 2 |
177Lu-DOTA-Rosopatamab | FOLH1 | 177-Lu | DOTA 2 | 2 |
Betalutin | CD37 | 177-Lu | p-SCN-Bn-DOTA | 2 |
CLR 131 3 | Lipid raft | 131-I | direct iodination | 2 |
64Cu-DOTA-trastuzumab | HER-2 | 64-Cu | DOTA 2 | 2 |
111 In-ibritumomab tiuxetan | CD20 | 111-In | modified-DTPA | 2 |
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Kostova, V.; Désos, P.; Starck, J.-B.; Kotschy, A. The Chemistry Behind ADCs. Pharmaceuticals 2021, 14, 442. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph14050442
Kostova V, Désos P, Starck J-B, Kotschy A. The Chemistry Behind ADCs. Pharmaceuticals. 2021; 14(5):442. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph14050442
Chicago/Turabian StyleKostova, Vesela, Patrice Désos, Jérôme-Benoît Starck, and Andras Kotschy. 2021. "The Chemistry Behind ADCs" Pharmaceuticals 14, no. 5: 442. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph14050442