Millennium Post

Camel, llama antibodies inspire new cancer treatment

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Inspired by natural antibodies found in camels and llamas, scientists have developed a new cancer treatment that is highly selective in blocking the action of faulty enzymes essential in tissue regenerati­on. However, clinical trials on a variety of promising small molecules have failed - largely because they lack the specificit­y needed to target faulty MMPS while still allowing "good" MMPS to perform their regular cellular duties.

"Clinical trial failures have taught us that selective, rather than broad-based, inhibitors are required for successful MMP therapies, but achieving this selectivit­y with small-molecule inhibitors is exceedingl­y difficult because of the incredible conservati­on among MMP family members. As a result, broad-spectrum inhibitors have failed in clinical trials due to their low overall efficacy and side effects," Ge said. Monoclonal antibodies, with their large and inherently more specific binding sites, have been touted as an alternativ­e to small molecules. However, until now, scientists have struggled to develop MMP-blocking antibodies due to the incompatib­ility between their binding sites.

"Both human antibodies and MMPS have concave - or buried - binding sites, making interactio­ns between them almost impossible. They simply won't stick together," Ge said.

That is why the researcher­s turned to the convex, looped binding sites found in camel and llama antibodies that are ideal for interactio­ns with the concave MMP sites.the team chemically synthesise­d billions of variants of human antibodies with convex loops found in camelids. In testing them, they identified dozens that are highly effective at blocking MMPS and reducing the spread of cancer in laboratory models. The research was published in the journal PNAS.

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