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Downhill running does not alter blood C1q availability or complement-dependent cytotoxicity of therapeutic monoclonal antibodies against haematological cancer cell lines in vitro

Downhill running does not alter blood C1q availability or complement-dependent cytotoxicity of therapeutic monoclonal antibodies against haematological cancer cell lines in vitro
Downhill running does not alter blood C1q availability or complement-dependent cytotoxicity of therapeutic monoclonal antibodies against haematological cancer cell lines in vitro
Complement-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) is a primary mechanism-of-action of monoclonal antibody (mAb) immunotherapies used to treat haematological cancers, including rituximab and daratumumab. However, mAb efficacy may be limited by reduced bioavailability of complement C1q – which activates the complement classical pathway following interactions with mAb-opsonised target cells. C1q is secreted by phagocytes upon recruitment to sites of muscle damage to facilitate muscular repair, hence we hypothesised that muscle damaging exercise may increase C1q ‘spill-over’ into blood. Additionally, other complement proteins (e.g., C1s) have been reported to increase following ultra-endurance and resistance exercise. Taken together, we hypothesised that muscle damaging exercise could be harnessed to enhance mAb-mediated CDC. In this study, n = 8 healthy males (28 ± 5-years) completed two 45-minute treadmill running protocols: (1) a flat running protocol at a speed 15% above anaerobic threshold, and (2) a downhill running protocol (− 10% slope) at the same speed. Blood samples were collected before, immediately after, and 1-hour, 24-hours, 2-days, and 4-days after exercise. Isolated serum was assessed for C1q by ELISA, and used to measure mAb (rituximab, daratumumab) mediated CDC against two haematological cancer cell lines (Raji, RPMI-8226) in vitro. Isolated plasma was assessed for markers of inflammation (C-reactive protein [CRP]), and muscle damage (creatine kinase [CK]) by turbidimetry. C1q and CDC activity were not different between running protocols and did not change over time (p > 0.05). Significantly greater perceived muscle soreness (p < 0.001) and fluctuations observed from baseline to 24-hours post-exercise in the downhill running trial in CK (+ 171%) and CRP (+ 66%) suggests some degree of muscle damage was present. It is possible that any increase in C1q post-exercise may have been masked by the increase and subsequent interaction with CRP, which utilises C1q to facilitate muscular repair. This is the first study to investigate whether exercise can increase circulating C1q and improve mAb-mediated CDC and our findings show that downhill running exercise does not increase circulating C1q nor improve CDC in vitro.
2045-2322
Collier-Bain, Harrison D.
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Brown, Frankie F.
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Causer, Adam J.
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Ross, Lois
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Rothschild Rodriguez, Daniela
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Browne, Noah
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Eddy, Rachel
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Cleary, Kirstie L.
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Gray, Juliet C.
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Cragg, Mark S.
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Moore, Sally
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Murray, James
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Turner, James E.
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Campbell, John P.
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Collier-Bain, Harrison D.
224758b9-df83-4021-8163-78e53465eec0
Brown, Frankie F.
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Causer, Adam J.
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Ross, Lois
53f5b662-5fb7-482c-8891-af6608779391
Rothschild Rodriguez, Daniela
c8d6cd59-71e0-4643-85aa-40595ffb04dd
Browne, Noah
3b01dc55-ca1e-43df-8ba9-1590769f9617
Eddy, Rachel
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Cleary, Kirstie L.
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Gray, Juliet C.
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Cragg, Mark S.
ec97f80e-f3c8-49b7-a960-20dff648b78c
Moore, Sally
d0855ea8-e4f3-4ce1-9e91-4f8698291128
Murray, James
c4dba6f5-48e0-4367-8531-439da097a84c
Turner, James E.
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Campbell, John P.
d4bb77fe-d59f-498d-b04d-70b4d58ba42d

Collier-Bain, Harrison D., Brown, Frankie F., Causer, Adam J., Ross, Lois, Rothschild Rodriguez, Daniela, Browne, Noah, Eddy, Rachel, Cleary, Kirstie L., Gray, Juliet C., Cragg, Mark S., Moore, Sally, Murray, James, Turner, James E. and Campbell, John P. (2024) Downhill running does not alter blood C1q availability or complement-dependent cytotoxicity of therapeutic monoclonal antibodies against haematological cancer cell lines in vitro. Scientific Reports, 14, [28239]. (doi:10.1038/s41598-024-79690-8).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Complement-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) is a primary mechanism-of-action of monoclonal antibody (mAb) immunotherapies used to treat haematological cancers, including rituximab and daratumumab. However, mAb efficacy may be limited by reduced bioavailability of complement C1q – which activates the complement classical pathway following interactions with mAb-opsonised target cells. C1q is secreted by phagocytes upon recruitment to sites of muscle damage to facilitate muscular repair, hence we hypothesised that muscle damaging exercise may increase C1q ‘spill-over’ into blood. Additionally, other complement proteins (e.g., C1s) have been reported to increase following ultra-endurance and resistance exercise. Taken together, we hypothesised that muscle damaging exercise could be harnessed to enhance mAb-mediated CDC. In this study, n = 8 healthy males (28 ± 5-years) completed two 45-minute treadmill running protocols: (1) a flat running protocol at a speed 15% above anaerobic threshold, and (2) a downhill running protocol (− 10% slope) at the same speed. Blood samples were collected before, immediately after, and 1-hour, 24-hours, 2-days, and 4-days after exercise. Isolated serum was assessed for C1q by ELISA, and used to measure mAb (rituximab, daratumumab) mediated CDC against two haematological cancer cell lines (Raji, RPMI-8226) in vitro. Isolated plasma was assessed for markers of inflammation (C-reactive protein [CRP]), and muscle damage (creatine kinase [CK]) by turbidimetry. C1q and CDC activity were not different between running protocols and did not change over time (p > 0.05). Significantly greater perceived muscle soreness (p < 0.001) and fluctuations observed from baseline to 24-hours post-exercise in the downhill running trial in CK (+ 171%) and CRP (+ 66%) suggests some degree of muscle damage was present. It is possible that any increase in C1q post-exercise may have been masked by the increase and subsequent interaction with CRP, which utilises C1q to facilitate muscular repair. This is the first study to investigate whether exercise can increase circulating C1q and improve mAb-mediated CDC and our findings show that downhill running exercise does not increase circulating C1q nor improve CDC in vitro.

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Collier-Bain et al., Downhill running and monoclonal antibody efficacy - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 11 November 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 November 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496534
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496534
ISSN: 2045-2322
PURE UUID: 78adde15-4765-4b5d-b62a-9bc24ccda920
ORCID for Kirstie L. Cleary: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6200-4945
ORCID for Juliet C. Gray: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5652-4722
ORCID for Mark S. Cragg: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2077-089X

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Date deposited: 17 Dec 2024 17:49
Last modified: 18 Dec 2024 02:47

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Contributors

Author: Harrison D. Collier-Bain
Author: Frankie F. Brown
Author: Adam J. Causer
Author: Lois Ross
Author: Daniela Rothschild Rodriguez
Author: Noah Browne
Author: Rachel Eddy
Author: Kirstie L. Cleary ORCID iD
Author: Juliet C. Gray ORCID iD
Author: Mark S. Cragg ORCID iD
Author: Sally Moore
Author: James Murray
Author: James E. Turner
Author: John P. Campbell

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