| Literature DB >> 33790906 |
Siqi Chen1, Seigmund W T Lai1, Christine E Brown1,2, Mingye Feng1.
Abstract
Cancer immunotherapy has revolutionized the paradigm for the clinical management of cancer. While FDA-approved cancer immunotherapies thus far mainly exploit the adaptive immunity for therapeutic efficacy, there is a growing appreciation for the importance of innate immunity in tumor cell surveillance and eradication. The past decade has witnessed macrophages being thrust into the spotlight as critical effectors of an innate anti-tumor response. Promising evidence from preclinical and clinical studies have established targeting macrophage phagocytosis as an effective therapeutic strategy, either alone or in combination with other therapeutic moieties. Here, we review the recent translational advances in harnessing macrophage phagocytosis as a pivotal therapeutic effort in cancer treatment. In addition, this review emphasizes phagocytosis checkpoint blockade and the use of nanoparticles as effective strategies to potentiate macrophages for phagocytosis. We also highlight chimeric antigen receptor macrophages as a next-generation therapeutic modality linking the closely intertwined innate and adaptive immunity to induce efficacious anti-tumor immune responses.Entities:
Keywords: antibody; cancer immunotherapy; chimeric antigen receptor (CAR); macrophage; nanoparticle; phagocytosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33790906 PMCID: PMC8006289 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.635173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Mechanism of action to mobilize macrophages as effector cells against tumor cells. (A) Antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP). Following treatment with mAbs targeting tumor-associated antigens, Fc gamma receptors on macrophages will recognize the Fc domain of the antibody and trigger downstream activation of the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM) to cause phagocytosis of the tumor cell. (B) Nanoparticle-mediated reeducation of M2 tumor associated macrophages (TAMs) into M1 TAMs. Nanoparticles will be recognized as foreign material and engulfed by M2 TAMs. Once this occurs, their contents will be released into the cytosol and trigger polarization of the macrophage away from the M2 pro-tumor phenotype toward the M1 anti-tumor phenotype. This process retrains the macrophage to perform phagocytosis on tumor cells. (C) CD47/SIRPα phagocytosis checkpoint blockade. I. Upon binding of CD47 on the tumor cell to SIRPα on the macrophage, an immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibition motif (ITIM) becomes activated, sparing the tumor cell from phagocytosis. II. Upon binding of the high affinity SIRPα fusion protein or anti-CD47 mAbs to CD47 on the tumor cells, or binding of anti-SIRPα mAbs to SIRPα on macrophages, the CD47/SIRPα axis is blocked and phagocytosis is restored. III. When a bispecific antibody is used, macrophage SIRPα and PD-1 ITIM activation is inhibited by a bispecific anti-CD47/PD-L1 antibody targeting the tumor cells, preventing the ligands from binding to its receptors; IV. In another scenario, the specificity of CD47 blockade is reinforced by dual-targeting of CD47 and tumor-associated antigen via a CD47/TAA bispecific antibody, therefore sparing normal tissue cells expressing CD47 but not TAA; the Fc region on the antibody is recognized by the FcγR on the macrophage, activating its immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM) and subsequently triggering phagocytosis of the tumor cell. (D) CAR-macrophages demonstrate enhanced phagocytic ability and tumor targeting specificity. When fitted with a CAR construct, macrophages are able to recognize tumor cells via their scFv region and trigger phagocytosis of the tumor cell. This occurs at a higher specificity and efficacy due to the CAR construct conferring increased tumor recognition capability to the macrophage.
Current clinical trials involving CD47 blockade.
| NCT Trial Identifier* | Drug Name | Target Disease(s) | Treatment Type | Current Phase | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT04435691 | Magrolimab (Hu5F9-G4) | Recurrent acute myeloid leukemia | With azacitidine | Phase 1 | Recruiting |
| Refractory acute myeloid leukemia | With venetoclax | Phase 2 | |||
| NCT04541017 | T-cell lymphoma | With mogamulizumab | Phase 1 | Not yet recruiting | |
| NCT02953509 | Relapsed/Refractory B-cell Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma | With rituximab or with rituximab and chemotherapy | Phase 1/2 | Recruiting | |
| NCT03248479 | Hematological Malignancies | Alone and with azacitidine | Phase 1 | Recruiting | |
| NCT04599634 | Relapsed and Refractory Indolent B-cell Malignancies | With obinutuzumab and venetoclax | Phase 1 | Not yet recruiting | |
| NCT04435691 | Acute myeloid leukemia | With azacitidine and venetoclax | Phase 1/2 | Recruiting | |
| NCT03869190 | Advanced/Metastatic ureothelial carcinoma | With multiple different immunotherapies | Phase 1/2 | Recruiting | |
| NCT04313881 | Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) | With azacitidine | Phase 3 | Recruiting | |
| NCT02663518 | TTI-621 | Hematological malignancies and solid tumors | Alone or with either rituximab or nivolumab | Phase 1 | Recruiting |
| NCT03530683 | TTI-622 | Advanced relapsed/refractory lymphoma or myeloma | Alone or with either rituximab, PD-1 inhibitors, or proteasome inhibitors | Phase 1 | Recruiting |
| NCT02367196 | CC-90002 | Advanced solid and hematological cancers | Alone and with rituximab | Phase 1 | Active, not recruiting |
| NCT04485052 | IBI-188 | Acute myeloid leukemia | With azacitidine | Phase 1/2 | Recruiting |
| NCT03763149 | Advanced malignancies | Alone | Phase 1 | Active, not recruiting | |
| NCT04485065 | High risk myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) | With azacitidine | Phase 1 | Not yet recruiting | |
| NCT03717103 | Advanced malignancies | Alone and with rituximab | Phase 1 | Recruiting | |
| NCT03834948 | AO-176 | Advanced solid tumors | Alone and with paclitaxel | Phase 1/2 | Recruiting |
| NCT04445701 | Relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma | Alone and with either dexamethasone or both dexamethasone and bortezomib | Phase 1/2 | Recruiting | |
| NCT04653142 | BI 765063 | Advanced solid tumors | Alone or with BI 765064 | Phase 1 | Recruiting |
| BI 765064 | Alone or with BI 765063 | ||||
| NCT03990233 | BI 765063 | Advanced solid tumors | Alone or with BI 754091 | Phase 1 | Recruiting |
| NCT04417517 | ALX-148 | High risk myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) | Alone and with azacitidine | Phase 1/2 | Recruiting |
| NCT04675294 | Advanced head/neck squamous cell carcinoma | Alone and with pembrolizumab | Phase 2 | Recruiting | |
| NCT04675333 | Alone or with pembrolizumab or with pembrolizumab and chemotherapy | Phase 2 | Recruiting | ||
| NCT03013218 | Advanced solid tumors and lymphoma | Alone or with either pembrolizumab, trastuzumab, rituximab, pembrolizumab and 5FU and platinum, or trastuzumab and ramucirumab and paclitaxel | Phase 1 | Recruiting | |
| NCT04097769 | HX009 | Advanced malignant tumors | Alone | Phase 1 | Recruiting |
| NCT04202003 | TJ011133 | Relapsed/refractory AML or MDS | Alone | Phase 1/2 | Recruiting |
| NCT03934814 | Relapsed/refractory advanced solid tumors and lymphoma | Alone or with either pembrolizumab or rituximab | Phase 1 | Recruiting |
*Information adapted from clinicaltrials.gov is current as of 10 January 2021.