| Literature DB >> 29712568 |
Yiwen Li1,2, Carmine Carpenito3, George Wang3, David Surguladze4, Amelie Forest3, Maria Malabunga3, Mary Murphy3, Yiwei Zhang5, Andreas Sonyi3, Darin Chin3, Douglas Burtrum5, Ivan Inigo4, Anthony Pennello4, Leyi Shen3, Laurent Malherbe6, Xinlei Chen7, Gerald Hall3, Jaafar N Haidar3, Dale L Ludwig5, Ruslan D Novosiadly3, Michael Kalos8,2,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Modulation of the PD-1/PD-L1 axis through antagonist antibodies that block either receptor or ligand has been shown to reinvigorate the function of tumor-specific T cells and unleash potent anti-tumor immunity, leading to durable objective responses in a subset of patients across multiple tumor types.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29712568 PMCID: PMC5925824 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-018-0329-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Binding and blocking properties of LY3300054. Panels a-c: 96-well plates were coated with 100 ng/well of recombinant (a) human, (b) cynomolgus or (c) murine PD-L1-Fc fusion protein. Bound LY3300054 was detected using HRP-conjugated anti-human Fab antibody and addition of chromogenic substrate (OD at 450 nm). Each data point is the average of two replicates. Data are representative of multiple independent experiments. Panels d and e: 96-well plates were coated with 100 ng/well of recombinant PD-1 (d) or B7–1 protein (EPlate bound PD-L1 was detected using HRP-conjugated streptavidin and addition of chromogenic substrate (OD at 450 nm). Each data point is the average of two replicates. Data are representative of multiple independent experiments. Human IgG1 LY3300054
Fig. 2Identification of LY3300054 epitope residues in human PD-L1. Panel a: CLUSTALW multiple sequence alignment of domain 1 of human (hu-PD-L1), canine (ca-PD-L1), and murine (mu-PD-L1) PD-L1 and human PD-L2 (huPD-L2) to identify LY3300054 a subset of the specificity anchors on hu-PD-L1. Underlined is the human PD-1 6Ǻ binding site on hu-PD-L1 (according to PDB: 4ZQK (26602187)). An alignment position is marked with (*) if both mu-PD-L1 and ca-PD-L1 substitutions differ from the hu-PD-L1 sequence. An alignment position is marked with (:) if either the mu-PD-L1 or ca-PD-L1 substitution differs from the hu-PD-L1 sequence. Panel b: Position N63 on human PD-L1 is a specificity anchor for LY3300054. Canine-to-human mutation K63 N (▲)Wild type ca-PD-L1-Fc (ty, human-to-canine mutant N69H (△). ELISA was repeated twice with three technical replicates for each concentration
Fig. 3LY3300054 enhances T cell activation in vitro. Panel a: Jurkat-NFAT reporter assay: Each data point represents the average of two technical replicates, with error bars representing the SD. Data are representative of three independent experiments. Panel b: Mixed leukocyte reactions. Supernatants were measured for IFN-γ production by ELISA. Each data point represents the average of 8 replicates, with error bars representing the SEM. Data are representative of multiple experiments and donor T cells/DC pairs. Panel c: Tetanus toxoid recall assay: Supernatants were measured for IFN-γ production by ELISA. Each data point represents the average of 4 replicates, with error bars representing the SD. Data are representative of two experiments with PBMC obtained from different donors. Panels d and e: Gene expression analysis of cell lysate (E) and cytokine level analysis of cell culture supernatant (F) from the mixed leukocyte reactions using QuantiGene Plex and microbead-based immunoassay panels, respectively. Volcano plots show Log2 fold change of gene expression (E) or cytokine levels (F) in the LY3300054 treated group compared to control group. The highlighted circles correspond to differentially expressed genes (DEG) or cytokines that display fold change > 1.7 (black solid vertical line) and p value < 0.05 (horizontal dotted line). Circle sizes are proportional to the level of expression in LY3300054 group. One-way ANOVA was used for statistical analysis. Human IgG1 LY3300054
Fig. 4Combination of LY3300054 and ipilimumab enhances T cell activation in vitro. Panel a: Mixed leukocyte reactions. Allogeneic DC were co-cultured with purified CD4+ T cells for 72 h in the presence of increasing (two-fold increments) concentrations of LY3300054, ipilimumab or a combination of both antibodies ranging from 0.0003 to 67 nM. Supernatants were measured for IFN-γ and IL-2 production by ELISA. Each data point represents the average of 8 replicates, with error bars representing the SEM. Data were generated with four different PBMC donors. Panel b: Gene expression analysis of cell lysate from the mixed leukocyte reactions was performed using QuantiGene Plex assay. Venn diagram showing the number of shared (overlap circle) and treatment-specific (no overlap) DEGs across the different treatments. Tables list the Log2 fold-change of LY3300054 vs control group for genes with fold-change > 1.5, p value < 0.05. One-way ANOVA was used for statistical analysis
Fig. 5LY3300054 demonstrates anti-tumor efficacy in xenograft tumor models reconstituted with human immune cells. Antibody treatment (indicated by red arrows), either human IgG or LY3300054, was delivered by intra-peritoneal injection in each case at 10 mg/kg. Tumor growth was monitored by caliper, and results are represented as a geometric mean of tumor volumes ± SEM. Panel a: Co-implantation model: NCI-H292 tumor cells and freshly isolated human PBMC were co-implanted subcutaneously into the flanks of NSG mice. n = 8 for all groups. Panel b: Established tumor model: HCC827 tumor cells were implanted subcutaneously into the flanks of NSG mice. When tumors reached volumes of ~ 300 mm3 (approximately 5 weeks), mice were infused with previously expanded human T cells (black arrow). n = 8 for all groups. Panels c and d: Established tumor models in CD34+ hHSC-reconstituted animals: HCC827 tumors (NSG, panel |C) or OV79 tumors (NOG, panel D). Mice were implanted subcutaneously with either HCC827 or OV79 tumor fragments at ~ 15–17 weeks of age (~ 13–15 weeks post HSC engraftment). HCC827 tumors were allowed to grow to ~ 200 mm3 (4 weeks) and OV79 were allowed to grow to ~ 150 mm3 (18 days) before starting weekly treatments of either human IgG1 or LY3300054 at 10 mg/kg. n = 5–9 per group. Statistically significant difference is indicated* (two-way repeated measurement ANOVA, RM-ANOVA)
Fig. 6LY3300054 enhances peripheral T cell engraftment and activation and induces T cell inflamed phenotype in tumor tissues of CD34+ hHSC-engrafted NOG and NSG mice. Panels a, b, c, d: Blood from OV79-bearing CD34+ hHSC-engrafted NOG mice was analyzed for human T cell engraftment and phenotype using TruCount tubes on day 18 (pre-dose), day 34 (after three antibody doses), and day 46 (after four antibody doses). Peripheral T cell engraftment (A); CD8:CD4 ratio (B); PD-1 expression in CD4+ (C) and CD8+ T cells (D) cells. Results are represented as a geometric mean of engraftment + SEM with n = 9 mice on day 18 and day 34, and n = 5 mice on day 46. Two-way repeated measurements ANOVA was used for statistical analysis. Panel e: Gene expression analysis of tumor sample was performed using QuantiGene Plex assay. Volcano plots show Log2 fold-change of gene expression in the LY3300054 treated group compared to control group. The highlighted circles correspond to differentially expressed genes that display fold change > 1.7 (black solid vertical line) and p value < 0.05 (horizontal dotted line). Circle sizes are proportional to the level of expression in LY3300054 group. One-way ANOVA was used for statistical analysis. Panel f: Venn diagram showing the number of shared and tissue-specific DEGs (LY3300054 vs human IgG treatment) across various tissue types. Table on the right lists shared DEGsacross various tissues with fold-change > 1.7, p value < 0.05 for LY3300054 vs control