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A humanized monoclonal antibody targeting an ectonucleotidase rescues cardiac metabolism and heart function after myocardial infarction
- Li, Shen;
- Tao, Bo;
- Wan, Jijun;
- Montecino-Rodriguez, Enca;
- Wang, Ping;
- Ma, Feiyang;
- Sun, Baiming;
- Gu, Yiqian;
- Ramadoss, Sivakumar;
- Su, Lianjiu;
- Sun, Qihao;
- Hoeve, Johanna Ten;
- Stiles, Linsey;
- Collins, Jeffrey;
- van Dam, R Michael;
- Tamboline, Mikayla;
- Taschereau, Richard;
- Shirihai, Orian;
- Kitchen, Douglas B;
- Pellegrini, Matteo;
- Graeber, Thomas;
- Dorshkind, Kenneth;
- Xu, Shili;
- Deb, Arjun
Abstract
Myocardial infarction (MI) results in aberrant cardiac metabolism, but no therapeutics have been designed to target cardiac metabolism to enhance heart repair. We engineer a humanized monoclonal antibody against the ectonucleotidase ENPP1 (hENPP1mAb) that targets metabolic crosstalk in the infarcted heart. In mice expressing human ENPP1, systemic administration of hENPP1mAb metabolically reprograms myocytes and non-myocytes and leads to a significant rescue of post-MI heart dysfunction. Using metabolomics, single-nuclear transcriptomics, and cellular respiration studies, we show that the administration of the hENPP1mAb induces organ-wide metabolic and transcriptional reprogramming of the heart that enhances myocyte cellular respiration and decreases cell death and fibrosis in the infarcted heart. Biodistribution and safety studies showed specific organ-wide distribution with the antibody being well tolerated. In humanized animals, with drug clearance kinetics similar to humans, we demonstrate that a single "shot" of the hENPP1mAb after MI is sufficient to rescue cardiac dysfunction.
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