| Literature DB >> 30413827 |
Pedro Berraondo1,2,3, Miguel F Sanmamed4,5,6,7, María C Ochoa4,5,6, Iñaki Etxeberria4,5,6, Maria A Aznar4,5,6, José Luis Pérez-Gracia4,5,6,7, María E Rodríguez-Ruiz4,5,6,7, Mariano Ponz-Sarvise4,5,6,7, Eduardo Castañón4,5,6,7, Ignacio Melero8,9,10,11.
Abstract
Cytokines are soluble proteins that mediate cell-to-cell communication. Based on the discovery of the potent anti-tumour activities of several pro-inflammatory cytokines in animal models, clinical research led to the approval of recombinant interferon-alpha and interleukin-2 for the treatment of several malignancies, even if efficacy was only modest. These early milestones in immunotherapy have been followed by the recent addition to clinical practice of antibodies that inhibit immune checkpoints, as well as chimeric antigen receptor T cells. A renewed interest in the anti-tumour properties of cytokines has led to an exponential increase in the number of clinical trials that explore the safety and efficacy of cytokine-based drugs, not only as single agents, but also in combination with other immunomodulatory drugs. These second-generation drugs under clinical development include known molecules with novel mechanisms of action, new targets, and fusion proteins that increase half-life and target cytokine activity to the tumour microenvironment or to the desired effector immune cells. In addition, the detrimental activity of immunosuppressive cytokines can be blocked by antagonistic antibodies, small molecules, cytokine traps or siRNAs. In this review, we provide an overview of the novel trends in the cytokine immunotherapy field that are yielding therapeutic agents for clinical trials.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30413827 PMCID: PMC6325155 DOI: 10.1038/s41416-018-0328-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Fig. 1Interleukin (IL)-2 receptors. IL-2 is recognised by three types of receptor complex expressed on natural killer (NK) and T lymphocytes. The non-signalling, low-affinity receptor is composed of the IL-2Rα chain alone. The medium-affinity receptor is composed of the IL-2Rβ chain and the common γ chain. Finally, the high-affinity IL-2 receptor is composed of the IL-2Rα, the IL-2Rβ chain and the common γ chain. Ligand binding to the medium-affinity and high-affinity receptors leads to the phosphorylation of Janus kinase-1 (JAK1) and JAK3 and the recruitment and subsequent phosphorylation of signal transducer and activator of transcription-3 (STAT3) and STAT5, and ensuing transcriptional changes
Fig. 2Engineered interleukin-15 (IL-15) variants. IL-15 is mainly produced as a membrane-bound heterodimer associated with IL-15Rα. The interaction of the IL-15–IL15-Rα complex with IL-2/IL-15Rβ and the common γc receptor triggers the phosphorylation of Janus kinase-1 (JAK1) and JAK3 and the recruitment and subsequent phosphorylation of signal transducer and activator of transcription-3 (STAT3) and STAT5. Clinical trials have tested the safety and efficacy of recombinant aglycosylated IL-15 and engineered variants to mimic the trans-presentation process and to enhance the half-life in circulation. These variants included the superagonist RLI protein (comprising the binding domain of IL-15Rα fused to IL-15), ALT-803 (comprising mutated IL-15 fused to the binding domain of IL-15Rα and an IgG1 Fc domain) and Sushi-IL15-Apo (a fusion protein encompassing the binding domain of IL-15Rα, IL-15 and apolipoprotein A-I)
Representative cytokine clinical trials
| Cytokine | Agent | Main mode of action | Clinical trial |
|---|---|---|---|
| IL-15 | ALT-803 IL-15+T or NK cells IL15+alemtuzumab IL15+rituximab | Expansion of NK and T lymphocytes | NCT02989844 NCT01875601 NCT02465957 NCT01385423 NCT1369888 NCT02689453 NCT02384954 |
| IL-2 | NKTR-214+atezolizumab NKTR-214+nivolumab NKTR-214+nivolumab+ipilimumab Cergutuzumab amunaleukin+atezolizumab RO6874281+trastuzumab or cetuximab RO6874281+atezolizumab RO6874281+atezolizumab+bevacizumab | Expansion of NK and T lymphocytes | NCT03138889 NCT02983045 NCT03282344 NCT03435640 NCT02983045 NCT02350673 NCT02627274 NCT03386721 NCT03063762 NCT03063762 |
| TNF-α | Nivolumab+ipilimumab+certolizumab or infliximab | Blockade of activation-immune cell death of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes | NCT03293784 |
| IL-10 | Pegilodecakin+FOLFOX | Blockade of activation-immune cell death of tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes | NCT02923921 |
| IL-12 | Transduced TILs Electroporated plasmid Electroporated plasmid+pembrolizumab | Promotion of NK cells and Th1 CD4+ and CD8+ lymphocytes | NCT01236573 NCT01579318 NCT00323206 NCT01502293 NCT02345330 NCT02493361 NCT03132675 |
| TGF-β | Galunisertib+nivolumab Galunisertib+durvalumab Fresolimumab+radiotherapy M7824 (dual block of TGF-β and PD-L1) | Inflammation of immune-excluded tumours | NCT02423343 NCT02734160 NCT02581787 NCT03451773 NCT03451773 |
| CSF-1 | Cabiralizumab+nivolumab Pexidartinib+durvalumab Pexidartinib+durvalumab or tremelimumab Pexidartinib+pembrolizumab | Suppression of tumour-associated myeloid cell | NCT03502330 NCT02777710 NCT02718911 NCT02452424 |
| IL-8 | mAb anti-IL-8+nivolumab | Suppression of tumour-associated myeloid cell | NCT03400332 |
| CCL2, CCL3 and CCL5 | CCR2/CCR5 inhibitor+nivolumab or chemotherapy | Suppression of tumour-associated myeloid cell | NCT03184870 |
| VEGF | Bevacizumab+atezolizumab | Suppression of tumour-associated myeloid cell | NCT01984242 |
Fig. 3Potential combinations of cytokine-based drugs with other modalities of cancer immunotherapy. Cytokines have been dichotomised into immunostimulatory cytokines (blue) and immunosuppressive cytokines (beige). The arrows indicate combinations with other immunotherapy approaches that are currently under research. TILs tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes, CARs chimeric antigen receptor T cells, ADCC antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity