| Literature DB >> 32397088 |
Peter W Janes1, Mary E Vail1, Hui K Gan1, Andrew M Scott1.
Abstract
The Eph subfamily of receptor tyrosine kinases mediate cell-cell communication controlling cell and tissue patterning during development. While generally less active in adult tissues, they often re-emerge in cancers, particularly on undifferentiated or progenitor cells in tumors and the tumor microenvironment, associated with tumor initiation, angiogenesis and metastasis. Eph receptors are thus attractive therapeutic targets, and monoclonal antibodies have been commonly developed and tested for anti-cancer activity in preclinical models, and in some cases in the clinic. This review summarizes 20 years of research on various antibody-based approaches to target Eph receptors in tumors and the tumor microenvironment, including their mode of action, tumor specificity, and efficacy in pre-clinical and clinical testing.Entities:
Keywords: Eph receptor; cancer; therapeutic antibodies
Year: 2020 PMID: 32397088 PMCID: PMC7281212 DOI: 10.3390/ph13050088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1Therapeutic mechanisms of anti-Eph receptor antibodies: (1) Agonist mAbs can promote receptor clustering, tyrosine phosphorylation, signaling (with downstream effects on cell behavior such as cytoskeletal rearrangement), internalization and degradation; (2) Antagonist mAbs inhibit Eph receptor function, such as by blocking binding to ligand on adjacent cells (blue); (3) Bispecific antibodies, which concurrently bind distinct receptor types on the same cell, or on different cell types, such as to recruit T cells; (4) Apoptosis, or cell death, either directly due to signaling effects, or by immune-mediated ADCC (antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity), or CDC (complement-dependent cytotoxicity); (5) Conjugation of cytotoxic drugs or radioactive isotopes; (6) Use of mAb antigen-binding domains for targeting of CAR-T cells. The target Eph-expressing cell could be either a transformed tumor cell or a non-transformed cell in the tumor microenvironment, contributing to the stroma, vasculature or immune regulation.
Antibodies Against Eph Receptors, Applications, and if Tested in the Clinic.
| Target | Antibody | Effects/Application | Clinic | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EphA2 | EA1.2 | Agonist, receptor phosphorylation and degradation. Inhibition of tumor cell growth/tube formation | No | [ |
| EphA2 | EA2, B233 | Agonist, tumor cell selective, inhibition of MDA-MB-231 breast tumor growth in vivo | No | [ |
| EphA2 | EA5 | EphA2 degradation in ovarian tumors in vivo, inhibition of tumor growth | No | [ |
| EphA2 | IgG25 | Agonist, inhibitory in a pancreatic xenograft | No | [ |
| EphA2 | IgG28 | Ligand blocking, inhibitory in a pancreatic xenograft | No | [ |
| EphA2 | mAb208 | Agonist, leading to receptor degradation, promoting CD8 T cell-mediated lysis | No | [ |
| EphA2 | 3F2-3M (B233) | Agonist, induction of ADCC | No | [ |
| EphA2 | DS-8895a | Antagonist, induction of ADCC; radiolabeled for biodistribution | Yes | [ |
| EphA2 | IF7-Lu-177 | Radiolabeled mAb inhibited murine leukemia model | No | [ |
| EphA2 | 1C1/MEDI-547 | Agonist, receptor phosphorylation and internalization; Auristatin-1C1 ADC (not 1C1 alone) inhibited tumor growth and metastasis in vivo; radiolabeled for biodistribution | Yes | [ |
| EphA2 | 4B3 | Radio-labeled for PET/MRI biodistribution imaging | No | [ |
| EphA2 | MM-310 | Pro-docetaxol loaded immunoliposomes, tumor targeting and growth inhibition, low organ toxicity | Begun | [ |
| EphA3 | IIIA4/KB004/ | Agonist, receptor phosphorylation and internalization; Targeted stem-like tumor and TME cells, inhibited growth and vascularity of solid and hematopoietic tumors | Yes | [ |
| EphA3 | IIIA4 conjugates | Radioactive or drug payloads inhibited tumor growth in leukemic and GBM models; also in vivo imaging | No | [ |
| EphA2/A3 | A2/A3 BsAb | Reduced GBM stem-cell qualities and tumor growth in vivo | No | [ |
| EphA10 | EphA10/CD3 BsAb | Promoted T cell-mediated tumor cell lysis and inhibited breast cancer xenografts | No | [ |
| EphB2 | 2H9 | Antagonist. Auristatin-ADC inhibited colon xenograft growth | No | [ |
| EphB4 | C2 | Inhibits tumor angiogenesis and growth | No | [ |
| EphB4 | Mab131, Mab47 | Inhibit tumor angiogenesis and growth; radio- labeled to image; 131 induces receptor degradation | No | [ |
| EphrinA4 | PF-06647263 | ADC with calicheamicin-γ1, inhibited breast and ovarian xenografts | Yes | [ |
| EphrinB2 | scFv B11, 2B1 | Inhibited angiogenesis and pancreatic xenografts | No | [ |