CA2055168A1 - Tnf-muteins - Google Patents

Tnf-muteins

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Publication number
CA2055168A1
CA2055168A1 CA002055168A CA2055168A CA2055168A1 CA 2055168 A1 CA2055168 A1 CA 2055168A1 CA 002055168 A CA002055168 A CA 002055168A CA 2055168 A CA2055168 A CA 2055168A CA 2055168 A1 CA2055168 A1 CA 2055168A1
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
mutein
pharmaceutically acceptable
acceptable salt
tnf
amino acid
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
CA002055168A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Walter Fiers
Jan Tavernier
Xaveer Van Ostade
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
F Hoffmann La Roche AG
Original Assignee
Walter Fiers
Jan Tavernier
Xaveer Van Ostade
Hoffmann-La Roche (F.) Ag
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Walter Fiers, Jan Tavernier, Xaveer Van Ostade, Hoffmann-La Roche (F.) Ag filed Critical Walter Fiers
Publication of CA2055168A1 publication Critical patent/CA2055168A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K14/00Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof
    • C07K14/435Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans
    • C07K14/52Cytokines; Lymphokines; Interferons
    • C07K14/525Tumour necrosis factor [TNF]
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P35/00Antineoplastic agents
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K38/00Medicinal preparations containing peptides

Abstract

Abstract It is an object of the present invention to provide a human Tumor Necrosis Factor mutein or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof characterized in that the TNF sequence is changed by deletion, insertion and/or substitution of one or more amino acids so that the mutein shows a significant difference between its binding affinity to the human p75-Tumor-Necrosis-Factor-Receptor and to the human p55-Tumor-Necrosis-Factor-Receptor, DNA sequences coding for such muteins, vectors comprising such DNA sequences, host cells trans-formed with such vectors and a process for the production of such muteins employing such transformed host cells and pharmaceutical compositions containing such muteins and their use for the treatment of illnesses, e.g. cancer.

Description

2 ~

Tumor Necrosis Factor, or more specifically Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha, is a cytokine, primarily produced by stimulated macrophages, that exhibits not only a striking cytotoxicity against various tumour cells LCarswell et al., Procd. Nat. Acad. Sci., U.S.A. 72, 5 3666-3670, (1975) 1 but also p~ays a multiple role as a mediator of inflammation and the immune response [for an overview see Beutler and Cerami, Ann. Rev. Immunol. 7, 625-655 (1989); Bonavista and Granger (eds.) "Tumor Necrosis Factor: Structure, Mechanism of Action, Role in Disease and Therapy, Karger, Basel (1990)1. The 0 primary structure of human Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha (hTNF-a) has been deduced from the nucleotide sequence of a cDNA which has been cloned and expressed in E. coli [Pennica et al., Nature 312, 724-729 (1984); Marmenout et al., Europ. J. Biochem. 152, 515 -522 (1985); Wang et al., Science 228, 149-154 (1985); Shirai et al., Nature 313, 803-806 (1985)1. A striking homology in amino acid sequence (30%) was found between hTNF-a and human Lymphotoxin, often referred to as human Tumor Necrosis Factor-beta (hTNF-~ ), a cytokine produced by a subset of Iymphocytes [Gray et al., Nature 312, 721-724 (1984); Fiers et al., Cold Spring Harbour Symp. 51, 587-595 aD (1986)] .

hTNF-a with modified amino acid sequences, so called TNF-a-muteins, have also been described in the art Lfor example see Yamagishi et al., Protein Engineering 3, 713-719, (1990) or by Fiers in 25 "Tumor Necrosis Factors: Structure, Function and Mechanism of Action", Aggarwal and Vilcek (eds.), Marcel Dekker, Inc., New Yorl;:, in press, or by Fiers et al. in Bonavista and Granger, pp. 77-81 (s.a.)~. In addition TNF-a-muteins have also been the object of several patent applications, e.g. International Patent Applications Publ. Nos.
30 WO 86/02381, WO 86/046û6, WO 88/06625 and European Patent AB/25.9.91 2~ 3 Applications Publ. Nos. 155,549; 158,2~6; 168,214; 251,037 and 340,333, and Deutsche Offenlegungsschrift Nr. 38~3534.

Muteins of Lymphotoxin have also been disclosed in the art, e.g.
5 in l~uropean Patent Applications Publ. Nos. 250,000; 314,094 and 336,3 83.

The biological effects of TNF are mediated via specific receptors, namely a receptor with an apparent molecular weight of 55 kD on 0 sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamid gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (p55-TNF-R) and a receptor with an apparent molecular weight of 75 kD on SDS-PAGE (p75-TNF-R). Both forms of TNF-receptors have been cloned, namely p55-TNF-R by Loetscher et al. [Cell 61, 351 -359, (1990)] and p75-TNF-R by Dembic et al. [Cytokine 2, 53-58, (1990)]
5 (for both receptors see also European Patent Application No.
90116707.2) and it was found more recently that both receptors bind not only TNF-a but also TNF-,~ with high affinity [Schonfeld et al., J.
Biol. Chem. 266, 3863-3~69 (1991)].

Object of the present invention is a mutein or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof on the basis of the amino acid sequence of human Tumor Necrosis Factor which sequence is changed by deletion, insertion and/or substitution of one or more amino acids so that the mutein shows a significant difference between its binding affinity to 25 the human p75-Tumor-Necrosis-Factor-Receptor and the human pS5-Tumor-Necrosis -Factor-Receptor.

A preferred embodiment of the present invention is a mutein as defined above on the basis of the amino acid sequence of TNF-a as 30 disclosed by Pennica et al. [s.a.], namely:

VAL ARG SER SER SER ARG THR PRO SER ASP LYS PRO VAL ALA HIS

VAL VAL ALA ASN PRO GLN ALA GLU GLY GLN LEU GLN TRP LEU ASN

ARG ARG ALA ASN ALA LEU LEU ALA ASN GLY VAL GLU LEU ARG ASP

2 a ~ s ASN GLN LEU VAL VAL PRO SER GL~ GLY LEU TYR LEU ILE TYR SER

GLN VAL LEU PHE LYS GLY GLN GLY CYS PRO SER THR HIS VAL LEU

LEU THR HIS T~R ILE SER ARG ILE A.1A VAL SER TYR GLN THR I.YS

VAL ASN LEU LEU SER ALA ILE LYS SER PRO CYS GLN ARG GLU THR

PRO GLU GLY ALA GLU ALA LYS PRO TRP TYR GLU PRO ILE TYR LEU

GLY GLY VAL P~E GLN LEU GLU LYS GLY ASP ARG LEU SER ALA GLU

ILE ASN ARG PRO ASP TYR LEU ASP PHE ALA GLU SER GLY GLN VAL

TYR PHE GLY ILE ILE ALA LEU

or as disclosed by Marmenout et al. (s.a.) or Wang et al. (s.a.) or Shirai et al. or more specifically as coded for by the nucleotide sequence of the insert of the plasmid pDS56/RBSII,Sphl-TNFa (see Figures 3a and 3b and Example I) coding for mature TNF-a.

A specifically preferred embodiment of the present invention is a mutein as defined above wherein the TNF-a amino acid sequence is changed by substitution of one or more amino acids, preferably one or two by other amino acids, preferably naturally occuring amino acids.

More specifically preferred embodiments of the present invention are muteins as defined above wherein the TNF-a amino acid sequence is substituted at position 29 and/or 32 or position 31 and 32 or position 31 or position 29 and 31 whereby substitutions at position 29 and/or 32 or position 31 and 32 or position 31 are preferred (referring to a TNF-a amino acid sequence with 157 amino acids) by other amino acids, preferably naturally occuring amino acids. Any amino acid, preferably any naturally occuring one, can be used at this position which leads to a TNF-mutein showing a 2~5~8 significant difference between itS binding affinity to the human p75-TNF-R and the human p55-TNF-R, whereby for substitutions at position 29 serine, glycine or tyrosine are preferred whereby serine is especially preferred, e.g. in case of a single position mutein at position 5 29 (Ser29-TNFol). For substitutions at position 31 glutamic acid, e.g.
Glu3l-TNF(x, or asparagine are preferred. For substitutions at position 32 tyrosine, e.g. Tyr32-TNFa or tryptophan, e.g. Trp32-TNF~ are preferred, whereby the latter one is specifically preferred. Especially preferred substitutions in case of a double position mutein at lo positions 29 and 32 are Ser29-Trp32-TNFo~ and at position 31 and 32 are Asn31 -Thr32-TNFa. It is understood that the muteins of the present invention can also be prepared by methods known in the art of chemical peptide and protein synthesis, e.g. by partial or total liquid or solid phase synthesis as described e.g. by Gross and Meyenhofer in "The Peptides" Vols. I-g, Academic Press, Inc., Harcourt Brace ~ovanovich, Publs., San Diego (1979-1987) or by Fields and Nobel, Int. J. Pept. Prot. Res. 35, 161-214 (1990).

Analogs obtained by deletion, substitution and/or addition of one a~ or several amino acids from or to the muteins as defined in the previous paragraph whereby position 29 and/or 32 or position 31 or position 31 and 32 in the mutein is/are not changed and which analogs still show a significant difference between its binding affinity to the human p75-TNF-R and the human p55-TNF-R are also an object 25 of the present invention. With respect to such substitution analogs amino acid substitutions in proteins which do not generally alter the activity are known in the state of the art and are described, for example, by H. Neurath and R.L. Hill in "The Proteins" (Academic Press, New York, 1979, see especially Figure 6, page 14). The most 30 commonly occurring exchanges are: Ala/Ser, Val/lle, Asp/Glu, Thr/Ser, Ala/Gly, Ala/Thr, Ser/Asn, Ala/Val, Ser/Gly, Tyr/Phe, Ala/Pro, Lys/Arg, Asp/Asn, Leu/Ile, Leu/Val, Ala/Glu, Asp/Gly as well as these in reverse (the three letter ab~reviations are used for amino acids and are standard and known in the art).

- s -Substitution ~ddition and/or deletion analogs can be produced by methods known in the art and descTibed e.g. in Sambrook et al.
[Molecular Cloning, A Laboratory Manual, 2nd ed., Cold Spring l~arbour Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbour Laboratory Press, USA
5 (1989)l or in the following paragraphs. Whether such an analog still shows the significant difference between its binding affinity to the p75-TNF-R and the pS5-TNF-~ can be determined as described in the following and e.g. more specifically in Examples lIa) and b) or ~xample VIII. Furthermore salts of such muteins and analogs are also 0 an object of the present invention. Such salts can be produced by methods known in the art.

It is furthermore an object of the present invention to provide a mutein as described above for the treatment of illnesses, e.g. cancer.

It is well known in the art that on the basis of its biological activities (s.a.) TNF-a can be a valuable compound for the treatment of various disorders. For example TNF-a, alone or in combination with interferon, can be an effective antitumor agent [Brouckaert et al., Int.
~o J. Cancer 38, 763-76~ (1986)1. However, its systemic toxicity is a major limitation to its wider therapeutic use [Taguchi T. and Sohmura Y., Biotherapy 3, 177 - 186 (1991)] .

The discovery of two TNF-receptors witlh (putatively) distinct 25 functional roles should allow to dissect in a given disease state the benefical and unwanted biological responses to TNF. There is circumstantial evidence supporting the feasibility of this approach. It has been shown for example [Brouckaert et al., Agents and Actions 26, 196-197 (1989); Everaerdt, B. et al., Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm.
30 163, 378-385 (1989)] that in mice murine TNF-a (mTNF-a) is up to 50-fold more toxic than human TNF-a (hTNF-a~, although whesl tested in cell culture, both are equally active on sensitive cell lines.

It is believed that the strategy of dissecting beneficial and 35 unwanted TNFa activities by using compounds specifically ~inding to one or the other TNF-receptor, such as the TNF-muteins of the present 2~1g~

invention, can be used in general in other disease states where TNF
plays a role.

DNA-sequences comprising a DNA-sequence coding for TNF-5 muteins as hereinbefore described are also an object of the presentinvention. Such DNA-sequences can be constructed starting from genomic- or cDNA-sequences coding for hTNF as disclosed in the art [s.a.] using known methods of in vitro mutagenesis [see e.g. Sambrook et al., 1989]. Such mutagenesis can be carried out ad-random in order 0 to obtain a large number of mutants which can than be tested for their desired properties in appropriate assay systems or, in order to mutate defined positions in a given DNA-sequence, by so called site directed mutagenesis [see e.g. Sambrook et al., 1989, 15.51-15.113] OT
by mutagenesis using the polymerase chain reaction [see e.g. White et 5 al., Trends in Genetics 5, 185-189 (1989~,].

One chemical mutagen which is often used for mutagenesis ad-random is sodium bisulfite which converts a cytosin residue into an uracil residue and hence leads to a transition of "C" to "T" (standard 20 abbreviations for nucleotides) [for the method see e.g. Shortle and Nathans, Procd. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 75, 2170-2174 (1978) or Pine and Huang, Meth. Enzym. 154, 415-430 (1987)]. This mutagen acts solely on single stranded DNA whereas the expression of the mutated target DNA sequence is achieved with a double stranded plasrnid 25 vector. One possibility to avoid the necessity of recloning in mutagenesis and expression vectors is the use of so called "phasmids".
These are vectors which, in addition to a plasmid origin of replication, carry also an origin of replication derived from a filamentous phage.
Examples of such phasmids are the pMa- and pMc-phasmids as 30 descnbed by Stanssen et al. [Nucleic Acids Res. 17, 4441-4454, (1989)]. Using this expression system one can construct so called "gap-duplex"-structures [see also Kramer et al., Nucl. Acids. Res. 12, 9441-9456 ~1984)] where only the l~NF-coding sequence (s.a.) is in a single stranded configuration and therefore accessible for the specific 35 chemical mutagen. "gap-duplexes" to be used in ad-random mutagenesis can be constructed as described for site-specific 2~3~316 mutagenesis by Stanssen et al. Is a l with the exception that the (-)strand contains the same active antibiotic resistance gene as the (+)strand. By making use of different restriction sites in the DNA-sequence encoding hTNFc~, variation of the width of the gap is possible. Examples of such restriction sites are the Clal-Sall sites (470 nucleotides), BstXI-BstXI sites (237 nucleotides) or Styl-Styl sites (68 nucleotides). Such gap-duplex-constructs can then be treated with increasiIlg concentrations (up to 4~1) of bisulfite, followed by several dialysis steps, as described by Shortle and Nathans (s.a.). A
0 suitable procaryotic host cell can then be transformed by such phasmid constructs according to methods known in the art and described e.g. by Sambrook et al. (s.a.). A suitable procaryotic host cell means in this context a host cell deficient in a specific repair function so that an uracil residue is maintained in the DNA during replication and which host cell is capable of expressing the corresponding mutated TNF. Such specific host strains are known~ in the art, for example for E~. coli strains, e.g. E. coli BW 313 [Kunkel, T.A., Procd. Natl.
Acad. Sci. USA 82, 488-492 (19~5)]. The resulting clones can then be screened for those expressing a desired TNF-mutein by appropriate aD assay systems. For example each colony can be inoculated in a microtiterplate in a suitable medium containing the relevant antibiotic. The cells may be Iysed by addition of Iysozyme, followed by sequential freeze-thaw cycles. After precipitation of nucleic acids and centrifugation, the supernatant of each colony can directly be 25 used in appropriate assays as described, e.g., in Example lIa and IIb or Example VIII measuring binding to the p75-TNF-R and the p55-TNF-R on the surface of living cells or in purified form.

If desired, the specific sites of mutation can be determined, for 30 example by restriction fragment analysis [see e.g. Sambrook et al.
(s.a.)]. By determination of the DNA-sequence of such fragments the exact position of the mutation can be determined and if such mutation leads to an amino acid replacement the new amino acid can be derived from the determined DNA-sequence. DNA-sequencing can be performed according to methods known in the art, e.g. by using T7 2 ~ 6 8 polymerase on supercoiled DNA with a commercially available sequencing kit (Pharmacia, Uppsala, Sweden).

As already mentioned above, another possibility of mutating a 5 given DNA-sequence is by "site directed mutagenesis". A widely used strategy for such kind of mutagenesis as originally outlined by Hutchinson and Edgell lJ Virol. 8, 181 (1971)] involves the annealing of a synthetic oligonucleotide carrying the desired nucleotide substitution to a target region of a single stranded DNA-sequence 0 wherein the mutation should be introduced [for review see Smith, Annual. Rev . Genet. 19 , 423 ( 1 985) and for improved methods see references 2-6 in Stanssen et al. (1989)].

One such preferred method is the one of Stanssen et al. ( 1989) using "gapped duplex DNA" as originally described by Kramer et al.
( 1984) [see above and Kramer and Fritz, Methods in Enzymology, ( 1987), Academic Press, Inc., USA] but using antibiotic resistance genes instead of M13 functional genes for selection of the mutation containing strand in addition with the phasmid-technology as also .~o described by Stanssen et al. (1989) [s.a.]. An advantage of this method lies also in the capability of performing successive cycles of mutagenesis Witl1out the need to transfer the gene to a new mutagenesis vector: second round mutagenesis differs only in the selection to another antibiotic marker (Stranssen et al., s.a.). As a 25 control site-specific back mutagenesis of the mutant to the wild-type TNF can be used. In addition, the use of an oligonucleotide, creating or destroying a restriction site in the TNF gene, allows to control the mutant not only by hybridization to the oligonucleotide used for site directed mutagenesis but also by the presence or absence of the 30 restriction site. In order to create a set of TNF-muteins wherein at a defined position of their amino acid sequence the wild-type amino acid is replaced by any naturally occurring amino acid a set of oligonucleotides is used with all possible codons at the defined position .

2~3~8 g As already mentioned above, another possibility of mutating a given DNA-sequence is the mutagenesis by using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The principles of !this method are outlined e.g. by White et al. ( 1989), whereas improved methods are described e.g. in 5 Innis et al. ~PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications, Academic Press, Inc. ( 1990)] .
PCR is an 1n vitro method for producing large amounts of a specific DNA fragment of defined len~th and sequence from small amounts of a template DNA. Thereby, PCR is based on the enzymatic amplification of lo the DNA fragment which is flanked by two oligonucleotide primers that hybridize to opposite strands of the target sequence. The primers are oriented with their 3' ends pointing towards each other. Repeated cycles of heat denaturation of the template, annealing of the primers to their complementary sequences and extension of the annealed primers with a 5 DNA polymerase result in the amplification of the segment defined by the S' ends of the PCR primers. Since the extension product of each primer can serve as a template for the other, each cycle essentially doubles the amount of the DNA fragment produced in the previous cycle.
Since the primers are physically incorporated into the amplified product ao and mismatches between the S' end of the primer and the template do not significantly affect the efficiency of the amplification, it is possible to alter the amplified sequence thereby introducing the desired mutation into the amplified DNA. By utilizing the thermostable Taq DNA
polymerase isolated from the thermophilic bacteria Thermus aquaticus, 25 it has been possible to avoid denaturation of the polymerase which necessitated the addition of enzyme after each heat denaturation step.
This development has led to the automation of PCR by a variety of simple temperature-cycling devices. In addition, the specificity of the amplification reaction is increased by aliowing the use of higher 30 temperatures for primer annealing and extension. The increased specificity improves the overall yield of amplified products by minimizing the competition by non-target fragments for enzyme and pri mers .

2 ~ 6 8 Design and synthesis of oligonucleotides can be effected as known in the art and described e.g. in Sambrook et al. (1989) or in one of the references cited above with respect to site directed mutagenesis.

As soon as a DNA-sequence coding for a TNF-mutein of the present invention has been created, expression can be effected by the phasmid technology as described above or by use of any suitable pro-or eukaryotic expression system well known in the art lsee e.g.
Sambrook et al., s.a. l .

Expression is effected pre~erably in prokaryotic cells, e.g., in E.
coli, Bacillus subtilis and so on, whereby E. coli, speci-fically E. coli Kl2 strains e.g. M15 [described as DZ 291 by Villarejo et al. in J. Bacteriol.
120, 466-474 (1974)l, HB 101 [ATCC No. 33694], WK6 (Stranssens et al. s.a.) or E. coli SG13009 [Gottesman et al., J. Bacteriol. ]48, 265-273 (1g81)] are preferred. Expression of the muteins of the present invention can also be effected in lower or higher eukaryotic cells, like for example yeast cells (like Saccharomyces, Pichia etc.), filamentous fungi (like Aspergillus etc.) or cell lines (like chinese hamster ovary ao cell lines etc.), whereby e~pression in yeast cells is preferred [see Sreekrishna et al., Biochem. 28, 4117-4125, (1989); Hitzeman et al., Nature 293, 717-722 (1981); European Patent Application Publication No. 263 311]. Expression of the TNF-muteins of the present invention may occur in such systems either intracellularly, or, after suitable 25 adaption of the gene, extracellularly (see Leemans et al., Gene 85, 99-108, 1989).

Suitable vectors used for expression in E. coli are mentioned e.g.
by Sambrook et al. [s.a.] or by Fiers et al. in "Procd. 8th Int.
30 Biotechnology Symposium" [Soc. Franc. de Microbiol., Paris, (Durand et al., eds.), pp. 680-697 (1988)] or and more specifically vectors of the pDS family [Bujard et al., Methods in Enzymology, eds. Wu and Grossmann, Academic Press, Inc. Vol. 155, 416-433 (1987); Stuber et al., Immunological Methods, eds. Lefkovits and Pernis, Academic 35 Press, Inc., Vol. IV, 121-152 (1990)] like for example pDS56/RBSII,Sph1-TNFaSer29 or pDS56/RBSII,Sphl-TNFccTrp32 (see Example I) or pDS56/RBSll,Sphl-TNFaGlu31 or pDS56/RBSll,Sphl-TNFaAsn31Thr32 (see Example Vll). The transformed E. coli strains M15 (pREP4;pDS56/RBSll,Sphl-TNFaGlu31~ and M15 (pREP4;pDS56/RBSll,Sphl-TNFaAsn31Thr32) have been deposited 5 under the Budapest Treaty for patent purposes at the Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen GmbH (DSM) in Braunschweig, BRD at September 18th, 1991 under accession numbers DSM 6714 and DSM 6715 respectively. Since with these specific pDS56/RBSII-plasmids due to their specific regulatable 0 promoter/operator elements and ribosomal binding sites a high level of expression can be achieved, the plasmids can be maintained in E.
coli cells only when the activity of the promoter/operator element is repressed by the binding of a lac repressor to the operator. The activity of the promoter can be restored at the desired cell density hy addition of IPTG, which inactivates the repressor and clears the promoter. Since most of the E. coli strains do not provide enough repressor molecules to completely repress the function of the promoter sequences present in these high copy number plasmids, such E. coli strains, like E. coli M15 or SG13009, have to be 21) transformed at first with a plasmid, like pREP 4, coding for the lac repressor, before being transformed with the specific pDS56/RBSII-plasmids of the invention which can then be stably maintained in the E. coli cells. Beside coding for the lac repressor, pREP4 contains also a region of the plasmid pACYC184 [Chang and Cohen, J. Bacteriol. 134, 25 1141-1156 (1978)], which contains all information required for replication and stable transmission to daughter cells [for additional information see also "System for high level production in E. coli and rapid purification of recombinant proteins: application to epitope mapping, preparation of antibodies and structure function analysis"
30 by StUber et al. in Immunological Methods, Vol. IV, pp 121-152, Le~kovits and Pernis (eds.), Academic Press, New York ( 1990).

Transformation of the host cells by vectors as described above may be carried out by any conventional procedure [see for example 35 Sambrook et al. (s.a.)]. Where the host cell is a prokaryote, such as E.
coli for example, competent cells which are capable of DNA uptake are prepared from cells harvested after exponential growth phase and subsequently treated according to the known CaC12-method.
Transformation can also be performed after forming a protoplast of the host cell or by other methods known in the art and described, e.g., 5 in Sambrook et al. (s.a.). Therefore a vector, especially for expression in a prokaryotic or lower eukaryotic host cell, comprising a DNA-sequence coding for a TNF-mutein as described above, and a host cell, especially a prokaryotic host cell, e.g. E. coli, or a lower eukaryotic host cell, transformed by such a vector are also an object of the 0 present invention.

Usually, the host organisms which contain a desired expression vector are grown under conditions which are optimal for their grow~h.
In case of a procaryotic host at the end of the exponential growth, when the increase in cell number per unit time decreases, the expression of the desired TNF-mutein is induced~ i.e. the DNA coding for the desired TNF-mutein is transcribed and the transcribed mRNA
is translated. The induction can be carried out by adding an inducer or a derepressor to the growth medium or by altering a physical aD parameter, e.g. a change in temperature. In the expression vectors used in the preferred embodiments of the present invention, the expression is controlled by the lac repressor. By adding isopropyl-,B-D-thiogalactopyranoside (~PTG), the expression control sequence is derepressed and the synthesis of the desired TNF-mutein is thereby 25 induced.

TNF-muteins of the present invention produced by transformed host cells as stated above can be recovered from the culture medium or after opening the cells and/or extraction by any appropriate 30 method known in protein and peptide chemistry such as, for example, precipitation with ammonium sulfate, dialysis, ultrafiltration, gelfiltration or ion-exchange chromatography, gel electrophoresis, isoelectric focusing, affinity chromatography, like immunoaffinity chromatography, HPLC or the like. Specifically preferred methods are 35 precipitation with ammonium sulfate and/or polyethylenimine, dialysis, affinity chromatography, e.g. on phenyl-agarose, specifically 13 2 ~ 6 8 phenyl-sepharose~ or ion-exchange chromatography, specifically on a MONO-Q- and/or MONO-S-matrix (Pharmacia, Uppsala, Sweden) or more specifically are those as described by Tavernier et al. [J. Mol.
Biol. 2 I L~ 493-501 (1990)1 and those disclosed in Example I or 5 ~xample III.

It is therefore also an object of the present invention to provide a process for the preparation of a compound as specified above which process comprises cultivating a transformed host cell as described 10 above in a suitable medium and isolating a mutein from the culture supernatant or the host cell itself, and if desired converting said mutein into a pharmaceutically acceptable salt. The compounds whenever prepared according to such a process are also an object of the present invention.

The muteins of the present invention are characterized by showing a significant difference between its binding affinity to the human p75-TNF-R and the human pS5-TNF-R. Such property can be determined by any assay known in the art measuring binding ao affinities. For example the binding of TNF itself and of the muteins of the present invention can be measured using cells in cell culture which express the two types of TNF-receptors to a different degree, like for example Hep-2 cells which exclusivly express the human p55-TNF-R and U937 or HL60 cells which express in addition also the 25 human p75-TNF-R [see Brockhaus et al., Procd. Nat. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.
87, 3127-3131, (1990); Hohmann et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264, 14927-14934, (1989); Loetscher et al. (1990); Dembic et al. (1990)J. Of course binding affinities can also be determined directly by using purified native or recombinant pS5-TNF-R and p75-TNF-R as specifically 30 described in Example IIb, or by using the corresponding soluble analogs of such receptors.

The term "significant difference between its binding affinity to the human p75-Tumor-Necrosis-Factor-Receptor and to the human 35 pSS-Tumor-Necrosis-Factor-Receptor" refers in the context of the present invention to a difference in binding affinities to the two types 2 ~

of TNF-receptors which is with respect to the used assay system significant enough to say that a mutein of the present invention binds preferentially to one of the two TNF-receptors as compared to wild type TNF. More specifically this term rneans in the context of the 5 assay-system of F,xample Ila) that a K~-value of a specific TNF-mutein of the present invention is at least a factor of 10 or more, especially preferred at least a factor of 102, larger than for TNF-~itself determined by using U937 cells whereby its KD-value determined by using Hep-2 cells for the same TNF-mutein is not 0 larger than a factor of 2 as for TNF-a itself lfor specific data see Table I of Example lIa)]. It is however understood that these specific KD-values are given for illustration and should not be considered as limiting in any manner.

The muteins of the present invention can he characterized by their anti-tumour activity by methods known in the art and described e.g. in Example IV.

The muteins of the present invention may show but not ao necessarily considerably reduced cytotoxic activity in standard TNF-assays which are based on murine cell lines, such as L929 (see Table 1) or L-M cell lines.

TNF-muteins of the present invention can be used for the 25 treatment of illnesses, e.g. cancer.

A further object of the present invention is a pharmaceutical composition and a process for its preparation which cornposition contains one or more compounds of the invention, if desired in 30 combination with additional pharmaceutically active substances and/or non-toxic, inert, therapeutically compatible carrier materials.
For this purpose, one or more compounds of the invention, where desired or required in combination with other pharmaceutically active substances, can be processed in a known manner with the 35 usually used solid or liquid carrier materials. The dosage of such 2 ~ 6 ~

preparations can be effected having regard to the usual criteria in analogy to already used preparations of similar activity and structure.

After the invention has been described in general hereinbefore, 5 the following Examples are intended to illustrate details of the invention, without thereby limiting it in any manner.

Examples lo Example I

Preparation of Ser29-TNFa and Trp32 TNFa Construction of a mutagenesis vector From the human TNF expression plasmid pDS56/RBSIl,Sph 1 -TNFa (see Figure 3a: The expression plasmid contain the regulatable promoter/operator element N250PSN250P29 ( l ~, the synthetic ribosomal binding site RBSII ([ : ~), genes (~--) for ,B-lactamase (bla), chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (cat), and transcriptional terminatos ( lllmllll) to of phage lambda (to) and T1 of rrnB operon of ao E. coli (T1), and the replication region of plasmid pBR322 (repl.). The coding region under control of N250PSN250P29 and RBSII is indicated by an arrow; for complete nucleotide sequence of the plasmid see Figure 3b/1-3b/3 given by the one letter standard abreviations for nucleotides), an EcoR1-HindlII fragment was isolated, containing the 2~ ribosome binding site RBSII, the mature TNFa coding sequence and a 130 bp 3' non-translated sequence. This fragment was cloned into the EcoR1-HindIII opened pMac phasmids (Stanssens et al., s.a.), resulting in the constructions pMa/RBSII,Sphl-TNFa and pMc/RBSII,Sph 1 -TNFa.
3~
Isolation of single-stranded (ss)DNA
The pMa/RBSII,Sphl-TNFa phasmid was transformed to E. coli WK6 (Stranssens et al., s.a.). One colony was picked up and cultured in S ml LB medium (Sambrook et al., 1989) + carbenicillin (50 llg/ml) at 35 37C, overnight. 1 ml of this confluent culture was used to inoculate 200 ml LB + carbenicillin. When the absorbance (650 nm) reached a 2 ~ g value of 0.1, the culture was infected with M13K07 helper phage (Stanssens et al., (1989) at a m.o.i. of about 20 and further incubated overnight at 37C. Then, the cells were spun down (10 min, 10.000 rpm) and the supernatant was transferred into another tube. 50 ml 5 PEG-solution (20% ps~lyethylene glycol 6000; 2.5 M NaC 1 ) was added and the mixture was kept on ice for one hour to precipitate the phages. After centrifugation (10 min; 8000 rpm), the supernatant was removed and the tube was dried on paper towels for 10 min. The phage pellet was resuspended in 6 ml TE buffer (10 mM Tris-HC1, 0.1 0 mM EDTA~ pH8). A first extraction was performed with 6 ml TE-saturated phenol, followed by vortexing for 3 min. After centrifugation (3 min) in an ~ppendorf centrifuge, the aqueous phase was transferred to a fresh tube and a second extraction was carried out with chloroform:isoamylalcohol (24:1), the same way as described.
The single stranded DNA could be preci,~itated by adding 1/10 volume of 5~ ~aC104 and 1 volume of isopropanol (-20C, 2 hours).
This ssDNA was pelleted by centrifugation for 20 min in an Eppendorf centrifuge. The pellet was dried and dissolved in 500 111 TE buffer as a control, 5 ~1 of this mixture was run on an agarose gel, containing I
~o ~g/ml ethidium bromide. Usllally, the ratio of pMa/RBSII,Sphl-T~Fa ssDNA (=(+)strand) over helper phage ssDNA was between 2:1 and 20:1. The amount of total ssDNA was estimated to be at least 200 ng/~l .

25 Construction of a gap-duplex From the phasmid pMc, the EcoR 1 -HindIII large fragment was isolated and used for hybridization to the pMa/RBSII, Sphl-TNFa(+)strand. In a typical experiment, 15 !11 ssDNA (~- 3 ~g), 15 ~1 of the double stranded, linear fragment (+ 1.5~,1g), 10 ml 30 hybridization buffer (1.5 M KCl; 100 mM Tris-HC1, pH 7.5) and 40 ~
H20 were mixed and incubated at 100C for 4 min, 65C for 8 min and room temperature for 15 min. An aliquot (10 ml) was electroforesed on an agarose gel containing ethidium bromide, to check the formation of gap duplex DNA and, if so, to estimate its quantity (this 35 usually amounted to 50ng/lOml hybridization mixture).

2 ~

Annealing of the mutant oligonucleotide and fill-in of the gap duplex Oligonucleotides were synthesized containing the mutated codon and destroying or creating a restriction site in the TN~ gene. The oligonucleotides 5'CCGGCGGl-rGGACCACTGGAGC3' and 5 5'CATTGGCCCAGCGGl~CAG3' (mutated bases underlined) were used to create the Ser29 and Trp3 2 mutations respectively . After enzymatic phosphorylation, about 8 pmol was added to 40 ng of gap-duplex. H2O
was added to a final volume of 10 ml. This mixture was heated to 65C for 5 min and allowed to cool to room temperature.
0 Subsequently, 18 ml H20, 4 1ll fill-in buffer 10 (625 mM KCl, ~75 mMTris-HCl, 150 mM MgC12, 20 mM DTT pH 7.5), 2 1ll ATP lmM, 4 1ll of the four dNTP's ImM, 1 1ll ligase and 1 ml Klenow polymerase were added and the mix$ure was incubated at room temperature for 45 min .
~
Transformation to E. coli WK6 mutS and E. coli WK6 We used 10 1ll of the filled-in gap duplex DNA to transform (Sambrook et al., 1989) E. coli WK6 mutS (Stranssens et al., s.a.). From this mixture ( 1.2 ml), 100 ml was plated out on agar plates containing ~o 25 ,~g/ml chloramphenicol to check transformation efficiency. The remainder was used to inoculate 20 ml LB + chloramphenicol and further grown overnight at 25C. A small-scale plasmid DNA
preparation [Birnboim, H.C. and Doly, J., Nucleic Acids Res., 7, 1513, ( 1979)] of this culture (not ye~ grown to confluency) resulted in a 2; rnixed phasmid population that could be transformed to E. coli WK6.
Again, 100 ~I transformation mixture was plated out on agar plates containing chloramphenicol.

Screening by colony hybridization 3~ About 100 colonies, resulting from the transformation to E coli WK6, were streaked on a nylon filter (PALL, Glen Cove, New York) and incubated overnight at 37C. The filter was transferred (face up) to Whatmann 3MM papers which were soaked in 0.5 M NaOH (3 min).
Neutralization was done by transfer to Whatmann 3MM sheets soaked 35 in IM Tris-HCI pH 7.4 (twice for 1 min) and 2XSSC (20xSSC=3M NaC1;
0.3M Na citrate, pH7) (5 min). After drying, the filter was baked at 2~ 8 80C between sheets of 3MM paper. Subsequently, the filter was prewetted in 6xSSC (5 min) and prehybridized at 67C for 5 min in lOx Denhardt solution (2% (w/v) Ficol 1 (400,000 MV), 2% (w/v) Polyvinylpyrrolidone (44,000 MW), 2% (w/v) Bovine Serum Albumin), 6xSSC buffer and 0.2% SDS. After rinsing in 6xSSC buffer, the filter was placed in a Petri dish containing 4 ml 6xSSC and 60 pmol of the 32p-labeled mutant oligonucleotide for I hour at room temperature~ and rinsed in 100 ml 6xSSC. The filter was covered with Saranwrap and autoradiographed on preflashed films (Fuji) at -70C
o for 1 hour. Subsequently, the filter was again washed in 6xSSC buffer at increasing temperatures (varying between 51C and 75C, according to the lenght of the probe and its amount of G and C
residues~, followed each time by an autoradiography, as described above. For instance, a wash at 64C could clearly distinguish the Ser29 mutants from the wild-type colonies, while the Trp32 mutants were detected after two subsequent washes at 62C and 63C, respectively.

Restriction fragment analysis Because the Ser29 mutation created an Ava2 restriction site and 20 Arg32 destroyed the Nci 1 restriction site, both corresponding endonucleases could be used for restriction fragment analysis to check once again the presence of the mutation. The colonies were picked up and grown to confluency in S ml + chloramphenicol. From these cultures, plasmid DNA was prepared, digested with the 2~ appropriate restriction endonucleases and electrophoresed on agarose gels, according to classical procedures (Sambrook et al., 1989).

Subcloning to a bacterial expression vector Transfer of the mutated TNF gene to an expression vector was 30 carried out exactly the opposite way as the construction of the mutagenesis vector. The phasmid pMc/RBSlI,Sphl-TNFaSer29 or pMc/RBSlI,Sphl-TNFaTrp32 was digested with EcoR1-HindIII and the small fragment was inserted into the EcoR 1 -HindITI opened pDS56/RBSII,Sphl-TNFa vector generating plasmids 35 pDS56/RBSIl,Sphl-TNFaSer29 and pDS56/RBSlI,Sphl-TNFocTrp32 and transformed into E. coli M15 cells containing already plasmid - l 9 -pREP4 (encoding the l~c repressor; see Figures 2a and 2b/1-2b/3 for a complete nucleotide sequence of the plasmid given by the one letter standard abreviations for nucleotides) by standard methods (s.a.).
Such cultures of transformed ~. coli M15 were grown at 37C in LB
5 mediurn (10 g bacto tryptone, 5 g yeast extract, 5 g NaC1 per litre) containing 100 mg/l ampicillin and 25 mg/l kanamycin. At an optical density at 600 nm of about 0.7 to 1.0 IP'rG was added to a final concentration of 2mM. After additional 2.5 to 5 h at 37C the cells were harvested by centrifugation and the TNF muteins were purified 0 according to Tavernier et al. [J. Mol. Biol. 211, 493-501, (1990)]. The transformed E. coli strains M15 (pREP4;pDS56/RBSII,Sphl-TNF(xSer29) and M15(pREP4;pDS56/RBSII,Sphl-TNFaTrp32) have been deposited under the Budapest Treaty for patent purposes at the Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen mbH(DSM) in Braunschweig, BRD at November 19th, 1990 under accession numbers DSM 6240 and DSM 6241 respectively.

Example II

21) Characterization of Ser29-TNFa and Trp---TNFoc a) Differential bindin~ and biological activity on Hep2- and U937 cells Cell culture Hep-2 [~TCC No. C~L 23], U937 [ATCC No. CRL 15931 and RAJI
[ATCC No. CCL 86] cells were grown in RPMI 1640 medium, supplemented with 10% (v/v) inactivated fetal calf serum, L-30 glutamine (2mM), sodium pyruvate (lmM), 2-mercaptoethanol (5x10-5M), 1% of a 100x mixture of non-essential amino acids [Gibro Laboratories, Paisley, GB] and gentamycine (25 mg/ml). The non-adherent cells (U937 and RAJI) were harvested after reaching a density of lx106 cells/ml. For binding experiments, the adherent 35 Hep-2 cells were grown to confluency, trypsinized, collected and seeded in large Petri dishes (150 cm ) at a density of 2.5x106 - 20 - 2~
cells/ml. Subsequently, the dishes were placed in a CO2-incubator overnight. Because Hep-2 cells are not strongly adherent, the cells could be harvested the same way as the non-adherent cells.
Dulbecco's medium, supplemented with 10% inactivated newborn calf 5 serum was used for L929 cell growth.

Determination of the specific activities on L929~ Hep-2 and U937 cells .

0 The amount of protein was determined by the Biorad (Richmond, CA, USA) protein dye reagent according to the instructions of the manufacturer. The purity of the TNF muteins was determined by SDS-PAGE.

The cytotoxic activity on mouse L929 cells was determined using the standard L929 assay (Ruff and Gifford in "Lymphokines", ed. by E.
Pick, Vol. 2, 235-275, Academic Press, 1981, Orlando, USA). The cytotoxicity assay on Hep-2 cells was performed the same way as the L929 assay with the only exception that cycloheximide (50 ~g/ml) was added instead of actinomycin D.

Receptor bindin~ assav -lodination of TNF-a and Trp32-TNF

5 ,ug Iodogen (Pierce, USAJ was dissolved in 10 ~I chloroform and dried under a nitrogen stream in a small glass tube. To this, 10 ~1 Nal25I (Amersham, 100 mCi/ml in 0.1 M borate buffer, pH 8) was added and kept for 15 min. on ice. This solution was quickly pipetted 30 to an Eppendorf tube, containing 5 ~g TNF-a [Pennica et al., s.a.l or 3.2 ',lg of Trp32-TNF in 10 ~Ll phosphate buffer pH 7. Again the reaction was kept for 15 min on ice. To separate the iodinated TNF-a from the Na125I, a PD-10 gelfiltration column (Pharmacia) was first equilibrated with 0.1 M phosphate buffer + 0.25% gelatin and prerun 35 with 1 ,~g TNF-a or Trp3 -TNF, depending on the iodinated TNF
species. Subsequently, the reaction mixture was loaded onto the column, and fractions of about 400 Ill were collected from which 2 Ill aliquots were counted in a ~-counter (L~CB 1275 Minigamma, Pharmacia LKB, Uppsala, Sweden). A specific radioactivity of 10-75 and 80 ,LCi/mg was obtained for TNF-a and Trp32-TNF, respecti~/ely.

-Determination of the KD-value of labeled TNF-a and Trp32-TNF
by Scatchard analysis A dilution series in steps of factor 2 in the range of 1 2.8nM ->
0 0.006nM of the labeled TNF-a or Trp32-TNF was made up in a microtiterplate. Each dilution was made in triplicate. Non-specific binding was measuTed by the sarrle setup, wherein each point contained a 100 fold excess of unlabeled TNF (1.28 IlM -~ 0.6nM). To each well, approximately 2x 1 o6 cells (U937, Hep-2 or RAJI) were 5 added. The reaction was performed in 0.2 ml tissue culture medium, containing 0.1% NaN3 for 2-3 hours at 4C. After this, samples were transferred from the microtiterplates to small plastic tubes (Micronic systems), already containing 300 ~,ll phthalate oil (dinonylphthalate 33~o, dibutylphthalate 66% (v/v)). The tubes were centrifuged in a a~ microfuge (~ppendorf) for 10 min. to spin down the cells, thereby separating them from the supernatant, using the phthalate oil as a separation medium. After inversion of the tubes, the cell pellet (now on top) could easily be isolated by melting off the top of the tubes with a hot scalpel. The amount of radioactivity, bound on the cells, 25 was measured by counting in a ~-counter. From these data, a Scatchard plot and, subsequently, the dissociation constant KD was determined using the equilibrium binding type "HOT" in the EBDA/LIGAND programm [Mc.Pherson et al., J. Pharmacol. Methods 1 4, 21 3-228, ( I 985)] .

-Determination of the KD of mutant TNF [Ser29-TNF-a and Trp -TNF-a] by competition analysis The Scatchard data showed that a concentration of 0.4 nM
35 radiolabeled TNF-a was high enough to show a clearly detectable signal and fell within the linear part of the saturation curves. This 2 ~ 8 concentration, however, was also low enough to allow addition up to a 5000 fold excess of cold mutant TNF (2 ~,lM), necessary to perform a competition experiment in which 1~5 I-wild type TNF is the primary ligand and cold mutant the competitor.

A ten well dilution series of unlabeled mutant TNF (2 mM ->
0.004 11 M) in concentration steps of factors x2 was set up in a microtiterplate. The two remaining wells contained no unlabeled TNF
(total binding) and a 5000 fold excess of the wild-type, unlabeled TNF
0 (background), respectively. To all wells, 0.4 nM of radiolabeled TNF-a (10-75 ~lCi/llg) was added. After addition of 2X106 cells, the total volume was 0.2 ml/well. l\ledium of incubation, reaction conditions and isolation of the cells were exactly the same as described above for the Scatchard analysis experiments. Each point was measured in 5 triplicate and the dissociation experiments were done twice, the average of the two KD's being indicated in Table 1. Using the "DRUG"
method of the EBDA/LIGAND program (s.a.), competition curves were plotted and the KD of the muteins was calculated. The following experimental data were used for such calculations:
ao 1. Labeling of hTNF

first labeling (=batch 1): 1.2x108 dpm/5~,1g =3.7x105 dpm/pmol =+10 ~Ci/~g second labeling (=batch 2:) 5.3xlO dpm/3.2 ~g -1 .9x 1 o6 dpm/pmol =+ 75 ~Ci/~lg 2. Determination of the KD of lw215d-type TNF
We measured the KD of I-TNF (batch 1) on Hep-2 and U937 cells by Scatchard analysis.
Hep-2: KD = 9.17xlO-1 U937: KD = 2.5xlO-1 2~

3. Competition experiments All dîsplacement experimen~s were carried out, using 125 I -TNF
(batch 1) as the primary ligand, except experiment B.3 (t~ble B, 3.), where 1 5 I-TNF (batch 2) was used.

In each experiment, the binding at each concentration was measured in triplicate and only the averages are shown in the following tables (A-D).

From each experiment shown in these tables, the KD value was calculated using the programm of Mc. Pherson et al. (1985). The 0 average of the KD determinations (2 experiments for Ser29-TNF~ on Hep-2 cells and on U937 cells, two experiments for Trp32-TNFcc on Hep-2 cells and three on U937 cells) are shown in table 1.

Table A
Competition with Ser -TNFc~ on U937 cells.
Mean dpm concentration of mutant [mol l 1. 2120 0 1869 lx10-9 1779 2xlO-9 1719 4x10-9 1708 8x10-9 1575 1.6x10-8 1415 3.2xlO-8 2~ 1320 6.4x10-8 1200 1.25x10-7 983 2.5x10-7 949 sx10-7 632 1x10-6 533 2x10-6 Background: 299 2 ~ 6 8 ~ 24 -2. 1014 0 635 4xlO-9 6 0 3 8 x 1 0 - 9 54 1 I.SxlO-572 3xlo-8 489 6x1~-8 4 1 3 1 .2x10-7 3 80 2.5x10-7 319 sx10-7 o 263 lx10-6 238 2.10-6 B ackgrou nd: 2 0 5 Table B
Competition with Trp32-TNF-a on U937 cells 1. 2120 1917 lx10-9 1 698 2x10-9 1 655 4xlO-9 ao 1585 8xlO-9 1488 1.5x10-8 1 377 3x 10- ~
1 333 6x10-8 1 166 1.25x10-7 2~ 1 02 6 2 . 5 x I 0~ 7 953 5x10-7 777 lx10-6 628 2x10-6 Background: 2 9 9 2. 1 047 0 653 4x109 6 2 9 8 x 1 0- 9 636 1.5xlO-5 85 3x10-8 546 6x10-8 2 ~

508 1.2x10-7 479 2.5x10-7 422 sx10-7 357 1.10-6 294 2x10-6 Background: 214 3. 8340 0 (carried out 4759 4x 10 ~ 9 with 1251- 4041 8x10-9 TNF, batch 2) 3620 l.Sx10-8 3275 3x10-8 3034 6x 10- 8 2387 1.25x1~-7 1981 2.5x10-7 1472 SxlO-1192 lx10-6 814 2x10-6 Background: 307 Table C
Competition with Ser29-TNF-~ on Hep-2 cells 1. ~38 0 799 lx10-9 677 2x10-9 564 4x10-9 510 8xlO-9 451 1.6x10-8 442 3.2x10-8 ~46 6.4x10-8 379 1.25x10-7 374 2.5x10-7 437 sx10-7 359 lx10-6 383 2x10-6 Background: 353 20~5~

2.457 0 273 4xlO-9 240 8x10-9 ~5 253 l.SxlO-235 3xlo-8 207 6x10-8 239 1.2x10-7 215 2.5x10-7 211 5x10-7 193 lx10-6 238 2xlO-6 Background: 215 ~5 Table D
Competition with Trp32-TNF-a on Hep-2 cells 1. 938 0 742 lxlO-9 3D 608 2xlO-537 4xlO-547 8xlo~9 397 1.6xlO-8 394 3.2x10-8 ;~ 405 6.4x10-8 395 1.25xlO-388 2.5x10-7 379 sxlO~7 353 lx10-6 3D 386 2x10-6 Background: 353 2. 445 0 298 4xlO-9 ~; 222 8xlO-9 256 1.5xlO-2 ~ 6 8 202 3x10-8 227 6x10-8 2 1 0 1 .2x10-7 221 2.5x10-7 1 97 sx10-7 23 1 lx10-6 202 2x10-6 B ackground: 2 0 3 Table 1 .10 Hep-2 U937 L929 specific specific affinity activity affinity activity (KD) (U/mg) (KD) (U/mg) TNF-a 9.17xlO-10(*~ 2.9x107 2.5x10-10(*) 2x107 (100%) (100%) (100%) (100%) Ser29- 1.06x10-9 9.3x106 5.07x10-~ 105 TNF-a (86.5%) (32%) (0-49%) (0.5%) Trp29- 1.06xlO-9 4.5x107 3.53x10-8 6.4x104 TNF-a (86.5%) (155%) (0.71%) (0.32%

KD values indicated by an asterislc (*) were obtained by Scatchard analysis. All other KD values were determined by competition analysis. Relative values (in percentage to TNF-a) are indicated between brackets.

It can be seen that the binding constant (KD) of Ser29-TNF-a and Trp3 -TNF-a determined with Hep-2 cells (which only carry the p55-TNF-R) are almost the same as the one of TNF-oc. ~lso the biological activity (specific activity) on these cells is largely retained (note that the accuracy of this assay is only a factor 3).
Strikingly, the binding affinity (measured in the competition assay) of Ser29-TNF-c~ and Trp32-TNF-a to the U937 cells, which predominantly - but not exclusively - carry the high affinity ~5 receptor p75-TNF-R, has been largely lost (increase in KD-value by a factor of more than 10~). It may also be noted that the 2 ~ 8 biological clCtiVity of Ser29-TNF-a and Trp32-TNF-c~, determined in the standard assay based on L929-cells, has been largely lost (decrease by a factor more than 100).

5 b) Differential bindin~ to the human p75-TNF-R and the human p55 -TNF-R.

Competition of human 1~51-TNF-a binding by Trp32- and Ser29-TNF-a and human TNF-a to TNF-receptors purified from ~L60 10 cells was determined as follows. 2 ~,11 aliquots of the native pS5-TNF-R
and the p75-TNF-R purified as described in European Patent Application No. 90116707.2 dissolved at a concentration of about 0.3 mg/ml in 20 mM Hepes, 50 mM Tris, 50 mM NaCI, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1%
octylglucoside, 0.1 mg/ml BSA, pH 8.0, were spotted onto prewetted nitrocellulose filters in triplicate. The filters were blocked with blocking buffer (50 mM Tris, 140 mM NaCI, 5 mM EDTA, 0.02% NaN3, 1 % defatted milk powder) for 1.5 hours at room temperature. After washing with PBS the filters were incubated with 10 ng/ml 1 251-TNFa and varying concentrations of Trp32- or Ser29-TNFa, or TNFa 2D overnight at 4C. The filters were washed with blocking buffer (2x for 5 min.) and with H2O (1x for 5 min.), air dried, and counted in a y-counter. Results are given in Figures la and b, whereby Figure 1 shows binding of TNFa (open rectangle), Ser29-TNFa (filled circles) and Trp32-TNFa (filled rectangle) to human p75TNF-R in case of 25 Figure la to human p75-TNF-R and in case of Figure lb to human pS5 -TNF-R.

Example III

30 Purification of Trp32-TNFa Transformed cells obtained according to Example I we;e processed in the following manner:

35 a ) Opening by French press, addition of polyethylene-imine until a final concentration of 0.4%, pH 7.6; removal of precipitate.

2~5~68 b ) Ammonium sulphate precipitation at pH 7.2; fraction 30-70%
c~ Dialysis against 25% ammonium sulphate in 10 mM Tris, pH 6.8 d ) Phenyl-Sepharose column CL-4B (35 x 250 mm) Load in 25% ammonium sulphate - 10 mM Tris, pH 6.8 0 Elution: gradient 25% ammonium sulphate-Tris buffer to 20 mM
ethanolamine, pH 9 (2 times 150 ml).

e) Column Mono Q (HR 16/10).
Load: in 20 mM ethanolamine, pH 9. ~lution: gradient (2 times 300 5 ml) in the same buffer, from 0 to 1 M sodium chloride (Pharmacia, FPLC). Active fractions dialysed versus 0.01 M phosphate buffer pH 7 f ) Column of Heparin Sepharose CL-6B (30 x 80 mm) Load in 0.01 M phosphate buffer pH 7. Elute with a gradient in the ao same buffer from 0 to 1 M sodium chloride g) Active fractions were concentrated on Amicon (micro-ultrafil-tration system 8 MC; membrane O 25 mm; diaflo 10 YMI0 - 25 mm) and separately loaded on a gelfiltration column (Ultrapac TSK G-2000 25 SWG; 21.5 x 600 mm), equilibrated in 0.01 M phosphate pH 7 and 0.9% sodium chloride LPS (determined by test kit o~ Kabivitrum):
Most active fraction contained 5 mg/ml Trp32-TNFa; endotoxin 3~ content: 26 E.U./mg The last active fraction contained 1.8 mg/ml TNF an~ 47 E.U./mg protein .

2~3~ ~8 Example IV

1. Anti-tumour effect of hTNFa and hIFN~ on subcutaneous HT-29 tumours in nude mice.

5x106 HT-29 human colon adenocarcinoma cells LATCC HTB381 were subcutaneously injected in nude mice. Groups consisted of 5 mice. The treatrnent comprises daily perilesional injections during 6 days per week, followed by 1 day without treatment. Results are 0 given in Fig. 4 whereby "PBS" refers to phosphate buffered saline as known in the art. The single arrow indicates the start of the treatment with 5 ~lg hTNFa or 5000 IU human Interferon y (hIFNy) or both. The double arrow indicates the time that these doses were doubled and the crossed arrow indicates the end of the treatment.

2. Comparison of the anti-tumour potential of hTNFa and Trp32-TNFc~

5x106 HT-~9 human colon adenocarcinoma cells (s.a.) were a~ subcutaneously injected in nude mice. Groups consisted of S mice. The treatment started on day 6 following inoculation and comprises daily perilesional injections during 6 days per week. Tumour volume was estimated every 3 or 4 days by measuring the larger (a) and the smaller (b) diameter and calculating the a x b2 x 0.4 according to Attia 25 and Weiss as krlown in the art. Results are given in Fig. 5 whereby the arrow indicates the start of the treatment and open triangles with tip down refers to 104 IU of hIFN~ and 10 llg hTNFa, filled triangles with tip down refer to 104 IU of hIFN-y and 10 ',lg Trp32-TNF, filled rectangles refer to 10 llg Trp32-TNFa, open reactangles refer to 10 llg 30 hTNFa, open triangles refer to phosphate bufferred saline and filled circles refer to 104 IU of hIFNy. In vitro, there is no difference in cytotoxicity for Hep or ~IT-29 cells between hTNFa and Trp32-TNFa.

2~5~68 Example V

Preparation of Ser29~p32-TNFa Ser29-Trp32-TNFa was prepared as described in Example I with the following exceptions:

1. The oligonucleotide used, contains the following sequence (mutated bases underlined):

5' GGGCATI~TGCCC_GCG{~lTGGACCACTGGAGC 3' 2. An Nci 1 site was destroyed while an Ava 2-site was created, allowing for check of the presence of the mutation by restriction 5 fragment analysis. No hybridization analysis was performed. 6 clones resulting from the WK6 transformation were grown up and DNA was prepared and analysed as described in Example I. 3 from 6 clones beared the mutation.

ao This DNA sequence was subcloned into the pDS56 expression vector, generating the plasmid pDS56/RBSII,Sphl-TNFaSer29Trp32, and transformed to the E. coli M15 strain. Expression and purification was performed as described in Example I.

2~ Example VI

Preparation of Glv29-TNFa~Tyr29-TNFa and Tvr32-TNFa Gly29-TNFa,Tyr29-TNFa and Tyr32-TNFa were prepared as 3~ described in Example I with the following exception. Oligonucleotides were used, containing a fully degenerated codon at position 29 or 32, resulting in a random insertion of all twenty amino acids at one of the two positions. The sequence of these oligonucleotides are as follows:

35 Position 29:
5'CCACGCCATr_GCGAGGAGGGCATTGGCCCGGCGGTIXXXCCACTGGAGC3' - 32 ~ i6i8 Position 32:
5' CCACGCCAl~GCGAGGAGGGCAl~XGCG~TTCAGCC 3' where X = A, C, G or T and mutated bases are underlined.

Together with the mutation, also a unique Nru-1 site is introduced. Thus, instead of directly transforming the phasmid-pool, isolated from the WK6 mutS strain, this DNA was first diges~ed with 0 Nru- 1, the linear band eluted from the agarose gel, ligated and transformed to the SURE-strain (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA, USA~. In this way, one can select only for phasmids, containing the mutations. 168 colonies obtained were inoculated in microtiterplates, grown to confluency and their lysates tested for biological activity towards 5 Hep-2 cells in a manner as described in~Example IIa and for differential binding as described in Example IIb or Example VIII. On the basis of the biological activity on the one side and differential binding as determined according to Example IIb or Example VIII
colonies were selected and further characterized by DNA sequence 20 analysis of corresponding inserts as known in the art. DNA-sequences coding for Gly29-TNFa, Tyr29-TNFa and Tyr32-T~Fa were isolated from corresponding colonies and cloned in bacterial expression vectors as described in Example I. Muteins expressed were purified to more than 95% homogeneity by means of a MONO-Q ion exchange 2~ chromatography step.

Example Vll Preparation of Glu31-TNFa and Asn31-Thr32-TNFa Mutagenesis of the TNFa gene using PCR
Three PCR reactions were performed with plasmid pDS56/RBSll,Sph 1 -TNFa [Figure 3] as the template DNA using a Per~;in-Elmer Cetus GeneAmpTM DNA Amplification Reagent Kit with 35 AmpliTaqTM Recombinant Taq DNA Polymerase (Perkin Elmer Cetus, 33 2 ~ ~ ~ 1 6 8 Vaterstetten, BRD) [see F;gure 8]. In reaction I primers 17/F
(5'-GGCGTATCACGAGGCCCTTTCG-3'; primer 17/F comprises nucleotides 3949-3970 of plasmid pDS56/RBSII,SphI-TNFa) and 211M5 (5-ATTGGCCCGCrCG~CAGCCACTGGAGCrGCCCCTC-3'; plimer 21/M5 5 comprises nucleotides which are complementary to nucleotides 219-184 of plasmid pDS56/RBSII,Sphl-TNFa, mutated bases are underlined) were used, reaction II contained primers 17/F and 21/M6 (5'-ATTGGCAGTGTTGTTCAGCCACTGGAGCTGCCCCTC-3'; primer 21/M6 comprises nucleotides which are complementary to nucleotides 0 219-184 of plasmid pDS56~RBSII,Sphl-TNFa, mutated bases are underlined), and reaction III contained primers 21/MR
(5'-GCCCTCCTGGCCAATGGCGTGG-3'; primer 21/MK comprises nucleotides 220-241 of plasmid pDS56/RBSII,Sphl-TNFa) and 17/O
(5'-CATTACTGGATCTATCAACAGG-3'; primer 17/O comprises nucleotides which are complementary to~ nucleotides 748-727 of plasmid pDS561RBSII,Sphl-TNFa). Therfore 10 ~l template DNA (10 ng), 5 ~11 each of the two primers (100 pmole each), 16 ~,11 dNTP's mix (1.25 mM of dATP, dGTP, dCTP, and dTTP), 10 1ll lOx reaction buffer (100 mM Tris-HCl pH8.3, 500 mM KCL, 15 mM MgC12 and 0.1 % gelatin), 1 111 (5 units) ao AmpliTaqTM DNA polymerase and 53 ~,II H20 were mixed in an Eppendorf tube and overlaid with 80 111 mineral oil (Perkin-Elmer Cetus). The tubes were transferred to a DNA thermal cycler (TRIO-Thermoblock, Biometra) and kept for 1 min at 94C, before 35 cycles of melting the DNA (1 min at 94C), annealing the primers (1 min at 50C),and extending the ~; primers (3 min at 72C) were performed. After additional 2 min at 72C, the reactions were cooled to room temperature and extracted with chloroform. The DNA present in the aqueous phase was precipitated with ethanol and subjected to electrophoresis in a 6 % polyacrylamide gel [Sambrook et al., 1989]. After staining of the DNA with ethidium 30 bromide, fragments I, II and III [see Figure 8; these fragments originate from reactions I, II and III, respectively] were isolated from the gel and purified [Sambrook et al., 1989].
Preparation of DNA fragments encoding Glu31-TNFa and Asn31-Thr32-TNFa 2 ~

Fragments 1, II and III were enzymatically phosphorylated, before in two parallel reactions fragments I and Ill and fragmen~s Il and 111 were ligated with each other [Sambrook et al ., 1989] . After heat-inactivation of tlle ligase and digestion with restriction enzymes EcoRI
5 and HindIII, the DNA was subjected to electrophoresis in a 6 %
polyacrylamide gel. After staining of the DNA with ethidium bromide, the EcoRI-HinclllI fragments A and B Lsee Figure 4] were isolated from the gel and purified [s.a].
Preparation of plasmids encoding Glu31-TNFa and Asn3]-Thr32-TNFa 0 In separate experiments, the EcoRI-HindIII fragments A and B
were inserted according to standard methods [Sambrook et al., 1989] into the EcoRI-HindIII opened plasmid pDS56/RBSll,Sphl-TNFaSer29 generating plasmids pDS56/RBSII,Sphl-TNFaGlu31 and pDS56/RBSII,Sphl-TNFaAsn31Thr32, respectively. Plasmid DNA was 5 prepared [Birnboim et al., 1979] and the identity of the coding region for the TNFa muteins was confirmed by sequencing the double-stranded DNA [Sambrook et al., 1989].
Production of Glu31-TNFa and Asn31-Thr32-TNFa Plasmids pDS56/RBSII,Sphl-TNFaGlu31 and pDS56/RBSII,Sphl-ao TNFaAsn31Thr32 were transformed into E. coli M15 cells containingalready plasmid pREP4 by standard methods [s.a.]. Transformed cells were grown at 37C in I,B medium [s.a.] containing 100 mg/l ampicillin and 25 mg/l kanamycin. At an optical density at 600 nm of about 0.7 to 1.0 IPTG was added to a final concentration of 2 mM.
25 After additional 2.5 to 5 h at 37C the cells were harvested by centrifugation.
Example VIII

Differential bindin~ to recombinant hurnan p75-TNF-R and 30 recombinant human pS5-TNF-R

I . 10 ml suspensions of transformed and induced E. coli cells expressing recombinant human TNFa, Ser29-TNFa, Trp32-TNFa, ~lu31-2 ~

TNFa, and Asn3l-Thr32-TNFoc [E. coli cells expressing recombinant dihydrofolate reductase (D~IFR) were included as a control l were centrifuged at 4'000 rpm for 10 min and resuspended in 0.9 ml of Iysis buffer (10 mM Tris-HCI pH 8.0, 5 mM EDTA, 2 mM PMSF, I0 mM
5 benzamidine, 200 units/ml aprotinine and 0.1 mg/ml Iysozyme).
After 20 min incubation at room tempelature 50 ~ of 1 M MgC12, 20 111 of 5 mg/ml DNasel, 50 1ll of 5 M Na~l and 5() 111 of 10% NP-~0 were added and the mixture was further incubated at room temperature for 15 min. 0.5 ml of the Iysate clarified by centri-0 fugation at 13'000 rpm for 5 min was subjected to ammonium sulfateprecipitation (30% - 70% cut). The 70% ammonium sulfat pellet was dissolved in 0.2 ml PBS and analyzed by SDS-PAGE to confirm the presence of the recombinant proteins.

For the differential binding assay microtiter plates were coated with recombinant human p75-TNF-R-human IgG~y3 and p55-TMF-R-human IgG~3 fusion proteins (European Patent Applications Publ. Nos.
417 563, 422 339) dissolved in PBS at 0.3 ~Lg/ml and 0.1 ~,lg/ml, respectively, (100 ~I/well, overnight at 4C). After blocking with blocking buffer (50 mM Tris pH 7.4, 140 mM NaCI, 5 mM EDTA, 0.02%
N aN 3, I % defatted milk powder) the microtiter plate was washed with PBS and incubated with 5 ng/ml human l25l-TNFa (labelled by the lodogen method to a specific activity of about 30 ,~Ci/~g as described above) in the presence of different dilutions of the E. coli Iysate partially purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation. The volume was 100 ~ /well and each dilution was assayed in duplicate. After three hours at room temperature the wells were thoroughly washed with PBS and counted in a ~-counter. Results are shown in Fig.6 whereby closed circles refer to binding to p55-TNF-R-human lgG~3-30 and open circles refer to binding to p75-TNF-R-human IgG~3.

2. Determination of binding of Ser29-Trp32-TNFa, Gly29-TNFa, Tyr29-TNFa and Tyr32-TNFa was performed as described under 1. with the only exception that MONO-Q ion exchange chromatography purified 35 muteins were used. Results are shown in Fig. 7 whereby open and 1 2 ~

closed circles have the same meaning as in Fig. 6 and ~lg/ml gives the amount of purified mutein/ml.

Claims (27)

1. A human Tumor Necrosis Factor mutein or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof characterized in that the TNF sequence is changed by deletion, insertion and/or substitution of one or more amino acids so that the mutein shows a significant difference between its binding affinity to the human p75-Tumor-Necrosis-Factor-Receptor and to the human p55-Tumor-Necrosis-Factor-Receptor.
2. A mutein as claimed in claim 1 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein the amino acid sequence of human Tumor Necrosis Factor is
3. A mutein as claimed in claim 2 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said amino acid sequence is changed by substitution of one or more, preferably one or two amino acids by other amino acids, preferably naturally occuring amino acids.
4. A mutein as claimed in claim 2 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said amino acid sequence is changed at position 29 as claimed in claim 3.
5. A mutein as claimed in claim 4 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said naturally occuring amino acid is serine.
6. A mutein as claimed in claim 4 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said naturally occurring amino acid is glycine.
7. A mutein as claimed in claim 4 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said naturally occurring amino acid is tyrosine.
8. A mutein as claimed in claim 2 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said amino acid sequence is changed at position 32 as claimed in claim 3.
9. A mutein as claimed in claim 8 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said naturally occuring amino acid is tryptophan.
10. A mutein as claimed in claim 8 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said naturally occurring amino acid is tyrosine.
11. A mutein as claimed in claim 2 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said amino acid sequence is changed at position 31 as claimed in claim 3.
12. A mutein as claimed in claim 11 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said naturally occurring amino acid is glutamic acid.
13. A mutein as claimed in claim 2 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said amino acid sequence is changed at positions 29 and 32 as claimed in claim 3.
14. A mutein as claimed in claim 13 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said naturally occurring amino acid at position 29 is serine, glycine or tyrosine, preferably serine and at position 32 tyrosine or tryptophase, preferably tryptophan.
15. A mutein as claimed in claim 2 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said amino acid sequence is changed at positions 31 and 32.
16. A mutein as claimed in claim 15 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof wherein said naturally occurring amino acid at position 31 is glutamic acid or asparagine, preferably asparagine and at position 32 tyrosine, tryptophan or threonine, preferably threonine.
17. A deletion, substitution and/or addition analog of a mutein as claimed in any one of claims 4-16 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof whereby position 29 and/or 32 or position 31 or position 31 and 32 of the mutein is/are not changed and which analog still shows a significant difference between its binding affinity to the human p75-Tumor Necrosis-Factor-Receptor and the human p55-Tumor Necrosis-Factor-Receptor.
18. A DNA-sequence comprising a DNA-sequence coding for a mutein as claimed in any one of claims 1-17.
19. A vector, especially for expression in a procaryotic or lower eukaryotic host cell, such vector comprising a DNA-sequence as claimed in claim 18.
20. A host cell, especially a procaryotic or lower eukaryotic host cell transformed by a vector as claimed in claim 19.
21. A host cell as claimed in claim 20 which is E. coli.
22. A compound as claimed in any one of claims 1-17 for the treatment of illnesses.
23. A process for the preparation of a compound as claimed in any one of claims 1-17 which process comprises cultivating a host cell as claimed in claim 20 or claim 21 in a suitable medium and isolating the mutein from the culture supernatant or the host cell itself, and if desired converting said mutein into a pharmaceutically acceptable salt.
24. A pharmaceutical composition which contains one or more compounds as claimed in any one of claims 1-17, if desired, in combination with additional pharmaceutically active substances and/or non-toxic, inert, therapeutically compatible carrier materials.
25. The use of a compound as claimed in any one of claims 1-17 for the treatment of illnesses.
26. A compound as claimed in any one of claims 1-17 whenever prepared according to a process as claimed in claim 23.
27. The invention as hereinbefore described.

***
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