AUTHOR=Chang Xiao L. , Wu Helen L. , Webb Gabriela M. , Tiwary Meenakshi , Hughes Colette , Reed Jason S. , Hwang Joseph , Waytashek Courtney , Boyle Carla , Pessoa Cleiton , Sylwester Andrew W. , Morrow David , Belica Karina , Fischer Miranda , Kelly Scott , Pourhassan Nader , Bochart Rachele M. , Smedley Jeremy , Recknor Christopher P. , Hansen Scott G. , Sacha Jonah B. TITLE=CCR5 Receptor Occupancy Analysis Reveals Increased Peripheral Blood CCR5+CD4+ T Cells Following Treatment With the Anti-CCR5 Antibody Leronlimab JOURNAL=Frontiers in Immunology VOLUME=12 YEAR=2021 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/immunology/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2021.794638 DOI=10.3389/fimmu.2021.794638 ISSN=1664-3224 ABSTRACT=
CCR5 plays a central role in infectious disease, host defense, and cancer progression, thereby making it an ideal target for therapeutic development. Notably, CCR5 is the major HIV entry co-receptor, where its surface density correlates with HIV plasma viremia. The level of CCR5 receptor occupancy (RO) achieved by a CCR5-targeting therapeutic is therefore a critical predictor of its efficacy. However, current methods to measure CCR5 RO lack sensitivity, resulting in high background and overcalculation. Here, we report on two independent, flow cytometric methods of calculating CCR5 RO using the anti-CCR5 antibody, Leronlimab. We show that both methods led to comparable CCR5 RO values, with low background on untreated CCR5+CD4+ T cells and sensitive measurements of occupancy on both blood and tissue-resident CD4+ T cells that correlated longitudinally with plasma concentrations in Leronlimab-treated macaques. Using these assays, we found that Leronlimab stabilized cell surface CCR5, leading to an increase in the levels of circulating and tissue-resident CCR5+CD4+ T cells