| Literature DB >> 33277440 |
Julie Preillon1, Julia Cuende1, Virginie Rabolli1, Gregory Driessens2, Catherine Hoofd1, Lucile Garnero1, Marjorie Mercier1, Noémie Wald1, Angela Pappalardo3, Sofie Denies1, Diane Jamart1, Anne-Catherine Michaux1, Romain Pirson1, Vincent Pitard3, Martine Bagot4, Shruthi Prasad1, Erica Houthuys1, Margreet Brouwer1, Reece Marillier1, Florence Lambolez1, Joäo R Marchante1, Florence Nyawouame1, Mathew J Carter5, Véronique Baron-Bodo1, Anne Marie-Cardine4, Mark Cragg5, Julie Déchanet-Merville3,6.
Abstract
TIGIT is an immune checkpoint inhibitor expressed by effector CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, NK cells, and regulatory T cells (Tregs). Inhibition of TIGIT-ligand binding using antagonistic anti-TIGIT mAbs has shown in vitro potential to restore T-cell function and therapeutic efficacy in murine tumor models when combined with an anti-PD(L)-1 antibody. In the current work, we demonstrate broader TIGIT expression than previously reported in healthy donors and patients with cancer with expression on γδ T cells, particularly in CMV-seropositive donors, and on tumor cells from hematologic malignancies. Quantification of TIGIT density revealed tumor-infiltrating Tregs as the population expressing the highest receptor density. Consequently, the therapeutic potential of anti-TIGIT mAbs might be wider than the previously described anti-PD(L)-1-like restoration of αβ T-cell function. CD155 also mediated inhibition of γδ T cells, an immune population not previously described to be sensitive to TIGIT inhibition, which could be fully prevented via use of an antagonistic anti-TIGIT mAb (EOS-448). In PBMCs from patients with cancer, as well as in tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes from mice, the higher TIGIT expression in Tregs correlated with strong antibody-dependent killing and preferential depletion of this highly immunosuppressive population. Accordingly, the ADCC/ADCP-enabling format of the anti-TIGIT mAb had superior antitumor activity, which was dependent upon Fcγ receptor engagement. In addition, the anti-TIGIT mAb was able to induce direct killing of TIGIT-expressing tumor cells both in human patient material and in animal models, providing strong rationale for therapeutic intervention in hematologic malignancies. These findings reveal multiple therapeutic opportunities for anti-TIGIT mAbs in cancer therapeutics. ©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33277440 DOI: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-20-0464
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer Ther ISSN: 1535-7163 Impact factor: 6.261