| Literature DB >> 31014360 |
Hongbing Ma1, Iyer Swaminathan Padmanabhan2, Simrit Parmar3, Yuping Gong4.
Abstract
Despite major scientific discoveries and novel therapies over the past four decades, the treatment outcomes of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), especially in the adult patient population remain dismal. In the past few years, an increasing number of targets such as CD33, CD123, CLL-1, CD47, CD70, and TIM3, have been developed for immunotherapy of AML. Among them, CLL-1 has attracted the researchers' attention due to its high expression in AML while being absent in normal hematopoietic stem cell. Accumulating evidence have demonstrated CLL-1 is an ideal target for AML. In this paper, we will review the expression of CLL-1 on normal cells and AML, the value of CLL-1 in diagnosis and follow-up, and targeting CLL-1 therapy-based antibody and chimeric antigen receptor T cell therapy as well as providing an overview of CLL-1 as a target for AML.Entities:
Keywords: Acute myeloid leukemia; CD371; CLEC12A; CLL-1; DCAL-2; hMICL
Year: 2019 PMID: 31014360 PMCID: PMC6480870 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-019-0726-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1The structure of CLL-1 gene and protein. a The human CLL-1 gene maps to 12p13, with high homology to LOX-1 and BGR. b CLL-1 protein consists of a single extracellular carbohydrate recognition domains with 6N-glycosylation sites, a transmembrane region, and an intracellular domain with 2 motifs of I/VXYXXL and YXXM at NH2 terminus
Fig. 2Mechanism of CLL-1 function. The ligands from dead cell or other material trigger the phosphorylation of ITAM and activation of Syk signaling, eliciting the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and activation of NF-kB through a complex containing CARD9, MALT1, and Bcl-10; the latter leads to the gene transcription and release of chemokines/cytokines, facilitating neutrophil activation and inflammatory infiltration. This process can be counterbalanced when MSU or unknown ligand on dead cells bind CLL-1, recruiting tyrosine phosphatases SHP-1, and SHP-2 to negatively regulate Syk signaling, as a result, inflammation is eliminated or alleviated. It is unknown whether YXXM in CLL-1 can bind P85 of PI3K and activate the downstream signals
Preclinical data for anti-CLL-1 antibody-based therapy
| Study | Antibody type | In vitro efficacy | Animal model | In vivo efficacy | Adverse effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zheng 2019 [ | Anti-CLL-1-PBD | Highly active against AML cell line and primary AML cells | Mice | Significant decrease in leukemia burden | No weight loss and signs of moribundity |
| Cynomolgus monkeys | N/A | Well toleration; welling at injection site; remarkable decrease of granulocyte and monocyte, minimal decrease of RBC; no effect on PLT and lymphocytes | |||
| Jiang 2018 [ | Anti-CLL-1-IQB | Effective to AML cell line and primary AML cell; inhibit LSC colony formation | Mice | Significant decrease in leukemia burden | No effect on engraftment or differentiation of CD34+ cells |
| Zhao 2010 [ | Anti-CLL-1 antibody | Effective to AML cell line and primary AML cells | Mice | Delayed tumor growth | N/A |
| Wiersma 2015 [ | scFvCLL-1:TRAIL | Upregulating TRAIL on granulocytes, improving anti-tumor activity of granulocyte; enhancing ADCC. | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Leong 2017 [ | Anti-CLL-1/anti–CD3 bispecific antibody | Highly active against CLL-1+ AML cell lines and clinical AML samples, especially for CD3H. | Cynomolgus monkeys | N/A | Vascular shock with CLL-1/CD3H; well toleration with CLL-1/CD3L. Evident decrease of monocyte and granulocyte, early decrease of lymphocyte. |
| Lu 2014 [ | Anti-CLL-1/anti–CD3 bispecific antibody | High cytotoxicity to AML cell lines, modest cytotoxicity to primary AML. | Mice | Elimination of the tumor | No effect on body weight and other status |
| Loo 2015 [ | Anti-CLL-1/anti–CD3 bispecific antibody | Efficiently activating T cells, potent anti-leukemia against primary AML cells | N/A | N/A | N/A |
PBD pyrrolobenzodiazepine, IQB isoquinolidinobenzodiazepine, PLT platelet, RBC red blood cell, PB peripheral blood, scFV single-chain variable fragment, TRAIL tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand, ADCC antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity, CD3H CD3 with high-affinity arm, CD3L CD3 with low-affinity arm
Preclinical data of CLL-1 CAR-T cell therapy
| Study | Generation | Costimulatory domain | Transduction method | In vitro efficacy | Impact on normal cells | NSG mice model |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tashiro 2017 [ | Second | 4-1BB | Retrovirus | Potent and specific cytotoxicity against CLL-1+ targets | Cytotoxic to mature myeloid cells, sparing myeloid progenitor cells | Significantly prolonged survival |
| Laborda 2017 [ | Second | 4-1BB | Lentivirus | Robust toxicity on AML cell lines and patient-derived AML blast | Minor decrease in CFU-GM, no impact on BFU-E, CFU-GEMM, and HSC; Neutropenia. | Complete elimination of leukemia by day 90 |
| Kenderian 2016 [ | Second | 4-1BB | Lentivirus | Modest effect to primary AML blasts; highly effective to CLL-1+ AML cell lines. | N/A | 100% survival at day 200 in combination with cytarabine while 20% in untreated. |
| Wang 2018 [ | Third | CD28 and 4-1BB | Lentivirus | Specific and strong lysis of AML cell line and primary AML blasts | Eradicating mature granulocytes, variable elimination of progenitors, sparing HSC | Significantly decreased leukemia burden and prolonged survival |
| Togni 2018 [ | Second | 4-1BB | Lentivirus | Dose-dependent killing efficacy | N/A | Significantly prolonged survival with CLL-1 CART-A while not with CART-B |
NSG NOD/SCID IL2RγCnull, CFU-GM granulocyte-macrophage progenitor colonies, BFU-E burst-forming units-erythroid, CFU-GEMM colony-forming units-granulocyte, erythroid, macrophage, megakaryocyte
Clinical data of CAR-T cell therapy
| Study identifier | ICG136 | ICG144 | NCT03222674 | NCT03631576 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical phase | I | I | I/II | II/III |
| Target | CLL-1/CD33 | CLL-1/CD33 | Muc1/CLL-1/CD33/CD38/CD56/CD123 | CD123/CLL-1 |
| Generation | Second | Second | Fourth | N/A |
| Costimulatory domain | CD28 for CLL-1/4-1BB for CD33 | CD28 for CLL-1/4-1BB for CD33 | N/A | N/A |
| Transduction method | Lentivirus | Lentivirus | N/A | N/A |
| Patient number | 1 | 1 | 10 | 20 |
| Age (years) | 44 | 6 | 2–75 | ≦75 |
| Conditioning chemotherapy | FC | FC | N/A | N/A |
| CAR-T dose | 7 × 105/kg | 1 × 106/kg/days × 2 days | N/A | N/A |
| Study start | N/A | N/A | 2017 | 2018 |
| Estimated completion date | N/A | N/A | 2020 | 2021 |
| Status | N/A | N/A | Recruiting | Recruiting |
| Results | MRD− followed by sibling matched HSCT | complete response, followed by Haplo-HSCT | N/A | N/A |
| Adverse events | Grade 1 CRS, pancytopenia | Grade 1 CRS, grade 3 neurotoxicity, pancytopenia | N/A | N/A |
FC fludarabine and cyclophosphamide, CRS cytokine release syndrome, FLT-ITD FMS-like tyrosine kinase-3- internal tandem duplication