| Literature DB >> 29409507 |
Cécile Chalouni1, Sophia Doll2.
Abstract
Antibody-Drug Conjugates (ADCs) are a class of cancer therapeutics that combines antigen specificity and potent cytotoxicity in a single molecule as they are comprised of an engineered antibody linked chemically to a cytotoxic drug. Four ADCs have received approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the European Medicine Agency (EMA) and can be prescribed for metastatic conditions while around 60 ADCs are currently enrolled in clinical trials. The efficacy of an ADC greatly relies on its intracellular trafficking and processing of its components to trigger tumor cell death. A limited number of studies have addressed these critical processes that both challenge and help foster the design of ADCs. This review highlights those mechanisms and their relevance for future development of ADCs as cancer therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody-drug conjugates; Endocytic compartments; Endocytosis; Intracellular trafficking
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29409507 PMCID: PMC5802061 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-017-0667-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1a - ADC structure: An ADC is composed of an antibody coupled to cytotoxic drugs by linkers. b - ADC trafficking and processing classic model: The ADC binds to its surface antigen (1) and the complex is internalized (2), it reaches lysosomes where its linker of the ADC is degraded leading to the release of the drug (3), the drug passes from the intracellular compartment to the cytosol (4), and binds to its target, DNA or tubulin (5) ensue apoptosis. It may also be released into the microenvironment via pumps or passive transfer through the cell membrane (6), capacity to enter a neighbor cancer cell (7) resulting in bystander effect. c- Endocytosis and autophagy pathways
Roles of molecules involved in endocytosis in normal and cancer cells. Figure adapted from L. Lanzeti et al
| Molecule | Role in normal cells | Role in Cancer cells | Alterations | Tumor type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clathrin | Endocytic vesicle formation at PM Cell division | Tumor suppressor | M, T | Lymphoma Kidney |
| Dynamin 2 | Fission of endocytic vesicles | Migration | O | Pancreas |
| Rab5A | Vesicle formation | Invasiveness | O | Breast |
| Rab4 | Recycling to PM | Invasiveness | O | Breast |
| Rab11 and effectors | Recycling of Tight junctions, EGFR and integrins to PM | Invasiveness | O | Breast |
| Rab 1A | Sensing of amino acids | Proliferation | O | Colon |
| Rab7 | Formation of autolysosomes | Tumor suppressor | na | |
| Numb | Maintenance of stem cell compartments | EMT | U | Breast |
| Rab2A | Fusion of late endosomes with lysosomes | Invasiveness | O | Breast |
| Caveolin | Coat protein | Loss of caveolae results in cell proliferation | U, M, O | Multiple cancers |
| LAMP1 | Protein of lysosome membrane | Expression levels correlated with invasiveness | O | Melanoma |
| CD71 | Receptor to transferrin | Loss of CD71 correlates with expansion of CSC and invasiveness | O | Colon |
PM Plasma membrane, M Mutated, T Translocation T O Overexpressed, A Amplified, U Under-expressed, EMT Epithelial- mesenchymal transition, CSC Cancer stem cells, ER Endoplasmic reticulum, NA Not available
Fig. 3Mode of action of anti-HER2 based ADCs, T-DM1 and the Biparatopic anti-HER2 ADC. a - In HER2 positive cancer cells, T-DM1 is internalized via clathrin coated pits and reaches endosomes where the antibody is degraded leading to the release of DM1. A small fraction of T-DM1 reaches the lysosomes where it can also be degraded. DM1 traverse the lysosomal/endosomal membrane and accesses the cytosol. DM1 can then bind the microtubules, triggering depolymerisation leading to cell death. b - In cancer stem cells, T-DM1 is endocytosed via autophagy. It reaches autophagosomes and later autolysosomes where it is degraded leading to the release of DM1. DM1 accesses the cytosol and inhibits microtubules polymerization leading to cell death. c - The biparatopic anti-HER2 ADC has more efficient trafficking to the lysosomes compared to the monoclonal T-DM1. Its drug tubulysin is liberated in the lysosomes and accesses the cytosol where it can induce the depolymerization of microtubules. In addition, it can exert a bystander effect
Trafficking, drug intracellular targets and bystander effects of ADCs that have received FDA approval or are enrolled in Phases II or III clinical trial
| Name | Antigen | Receptor mediated endocytosis | Autophagy | Bystander effect | Target (drug) | Indication (stage) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CCV | RE | EE | LE-Lys | ||||||
| SGN35 | CD30 | + | na | na | + | na | + | Tubulin (MMAE) | ALCL and HK (FDA approved 2011) |
| T-DM1 | HER2 | + | + | na | – | + | – | Tubulin | HER2+ metastatic breast cancer (FDA approved 2013) |
| SGN33 | CD33 | na | na | na | + | na | na | DNA (PBD) | |
| IMGN779 | CD33 | na | na | na | na | na | + | DNA (IDB)) | |
| ROVA-T | DLL3 | na | na | na | + | na | na | DNA (PBD) | |
| CDX-011* | GPNMB | na | na | – | – | + | na | Tubulin (MMAE) | Melanoma, osteocarcinoma (Phase II) |
| RG7596 | CD79b | na | na | na | + | na | na | Tubulin (MMAE) | NHL (Phase II) |
| SGN-CD19A* | CD19 | + | na | na | + | na | na | Tubulin (MMAF) | NHL (Phase II) |
| PSMA ADC* | PSMA | + | + | na | na | na | na | Tubulin (MMAE) | Prostate cancer (Phase II) |
| IMGN853 | FOLR1 | na | na | + | na | na | + | Tubulin (DM4) | Ovarian cancer (Phase III) |
| SAR3419 | CD19 | na | na | + | na | na | – | Tubulin (DM4) | Diffuse Large B cell lymphoma (Phase II) |
| IMGN529 | CD37 | na | na | na | na | na | na | Tubulin (DM1) | NHL (Phase II) |
| BT-062 | CD138 | na | na | na | na | na | + | Tubulin (DM4) | Multiple myeloma (Phase II) |
| Bay 94–9343 | Mesothelin | na | na | na | + | na | + | Tubulin (DM4) | Mesothelin expressing tumors (phase II) |
| SAR408701 | CEACAM5 | na | na | na | na | na | na | Tubulin (DM4) | Solid tumors (Phase II) |
| SAR428926 | LAMP1 | na | na | na | na | na | na | Tubulin (DM4) | Solid tumors (Phase II) |
Legend for abbreviations: CCV Clathrin coated vesicles; RE Recycling endosomes; EE Early endosomes; LE Late endosomes; LE-Lys Late endosomes and lysosomes; MMAE Mono-methyl auristatin E; MMAF mono-methyl auristatin F; DM1 Emtansine; DM4 Mertansine