| Literature DB >> 32847940 |
Mika Kamata-Sakurai1, Yoshinori Narita2, Yuji Hori3, Takayuki Nemoto4, Ryo Uchikawa2, Masaki Honda3, Naoka Hironiwa5, Kenji Taniguchi2, Meiri Shida-Kawazoe3, Shoichi Metsugi2, Taro Miyazaki6, Naoko A Wada3, Yuki Ohte2, Shun Shimizu3, Hirofumi Mikami3, Tatsuhiko Tachibana3, Natsuki Ono2, Kenji Adachi3, Tetsushi Sakiyama7, Tomochika Matsushita8, Shojiro Kadono2, Shun-Ichiro Komatsu2,3, Akihisa Sakamoto3, Sayuri Horikawa2, Ayano Hirako8, Koki Hamada2, Sotaro Naoi3, Nasa Savory3, Yasuko Satoh2, Motohiko Sato3, Yuki Noguchi3, Junko Shinozuka3, Haruka Kuroi3, Ami Ito3, Tetsuya Wakabayashi3, Masaki Kamimura9, Fumihisa Isomura10, Yasushi Tomii3, Noriaki Sawada2, Atsuhiko Kato2,3, Otoya Ueda3, Yoshito Nakanishi11, Mika Endo2,3, Kou-Ichi Jishage9,10, Yoshiki Kawabe2,3, Takehisa Kitazawa2,3, Tomoyuki Igawa2,3,5.
Abstract
Agonistic antibodies targeting CD137 have been clinically unsuccessful due to systemic toxicity. Because conferring tumor selectivity through tumor-associated antigen limits its clinical use to cancers that highly express such antigens, we exploited extracellular adenosine triphosphate (exATP), which is a hallmark of the tumor microenvironment and highly elevated in solid tumors, as a broadly tumor-selective switch. We generated a novel anti-CD137 switch antibody, STA551, which exerts agonistic activity only in the presence of exATP. STA551 demonstrated potent and broad antitumor efficacy against all mouse and human tumors tested and a wide therapeutic window without systemic immune activation in mice. STA551 was well tolerated even at 150 mg/kg/week in cynomolgus monkeys. These results provide a strong rationale for the clinical testing of STA551 against a broad variety of cancers regardless of antigen expression, and for the further application of this novel platform to other targets in cancer therapy. SIGNIFICANCE: Reported CD137 agonists suffer from either systemic toxicity or limited efficacy against antigen-specific cancers. STA551, an antibody designed to agonize CD137 only in the presence of extracellular ATP, inhibited tumor growth in a broad variety of cancer models without any systemic toxicity or dependence on antigen expression.See related commentary by Keenan and Fong, p. 20.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1. ©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32847940 DOI: 10.1158/2159-8290.CD-20-0328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Discov ISSN: 2159-8274 Impact factor: 39.397