M. Vankemmelbeke, Thomas Kirk, J. Chua, R. Mcintosh, L. Durrant
{"title":"A161:恒区工程抗多糖抗体靶向胃肠道肿瘤","authors":"M. Vankemmelbeke, Thomas Kirk, J. Chua, R. Mcintosh, L. Durrant","doi":"10.1158/2326-6074.CRICIMTEATIAACR18-A161","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Post-translational modifications, for instance protein and lipid glycosylation, are attractive targets for therapeutic antibody (mAb) development. The altered tumor glyco-code drives oncogenic features such as the ability to proliferate, metastasize as well evade immune detection. Through immunizations with colorectal cancer cell membrane extracts we have generated a panel of anti-glycan mAbs with potential for application as cancer therapeutics. These mAbs selectively target Lewis or sialylated Lewis glycans on glycoproteins and/or glycolipids, binding to a large percentage of colorectal, pancreatic and gastric tumor tissues on tumor microarrays and induce a significant tumor volume reduction combined with a survival benefit in metastatic colorectal cancer xenograft models. Underlying these potent antitumor responses is the mAbs’ ability to induce direct tumor cell killing in the absence of complement or immune effector cells. In vitro, this direct cytotoxicity is characterized by mAb-induced cellular aggregation, pore formation, release of alarmins (ATP and high mobility group box 1 protein (HMGB1)), and maturation of immature dendritic cells, thereby constituting a form of inflammatory cell death (ICD). This mode of cell killing is linked to mAb cooperative binding on repeating antigen, a characteristic mostly associated with the murine mIgG3 isotype, thus human hIgG1 formats do not exhibit this form of direcT-cell killing. We have identified the residues required for the cooperative binding behaviour, through mAb constant region (CH2/CH3) screening, and have engineered improved (‘i’) hIgG1 variants, containing these selected residues. In silico immunogenicity prediction (IEDB) suggests limited immunogenicity, which requires further validation. Functional characterization of three improved anti-glycan hIgG1 mAbs in in vitro cell-based and Biacore assays demonstrates significant direct cancer cell killing, pore formation as well as increased functional glycan affinity. Classical immune effector functions (ADCC and CDC) were maintained or improved. Importantly, these improved hIgG1 variants now show significant tumor volume reduction in vivo in a mouse colorectal xenograft model.The multifaceted killing activity of our hIgG1 anti-glycan mAbs, has the potential to synergize with checkpoint blockade, thus holding tremendous therapeutic promise for the treatment of gastrointestinal tumors. Additionally, the activity of other therapeutic mAbs could be further enhanced with our Fc-engineering strategy for introducing cooperative binding. Citation Format: Mireille Vankemmelbeke, Thomas Kirk, Jia X. Chua, Richard McIntosh, Lindy G. Durrant. Targeting gastrointestinal tumors with constant region engineered anti-glycan antibodies [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Fourth CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR International Cancer Immunotherapy Conference: Translating Science into Survival; Sept 30-Oct 3, 2018; New York, NY. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Immunol Res 2019;7(2 Suppl):Abstract nr A161.","PeriodicalId":18169,"journal":{"name":"Maintenance of Immune Balance: Effects of Targeted and Immune Therapies","volume":"15 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-02-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Abstract A161: Targeting gastrointestinal tumors with constant region engineered anti-glycan antibodies\",\"authors\":\"M. Vankemmelbeke, Thomas Kirk, J. Chua, R. Mcintosh, L. Durrant\",\"doi\":\"10.1158/2326-6074.CRICIMTEATIAACR18-A161\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Post-translational modifications, for instance protein and lipid glycosylation, are attractive targets for therapeutic antibody (mAb) development. The altered tumor glyco-code drives oncogenic features such as the ability to proliferate, metastasize as well evade immune detection. Through immunizations with colorectal cancer cell membrane extracts we have generated a panel of anti-glycan mAbs with potential for application as cancer therapeutics. These mAbs selectively target Lewis or sialylated Lewis glycans on glycoproteins and/or glycolipids, binding to a large percentage of colorectal, pancreatic and gastric tumor tissues on tumor microarrays and induce a significant tumor volume reduction combined with a survival benefit in metastatic colorectal cancer xenograft models. Underlying these potent antitumor responses is the mAbs’ ability to induce direct tumor cell killing in the absence of complement or immune effector cells. In vitro, this direct cytotoxicity is characterized by mAb-induced cellular aggregation, pore formation, release of alarmins (ATP and high mobility group box 1 protein (HMGB1)), and maturation of immature dendritic cells, thereby constituting a form of inflammatory cell death (ICD). This mode of cell killing is linked to mAb cooperative binding on repeating antigen, a characteristic mostly associated with the murine mIgG3 isotype, thus human hIgG1 formats do not exhibit this form of direcT-cell killing. We have identified the residues required for the cooperative binding behaviour, through mAb constant region (CH2/CH3) screening, and have engineered improved (‘i’) hIgG1 variants, containing these selected residues. In silico immunogenicity prediction (IEDB) suggests limited immunogenicity, which requires further validation. Functional characterization of three improved anti-glycan hIgG1 mAbs in in vitro cell-based and Biacore assays demonstrates significant direct cancer cell killing, pore formation as well as increased functional glycan affinity. Classical immune effector functions (ADCC and CDC) were maintained or improved. Importantly, these improved hIgG1 variants now show significant tumor volume reduction in vivo in a mouse colorectal xenograft model.The multifaceted killing activity of our hIgG1 anti-glycan mAbs, has the potential to synergize with checkpoint blockade, thus holding tremendous therapeutic promise for the treatment of gastrointestinal tumors. Additionally, the activity of other therapeutic mAbs could be further enhanced with our Fc-engineering strategy for introducing cooperative binding. Citation Format: Mireille Vankemmelbeke, Thomas Kirk, Jia X. Chua, Richard McIntosh, Lindy G. Durrant. Targeting gastrointestinal tumors with constant region engineered anti-glycan antibodies [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Fourth CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR International Cancer Immunotherapy Conference: Translating Science into Survival; Sept 30-Oct 3, 2018; New York, NY. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
翻译后修饰,例如蛋白质和脂质糖基化,是治疗性抗体(mAb)开发的有吸引力的靶点。改变的肿瘤糖密码驱动肿瘤的致癌特征,如增殖、转移以及逃避免疫检测的能力。通过使用结直肠癌细胞膜提取物进行免疫,我们已经产生了一组具有潜在应用于癌症治疗的抗聚糖单克隆抗体。这些单克隆抗体选择性地靶向糖蛋白和/或糖脂上的Lewis或唾液化Lewis聚糖,在肿瘤微阵列上与大比例的结直肠、胰腺和胃肿瘤组织结合,并在转移性结直肠癌异种移植模型中诱导肿瘤体积显著减少并提高生存期。这些有效的抗肿瘤反应的基础是单克隆抗体在缺乏补体或免疫效应细胞的情况下诱导直接杀伤肿瘤细胞的能力。在体外,这种直接的细胞毒性表现为单克隆抗体诱导的细胞聚集、孔隙形成、警报因子(ATP和高迁移率组框1蛋白(HMGB1))的释放和未成熟树突状细胞的成熟,从而构成炎症细胞死亡(ICD)的一种形式。这种细胞杀伤模式与mAb与重复抗原的合作结合有关,这一特征主要与小鼠mIgG3同型相关,因此人类hIgG1格式不表现出这种形式的直接细胞杀伤。我们已经通过mAb恒定区(CH2/CH3)筛选确定了协同结合行为所需的残基,并设计了含有这些选定残基的改进(' i ') hIgG1变体。硅免疫原性预测(IEDB)提示免疫原性有限,有待进一步验证。三种改进的抗多糖hIgG1单抗在体外细胞和Biacore实验中的功能表征表明,它们具有显著的直接癌细胞杀伤、孔形成以及增强的功能性多糖亲和力。经典免疫效应功能(ADCC和CDC)维持或改善。重要的是,这些改进的hIgG1变体现在在小鼠结肠直肠癌异种移植模型中显示出显著的肿瘤体积减少。我们的hIgG1抗多糖单抗具有多方面杀伤活性,具有与检查点阻断协同作用的潜力,因此在胃肠道肿瘤的治疗中具有巨大的治疗前景。此外,通过引入协同结合的fc工程策略,可以进一步增强其他治疗性单克隆抗体的活性。引文格式:Mireille Vankemmelbeke, Thomas Kirk, Jia X. Chua, Richard McIntosh, Lindy G. Durrant。恒区工程抗多糖抗体靶向胃肠道肿瘤[摘要]。第四届CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR国际癌症免疫治疗会议:将科学转化为生存;2018年9月30日至10月3日;纽约,纽约。费城(PA): AACR;癌症免疫学杂志,2019;7(2增刊):摘要nr A161。
Abstract A161: Targeting gastrointestinal tumors with constant region engineered anti-glycan antibodies
Post-translational modifications, for instance protein and lipid glycosylation, are attractive targets for therapeutic antibody (mAb) development. The altered tumor glyco-code drives oncogenic features such as the ability to proliferate, metastasize as well evade immune detection. Through immunizations with colorectal cancer cell membrane extracts we have generated a panel of anti-glycan mAbs with potential for application as cancer therapeutics. These mAbs selectively target Lewis or sialylated Lewis glycans on glycoproteins and/or glycolipids, binding to a large percentage of colorectal, pancreatic and gastric tumor tissues on tumor microarrays and induce a significant tumor volume reduction combined with a survival benefit in metastatic colorectal cancer xenograft models. Underlying these potent antitumor responses is the mAbs’ ability to induce direct tumor cell killing in the absence of complement or immune effector cells. In vitro, this direct cytotoxicity is characterized by mAb-induced cellular aggregation, pore formation, release of alarmins (ATP and high mobility group box 1 protein (HMGB1)), and maturation of immature dendritic cells, thereby constituting a form of inflammatory cell death (ICD). This mode of cell killing is linked to mAb cooperative binding on repeating antigen, a characteristic mostly associated with the murine mIgG3 isotype, thus human hIgG1 formats do not exhibit this form of direcT-cell killing. We have identified the residues required for the cooperative binding behaviour, through mAb constant region (CH2/CH3) screening, and have engineered improved (‘i’) hIgG1 variants, containing these selected residues. In silico immunogenicity prediction (IEDB) suggests limited immunogenicity, which requires further validation. Functional characterization of three improved anti-glycan hIgG1 mAbs in in vitro cell-based and Biacore assays demonstrates significant direct cancer cell killing, pore formation as well as increased functional glycan affinity. Classical immune effector functions (ADCC and CDC) were maintained or improved. Importantly, these improved hIgG1 variants now show significant tumor volume reduction in vivo in a mouse colorectal xenograft model.The multifaceted killing activity of our hIgG1 anti-glycan mAbs, has the potential to synergize with checkpoint blockade, thus holding tremendous therapeutic promise for the treatment of gastrointestinal tumors. Additionally, the activity of other therapeutic mAbs could be further enhanced with our Fc-engineering strategy for introducing cooperative binding. Citation Format: Mireille Vankemmelbeke, Thomas Kirk, Jia X. Chua, Richard McIntosh, Lindy G. Durrant. Targeting gastrointestinal tumors with constant region engineered anti-glycan antibodies [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the Fourth CRI-CIMT-EATI-AACR International Cancer Immunotherapy Conference: Translating Science into Survival; Sept 30-Oct 3, 2018; New York, NY. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Immunol Res 2019;7(2 Suppl):Abstract nr A161.