| Literature DB >> 26674411 |
Yong Wha Moon1, Joud Hajjar2, Patrick Hwu3, Aung Naing4.
Abstract
Tumor cells escape the immune surveillance system of the host through a process called immune tolerance. Immunotherapy targets molecules that serve as checks and balances in the regulation of immune response. Indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) is an intracellular enzyme, which through the process of tryptophan depletion exerts an immunosuppressive effect, facilitating immune escape of tumors. This review summarizes our current knowledge on IDO expression in malignancies, the IDO inhibitors that are currently available and those under clinical development.Entities:
Keywords: IDO inhibitors; Immune surveillance; Immunomodulatory; Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase; Malignancy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26674411 PMCID: PMC4678703 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-015-0094-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Mechanisms of IDO pathway activity in immune tolerance. The enzyme IDO catalyzes the initial and rate-limiting step in the catabolism of tryptophan along the kynurenine pathway. Accordingly, IDO can provoke tryptophan shortage, which results in mTORC1 inhibition and GCN2 activation, in turn leading to anergy of effector T cells. Tryptophan’s degradation leads to production of bioactive kynurenine pathway compounds, which activate the AHR, resulting in promotion of Treg differentiation. TC, tumor cell; DC, dendritic cell; MФ, macrophage; EC, endothelial cell; FB, fibroblast; IDO, indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase 1; Trp, tryptophan; Krn, kynurenine; mTORC1, mechanistic target of rapamycin (serine/threonine kinase) complex 1; GCN2, general control nondepressible-2; AHR, aryl hydrocarbon receptor; Treg, regulatory T cell
Reported IDO inhibitors
| Agent | Mechanism | First author, year |
|---|---|---|
| D-1MT | Tryptophan mimetic; D isoform of MT; Transcriptional suppressor of IDO | Metz 2012 [ |
| L-1MT | Tryptophan mimetic; L isoform of MT; selective IDO1 inhibitor | Opitz 201 [ |
| MTH-Trp | Tryptophan mimetic; transcriptional suppressor of IDO | Okamoto 2007 [ |
| β-carbolines | Tryptophan mimetic; IDO and TDO inhibitor | Eguchi 1984 [ |
| Naphthoquinone-based | Pharmacophore of natural product annulin B; indole mimetic; IDO inhibitor | Kumar 2008 [ |
| S-allyl-brassinin | Phytoalexin; indole mimetic | Gaspari 2006 [ |
| S-benzyl-brassinin | Phytoalexin; indole mimetic | Gaspari 2006 [ |
| 5-Bromo-brassinin | Phytoalexin; indole mimetic | Banerjee 2008 [ |
| Phenylimidazole-based | Computationally designed synthetic IDO inhibitor | Kumar 2008 [ |
| 4-phenylimidazole | Heme ligand in IDO enzyme | Sono 1989 [ |
| Exiguamine A | Non-tryptophan analogue | Harry 2006 [ |
| NSC401366 | Non-indolic IDO inhibitor | Vottero 2006 [ |
IDO Indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase 1, 1MT 1-methyl-DL-tryptophan, MTH-Trp methylthiohydantoin-dl-tryptophan, TDO tryptophan-2,3-dioxygenase
Clinical trials using IDO inhibitors
| Drug | Phase | Mono or combo | Cancer | Clinical trial ID | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| INCB 024360 | I | Mono | All | NCT01195311 | ASCO 2013 |
| Ib/II | With ipilimumab | Melanoma | NCT01604889 | ASCO 2014/Recruiting | |
| II | With MELITAC 12.1 | Melanoma | NCT01961115 | Recruiting | |
| II | Mono | Ovary | NCT01685255 | Recruiting | |
| II | Mono | MDS | NCT01822691 | Recruiting | |
| Ib/II | With MK3475 | All/NSCLC | NCT02178722 | Recruiting | |
| Ib/II | With CDX-1401, poly ICLC | Ovary | NCT02166905 | Recruiting | |
| Pilot | Mono | Ovary (neoaduvant) | NCT02042430 | Recruiting | |
| Indoximod (NLG2101) | I | Mono | All | NCT00739609 | ASCO 2012 |
| Ib | With docetaxel | All | NCT01191216 | ASCO 2013 | |
| Ib/II | With AD.p53 DC vaccine | All/breast | NCT01042535 | ASCO 2013/Recruiting | |
| II | With docetaxel | Breast (HER2-) | NCT01792050 | Recruiting | |
| II | Mono | Prostate | NCT01560923 | Recruiting | |
| II | With sipuleucel-T | Prostate | NCT01560923 | Recruiting | |
| Ib/II | With nab-paclitaxel, gemcitabine | Pancreas | NCT02077881 | Recruiting | |
| Ib/II | With ipilimumab | Melanoma | NCT02073123 | Recruiting | |
| Ib/II | With temozolomide | Brain | NCT02052648 | Recruiting | |
| IDO peptide vaccine | I | With imiquimod, montanide | NSCLC | NCT01219348 | Iversen 2013 [ |
| Ib | With temozolomide | Melanoma | NCT01543464 | Recruiting | |
| NLG919 | I | Mono | All | NCT02048709 | Recruiting |
DC dendritic cell, MDS myelodysplastic syndrome, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer
Fig. 2Potential mechanism of combinatory synergism between three methods of immune checkpoint blockade. PD-1 or CTLA4 signaling inhibits proliferation of effector T cells. In addition, some studies have suggested that Tregs are also partly activated by PD-1 or CTLA4 signaling [100]. IDO signaling induces tumor immune tolerance by both suppressing effector T cells and activating Tregs. Therefore, if PD-1 or CTLA-4 signaling blockade is combined with an IDO inhibitor, effector T cells may be further activated and Tregs may be further suppressed. The result could be more effective reversal of immune tolerance and enhanced anti-tumor immune response. APC, antigen-presenting cell; PD-1, programmed cell death-1; PD-L1, programmed cell death-ligand 1; CTLA4, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4; B7-1/2, peripheral membrane proteins found on activated APCs