| Literature DB >> 27037412 |
Peter Brünker1, Katharina Wartha2, Thomas Friess2, Sandra Grau-Richards1, Inja Waldhauer1, Claudia Ferrara Koller1, Barbara Weiser2, Meher Majety2, Valeria Runza2, Huifeng Niu3, Kathryn Packman3, Ningping Feng3, Sherif Daouti3, Ralf J Hosse1, Ekkehard Mössner1, Thomas G Weber2, Frank Herting2, Werner Scheuer2, Hadassah Sade2, Cuiying Shao4, Bin Liu4, Peng Wang4, Gary Xu4, Suzana Vega-Harring2, Christian Klein1, Klaus Bosslet2, Pablo Umaña5.
Abstract
Dysregulated cellular apoptosis and resistance to cell death are hallmarks of neoplastic initiation and disease progression. Therefore, the development of agents that overcome apoptosis dysregulation in tumor cells is an attractive therapeutic approach. Activation of the extrinsic apoptotic pathway is strongly dependent on death receptor (DR) hyperclustering on the cell surface. However, strategies to activate DR5 or DR4 through agonistic antibodies have had only limited clinical success. To pursue an alternative approach for tumor-targeted induction of apoptosis, we engineered a bispecific antibody (BsAb), which simultaneously targets fibroblast-activation protein (FAP) on cancer-associated fibroblasts in tumor stroma and DR5 on tumor cells. We hypothesized that bivalent binding to both FAP and DR5 leads to avidity-driven hyperclustering of DR5 and subsequently strong induction of apoptosis in tumor cells but not in normal cells. Here, we show that RG7386, an optimized FAP-DR5 BsAb, triggers potent tumor cell apoptosis in vitro and in vivo in preclinical tumor models with FAP-positive stroma. RG7386 antitumor efficacy was strictly FAP dependent, was independent of FcR cross-linking, and was superior to conventional DR5 antibodies. In combination with irinotecan or doxorubicin, FAP-DR5 treatment resulted in substantial tumor regression in patient-derived xenograft models. FAP-DR5 also demonstrated single-agent activity against FAP-expressing malignant cells, due to cross-binding of FAP and DR5 across tumor cells. Taken together, these data demonstrate that RG7386, a novel and potent antitumor agent in both mono- and combination therapies, overcomes limitations of previous DR5 antibodies and represents a promising approach to conquer tumor-associated resistance to apoptosis. Mol Cancer Ther; 15(5); 946-57. ©2016 AACR. ©2016 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27037412 DOI: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-15-0647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer Ther ISSN: 1535-7163 Impact factor: 6.261