Anti-Human Amyloid-β (Aducanumab) [Clone BIIB037]

Anti-Human Amyloid-β (Aducanumab) [Clone BIIB037]

Product No.: A480

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Product No.A480
Clone
BIIB037
Target
Amyloid-β
Product Type
Biosimilar Recombinant Human Monoclonal Antibody
Alternate Names
ABPP, APPI, Alzheimer disease amyloid A4 protein homolog, Alzheimer disease amyloid protein, Amyloid precursor protein
Isotype
Human IgG1κ
Applications
ELISA

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Antibody Details

Product Details

Reactive Species
Human
Host Species
Human
Expression Host
HEK-293 Cells
FC Effector Activity
Active
Product Concentration
≥ 5.0 mg/ml
Endotoxin Level
≤ 1.0 EU/mg as determined by the LAL method
Purity
≥95% by SDS Page
≥95% monomer by analytical SEC
Formulation
This biosimilar antibody is aseptically packaged and formulated in 0.01 M phosphate buffered saline (150 mM NaCl) PBS pH 7.2 - 7.4 with no carrier protein, potassium, calcium or preservatives added. Due to inherent biochemical properties of antibodies, certain products may be prone to precipitation over time. Precipitation may be removed by aseptic centrifugation and/or filtration.
State of Matter
Liquid
Product Preparation
Recombinant biosimilar antibodies are manufactured in an animal free facility using only in vitro protein free cell culture techniques and are purified by a multi-step process including the use of protein A or G to assure extremely low levels of endotoxins, leachable protein A or aggregates.
Pathogen Testing
To protect mouse colonies from infection by pathogens and to assure that experimental preclinical data is not affected by such pathogens, all of Leinco’s recombinant biosimilar antibodies are tested and guaranteed to be negative for all pathogens in the IDEXX IMPACT I Mouse Profile.
Storage and Handling
Functional grade preclinical antibodies may be stored sterile as received at 2-8°C for up to one month. For longer term storage, aseptically aliquot in working volumes without diluting and store at ≤ -70°C. Avoid Repeated Freeze Thaw Cycles.
Regulatory Status
Research Use Only
Country of Origin
USA
Shipping
2 – 8° C Wet Ice
Additional Applications Reported In Literature ?
ELISA
Each investigator should determine their own optimal working dilution for specific applications. See directions on lot specific datasheets, as information may periodically change.

Description

Description

Specificity
This non-therapeutic biosimilar antibody uses the same variable region sequenceas the therapeutic antibody Aducanumab. Aducanumab, is a high-affinity, fully human IgG1monoclonal antibody that specifically targets aggregated forms of amyloid-β (Aβ) in the brain. This product is research use only.
Background
Amyloid-β (Aβ) is a peptide that accumulates in the brains of individuals with Alzheimer’s disease, forming plaques that are a hallmark of the condition. These plaques are believed to contribute to the neurodegenerative processes seen in Alzheimer’s by disrupting cell function and triggering inflammatory responses. Amyloid-β is derived from the amyloid precursor protein (APP) through enzymatic cleavage. The aggregation of Aβ into oligomers and fibrils is a key pathological feature of Alzheimer’s disease, making it a significant target for therapeutic interventions aimed at reducing or preventing plaque formation 1,21,2.

Aducanumab is a human monoclonal antibody of the IgG1 isotype that specifically targets aggregated forms of amyloid-β. Developed by Biogen and Neurimmune, Aducanumab was designed to bind to amyloid plaques in the brain, facilitating their clearance by the immune system. Clinical studies have shown that Aducanumab can reduce amyloid plaque levels in patients with early Alzheimer’s disease, potentially slowing cognitive decline. The development of Aducanumab involved identifying antibodies from healthy elderly individuals who were cognitively normal, leveraging their immune response to create a therapeutic antibody2-4.

Antigen Distribution
Amyloid-β (Aβ) is primarily found in the brain, where it accumulates to form plaques in individuals with Alzheimer’s disease.
Ligand/Receptor
APBB1-KAT5, TNFRSF21, binds transient metals such as copper, zinc, and iron
NCBI Gene Bank ID
UniProt.org
Research Area
Biosimilars
.
Cell Biology
.
Neuroscience
.
Alzheimer's Disease
.
Neuroimmunology

Leinco Antibody Advisor

Powered by AI: AI is experimental and still learning how to provide the best assistance. It may occasionally generate incorrect or incomplete responses. Please do not rely solely on its recommendations when making purchasing decisions or designing experiments.

Research-grade Aducanumab biosimilars are used as calibration standards or reference controls in pharmacokinetic (PK) bridging ELISAs by generating calibration curves that enable accurate quantification of drug concentrations in serum samples, ensuring the assay measures both biosimilar and reference aducanumab with comparable accuracy and precision.

Bridging PK ELISAs for biosimilars are designed to quantify the concentration of the therapeutic antibody (such as aducanumab) in biological matrices (like human serum). The process involves the following key practices:

  • Selection of Analytical Standard: The biosimilar (research-grade aducanumab) is often selected as the analytical standard or calibrator because it must demonstrate analytical equivalence to the reference product (the original branded aducanumab). This is established through robust method qualification studies that compare the standard curves and binding affinity of both the biosimilar and reference molecule.
  • Standard Curve Preparation: Serial dilutions of the biosimilar are used to generate a calibration curve (e.g., ranges from 0.098 µg/mL to 12.5 µg/mL or nanogram ranges as per assay requirement), which is run in each ELISA plate. The curve provides reference points against which the concentrations in test serum samples are determined.
  • Assessment of Bioanalytical Equivalence: Both the reference and biosimilar aducanumab are measured in the assay. Data (e.g., precision, accuracy) for both must fall within prespecified equivalence criteria (e.g., 90% confidence interval within [0.8, 1.25]). If this is established, a single PK assay using the biosimilar standard is considered valid for routine testing.
  • Quality Controls (QCs): Independent quality control samples are prepared with both biosimilar and reference aducanumab at several concentrations (e.g., lower limit, low, mid, high, and upper limit of quantification). These QC samples are quantified against the biosimilar-based calibration curve to ensure accuracy and consistency across runs.
  • Reference Controls: Additional samples, sometimes spiked with known concentrations of reference aducanumab or positive controls, are run to confirm parallelism (comparable dose response) between the biosimilar and reference within the assay, thus bridging the two products.

In summary, research-grade aducanumab biosimilars serve as the primary analytical standard in the calibration curve for PK ELISAs because they have demonstrated equivalence to the reference product in terms of binding and assay response. This approach minimizes inter-assay variability and enables accurate measurement of drug levels in serum, supporting pharmacokinetic and bioequivalence studies.

The primary models for in vivo administration of research-grade anti-Amyloid-β antibodies to study tumor growth inhibition and characterize tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) are mouse syngeneic tumor models. These models are preferred because they possess a fully functional immune system, enabling analysis of immunotherapy effects—including TIL composition—within an authentic tumor microenvironment.

Essential context:

  • Syngeneic models involve implanting murine tumor cell lines into immunocompetent mice of the same genetic background, allowing the study of anti-tumor immunity, including TILs, following antibody administration. Common syngeneic models referenced in immunotherapy and TIL research include B16.F10 melanoma, MC38 colon carcinoma, CT26 colon carcinoma, and RENCA renal carcinoma.
  • These models are fully characterized for baseline TIL populations and the response to immune checkpoint inhibitors, which directly relates to studying the effect of anti-Amyloid-β antibodies on TILs and tumor growth.

Additional relevant information:

  • Studies have identified Amyloid-β's role in promoting cancer progression through mechanisms such as NETosis (neutrophil extracellular trap formation), and therapeutic interventions like BACE inhibition or anti-Amyloid-β treatment can disrupt this, altering TIL phenotype and inhibiting tumor growth.
  • While syngeneic models are the standard for immune characterization, humanized mouse models (mice engrafted with human immune cells) may also be used for translational studies, but are less commonly referenced in Amyloid-β antibody work in the available literature.

In summary, syngeneic mouse tumor models are the primary in vivo system for research-grade anti-Amyloid-β antibody studies on tumor growth inhibition and TIL characterization, with commonly used models being B16.F10, MC38, CT26, and RENCA.

Current evidence does not show direct use of Aducanumab or its biosimilars in conjunction with checkpoint inhibitors (such as anti-CTLA-4 or anti-LAG-3 agents) in immune-oncology models, as Aducanumab is primarily developed and studied for Alzheimer’s disease and not for oncology applications. Researchers studying synergy in immune-oncology models typically combine checkpoint inhibitors targeting different immune pathways or pair them with cytotoxic or targeted anti-cancer agents.

Essential context:

  • Aducanumab is a monoclonal antibody specific for aggregated beta-amyloid (Aβ) used for Alzheimer’s disease, with studies focusing on cognitive outcomes and amyloid/tau biomarkers.
  • Checkpoint inhibitors (like anti-CTLA-4 or anti-LAG-3) are immunotherapies used in oncology to restore and amplify anti-tumor immune responses by blocking inhibitory signals on T cells.
  • Synergy studies in immune-oncology models frequently use combinations like anti-CTLA-4 plus anti-PD-1/PD-L1 or newer pairings (including anti-LAG-3), aiming to leverage differences in action (e.g., anti-CTLA-4 acts in lymph nodes; anti-PD-1 at the tumor site).

Current strategies for studying synergy in immune-oncology:

  • Researchers test combinations of immune checkpoint inhibitors (e.g., anti-CTLA-4 with anti-PD-1 or anti-LAG-3) in animal models or early-phase clinical trials, looking for enhanced tumor regression or delayed progression.
  • Combinations with non-checkpoint drugs (like chemotherapies, targeted therapies, or vaccines) are also studied to further modulate the tumor microenvironment.
  • Experimental setups in complex models assess not only response rates and tumor growth inhibition but also mechanistic immune changes (e.g., T cell infiltration, cytokine profiles).

No evidence supports Aducanumab or any biosimilar’s use in such oncology-related immune combination studies as of the current literature. While other monoclonal antibodies are frequently re-purposed or studied in new contexts, Aducanumab’s Alzheimer’s-focused mechanism (anti-amyloid) is not linked to current cancer immunotherapy research. Any attempt to use it in cancer models would be considered highly experimental and not reflected in mainstream translational immuno-oncology research to date.

Summary Table

Study CombinationContextTypical Research FocusAducanumab Involved?
Anti-CTLA-4 + Anti-PD-1/PD-L1Cancer immunotherapyTumor response, immunityNo
Anti-LAG-3 + other checkpointsNext-gen immunotherapyOvercome resistanceNo
Aducanumab combinationsAlzheimer’s researchCognitive, biomarker changeNot oncology

If your question refers to future or highly novel experimental models (e.g., using Aducanumab’s technology or scaffold as a checkpoint inhibitor), there is no documentation of such work in current published research. Most checkpoint inhibitor synergy studies utilize antibodies designed to target immune-specific pathways.

Aducanumab biosimilar can be used as the capture or detection reagent in a bridging anti-drug antibody (ADA) ELISA to monitor a patient's immune response against the therapeutic drug by serving as a proxy for the original biologic in the assay, enabling detection of antibodies generated against either the reference or biosimilar product.

In the bridging ADA ELISA format:

  • The biosimilar aducanumab is chemically labeled in two forms: one for capture (often biotinylated) and another for detection (commonly with an HRP or fluorescent label).
  • Patient serum (possibly containing ADAs) is incubated with both labeled biosimilar variants. If anti-aducanumab antibodies are present, they bind to both forms, forming a bridge between the capture and detection reagents.
  • The complex is immobilized on a streptavidin-coated plate (captured via the biotinylated biosimilar); detection is achieved through the signal generated by the tagged biosimilar on the opposite end of the ADA.
  • The reaction signal correlates to the amount of anti-drug antibody present in the patient sample, allowing monitoring of immunogenicity during therapy.

Why use the biosimilar (vs. reference drug)?

  • Biosimilar aducanumab is expected to have the same immunological epitopes as the originator, making it suitable for detecting patient ADAs that could potentially cross-react with both the therapeutic and its biosimilar.
  • This approach is especially relevant in clinical interchangeability or switching studies to ensure immune responses aren’t directed specifically against unique biosimilar-specific epitopes.

Key analytical points:

  • The ADA bridging ELISA is highly sensitive for detection of bivalent antibodies that recognize the therapeutic drug.
  • Assay reagents must be of high quality to reduce interference from serum components and improve specificity and sensitivity.
  • Using a biosimilar as a reagent can help validate assay performance and is standard practice in biosimilar comparability trials.

In summary, in ADA bridging ELISA, Aducanumab biosimilar is dual-labeled and used to both capture and detect patient anti-drug antibodies to quantify immunogenic responses against both biosimilar and reference drug forms, providing robust monitoring during therapy and biosimilar evaluation.

References & Citations

1. Arndt JW, Qian F, Smith BA, et al. Sci Rep. 2018;8(1):6412.
2. Sevigny J, Chiao P, Bussière T, et al. Nature. 2016;537(7618):50-56.
3. Rahman A, Hossen MA, Chowdhury MFI, et al. Psychogeriatrics. 2023;23(3):512-522.
4. Lin L, Hua F, Salinas C, et al. CPT Pharmacometrics Syst Pharmacol. 2022;11(3):362-372.
5. Desvignes C, Edupuganti SR, Darrouzain F, et al. Bioanalysis. 2015;7(10):1253-1260.
Indirect Elisa Protocol

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Disclaimer AlertProducts are for research use only. Not for use in diagnostic or therapeutic procedures.