The Swiss company GlycArt Biotechnology developed a system using
CHO cells, where the cells were engineered to overexpress an enzyme called
GnTIII. The effect of this overexpression is to block the formation of fucosylated oligosaccharides on the expressed antibodies. This technology was first reported in 1999 and was the basis of GlycArt Biotechnology.
Roche acquired GlycArt in 2005 in order to acquire technology to afucosylate antibodies. GlycArt Biotechnology had been founded in 2000 as a spin-out company of the
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. The first commercial product from the GlycArt acquisition was
obinutuzumab, which as Gazyva gained FDA approval in November 2013 for the treatment of
chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Kyowa Hakko Kirin's "Potelligent" platform uses a CHO cell line in which
FUT8 has been knocked out, and which produces antibodies with little to no
fucose in the
Fc region. The company gained marketing approval in Japan in April 2012 for a monoclonal antibody drug called
mogamulizumab which was developed using the platform. The Company's technology was first reported in 2004. == Applications of afucosylated antibodies ==