| Literature DB >> 26141862 |
Anna Hultberg1, Virginia Morello2, Leander Huyghe3, Natalie De Jonge4, Christophe Blanchetot4, Valérie Hanssens4, Gitte De Boeck4, Karen Silence4, Els Festjens4, Raimond Heukers5, Benjamin Roux6, Fabienne Lamballe6, Christophe Ginestier7, Emmanuelle Charafe-Jauffret7, Flavio Maina6, Peter Brouckaert3, Michael Saunders4, Alain Thibault4, Torsten Dreier4, Hans de Haard4, Paolo Michieli8.
Abstract
Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and its receptor MET represent validated targets for cancer therapy. However, HGF/MET inhibitors being explored as cancer therapeutics exhibit cytostatic activity rather than cytotoxic activity, which would be more desired. In this study, we engineered an antagonistic anti-MET antibody that, in addition to blocking HGF/MET signaling, also kills MET-overexpressing cancer cells by antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC). As a control reagent, we engineered the same antibody in an ADCC-inactive form that is similarly capable of blocking HGF/MET activity, but in the absence of any effector function. In comparing these two antibodies in multiple mouse models of cancer, including HGF-dependent and -independent tumor xenografts, we determined that the ADCC-enhanced antibody was more efficacious than the ADCC-inactive antibody. In orthotopic mammary carcinoma models, ADCC enhancement was crucial to deplete circulating tumor cells and to suppress metastases. Prompted by these results, we optimized the ADCC-enhanced molecule for clinical development, generating an antibody (ARGX-111) with improved pharmacologic properties. ARGX-111 competed with HGF for MET binding, inhibiting ligand-dependent MET activity, downregulated cell surface expression of MET, curbing HGF-independent MET activity, and engaged natural killer cells to kill MET-expressing cancer cells, displaying MET-specific cytotoxic activity. ADCC assays confirmed the cytotoxic effects of ARGX-111 in multiple human cancer cell lines and patient-derived primary tumor specimens, including MET-expressing cancer stem-like cells. Together, our results show how ADCC provides a therapeutic advantage over conventional HGF/MET signaling blockade and generates proof-of-concept for ARGX-111 clinical testing in MET-positive oncologic malignancies. ©2015 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26141862 DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-15-0356
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701