| Literature DB >> 24938283 |
Brett Schrand1, Alexey Berezhnoy1, Randall Brenneman1, Anthony Williams2, Agata Levay1, Ling-Yuan Kong3, Ganesh Rao3, Shouhao Zhou4, Amy B Heimberger3, Eli Gilboa5.
Abstract
Despite the recent successes of using immune modulatory Abs in patients with cancer, autoimmune pathologies resulting from the activation of self-reactive T cells preclude the dose escalations necessary to fully exploit their therapeutic potential. To reduce the observed and expected toxicities associated with immune modulation, here we describe a clinically feasible and broadly applicable approach to limit immune costimulation to the disseminated tumor lesions of the patient, whereby an agonistic 4-1BB oligonucleotide aptamer is targeted to the tumor stroma by conjugation to an aptamer that binds to a broadly expressed stromal product, VEGF. This approach was predicated on the premise that by targeting the costimulatory ligands to products secreted into the tumor stroma, the T cells will be costimulated before their engagement of the MHC-peptide complex on the tumor cell, thereby obviating the need to target the costimulatory ligands to noninternalizing cell surface products expressed on the tumor cells. Underscoring the potency of stroma-targeted costimulation and the broad spectrum of tumors secreting VEGF, in preclinical murine tumor models, systemic administration of the VEGF-targeted 4-1BB aptamer conjugates engendered potent antitumor immunity against multiple unrelated tumors in subcutaneous, postsurgical lung metastasis, methylcholantrene-induced fibrosarcoma, and oncogene-induced autochthonous glioma models, and exhibited a superior therapeutic index compared with nontargeted administration of an agonistic 4-1BB Ab or 4-1BB aptamer. ©2014 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24938283 PMCID: PMC5502823 DOI: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-14-0007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Immunol Res ISSN: 2326-6066 Impact factor: 11.151