| Literature DB >> 33921301 |
Fabrizio Marcucci1, Cristiano Rumio1.
Abstract
Antibodies against inhibitory immune checkpoint molecules (ICPMs), referred to as immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), have gained a prominent place in cancer therapy. Several ICIs in clinical use have been engineered to be devoid of effector functions because of the fear that ICIs with preserved effector functions could deplete immune cells, thereby curtailing antitumor immune responses. ICPM ligands (ICPMLs), however, are often overexpressed on a sizeable fraction of tumor cells of many tumor types and these tumor cells display an aggressive phenotype with changes typical of tumor cells undergoing an epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Moreover, immune cells expressing ICPMLs are often endowed with immunosuppressive or immune-deviated functionalities. Taken together, these observations suggest that compounds with the potential of depleting cells expressing ICPMLs may become useful tools for tumor therapy. In this article, we summarize the current state of the art of these compounds, including avelumab, which is the only ICI targeting an ICPML with preserved effector functions that has gained approval so far. We also discuss approaches allowing to obtain compounds with enhanced tumor cell-depleting potential compared to native antibodies. Eventually, we propose treatment protocols that may be applied in order to optimize the therapeutic efficacy of compounds that deplete cells expressing ICPMLs.Entities:
Keywords: ADC; CAR T cells; bispecific; combination therapy; effector functions; epithelial-mesenchymal transition; immune checkpoint; oncolytic virus; overexpression
Year: 2021 PMID: 33921301 PMCID: PMC8069236 DOI: 10.3390/cells10040872
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Expression of ICPMLs on tumor cells, immune cells and other cells of the tumor microenvironment (TME).
| ICPML | Tumor Type | Immune Cells | Other Cells of the TME | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PD-L1 | On cells of many hematologic and solid tumor types | Inducible expression on T cells, macrophages, DCs in response to inflammatory cytokines | On tumor endothelial cells, CAFs | [ |
| B7-H3 | On cells of many hematologic and solid tumor types | Inducible expression on T cells, NK cells, DCs and macrophages | On tumor endothelial cells, CAFs | [ |
| B7-H4 | On cells of many tumor types | Inducible expression on monocytes, macrophages, and myeloid DCs. Constitutive expression on TAMs, tumor Tregs | On tumor endothelial cells, CAFs | [ |
| CD70 | On cells of many hematologic and solid tumor types, very frequent on RCC | On small subset of antigen-stimulated B and T cells, and mature DCs | On tumor endothelial cells, CAFs | [ |
| CD155 | On cells of many types of solid tumors | Low-level expression on immune cells, becomes up-regulated in response to inflammatory stimuli (LPS, cytokines). Expressed on tumor-infiltrating myeloid cells (macrophages, DCs). | On human vascular endothelial cells | [ |
| TIM-1 | O cells of many solid tumor types, most notably RCC and ovarian clear cell carcinoma | On T cells (in particular Th2), Breg and DCs in mice. | [ | |
| CD47 | On cells of many tumor types | Inducible (thrombospondin-1) expression on different types of immune cells (CD8+ T cells, macrophages, DCs, NK cells) | Ubiquitously expressed | [ |
| Galectin-9 | On cells of several human tumors including melanoma, multiple myeloma, mesothelioma | Constitutive expression on Treg, on Th cells upon activation, macrophages. | [ | |
| CD40 | On cells of hematologic tumors | On APCs (DCs), B cells, monocytes | [ |
Abbreviations: APC, antigen-presenting cell; Breg, regulatory B cell; CAF, cancer-associated fibroblast; DC, dendritic cell; ICPML, immune checkpoint molecule ligand; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; NK, natural killer; PD-L1, programmed cell death protein-ligand 1; RCC, renal cell carcinoma; TAM, tumor-associated macrophage; Th, T helper; TIM-1, T-cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain 1; TME, tumor microenvironment; Treg, regulatory T cell.
Anti-ICPML compounds with enhanced target cell-depleting potential reported in the literature and/or in clinical development.
| Compound | Type of Construct | Preclinical or Clinical ( | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Antibodies with enhanced constitutive effector functions | |||
| Anti-B7-H3 (eroblituzumab/MGA271) | mAb with mutated Fc domain | Clinical: NCT01391143, phase I; NCT02381314, phase I, plus ipilimumab; NCT02982941, phase I in children; NCT02475213, phase I, plus pembrolizumab; NCT02923180, phase II, neoadjuvant in prostate cancer; NCT04129320, NCT04634825, phase II/III, plus anti-PD-1 mAb or bispecific anti-PD-1xLAG-3 mAb. | [ |
| Anti-CD70 (cusatuzumab/ARGX-110) | Afucosylated mAb | Clinical: NCT03030612, NCT04264806, NCT04241549, NCT04150887, NCT04023526, phase I/II, plus AZA or venetoclax in MDS, AML, CML; NCT02759250, phase I in NPC; NCT01813539, phase I/II neoplasms. | [ |
| ADCs | |||
| Anti-CD70 (SGN-75) | Humanized anti-CD70 mAb linked to tubulin inhibitor auristatin | Clinical: NCT01015911, phase I in NHL, RCC, modest single-agent activity; NCT01677390, phase Ib, plus everolimus in RCC. | [ |
| Anti-CD70 (SGN-CD70A) | Anti-CD70 mAb linked to PBD dimer | Clinical: NCT02216890, phase I in NHL, RCC, showed modest single-agent activity and high frequency/severity of thrombocytopenia. | [ |
| Anti-CD70 (BMS-936561/ MDX-1203) | Human anti-CD70 mAb linked to duocarmycin derivative | Clinical: NCT00944905, phase I in NHL, RCC. | [ |
| Anti-B7-H3 (MGC018) | Humanized anti-B7-H3 mAb linked to duocarmycin | Clinical: NCT03729596, phase I/II, plus anti-PD-1 in several solid tumors. | [ |
| Anti-B7-H3 (m276) | Human anti-B7-H3 mAb linked to PBD dimer | Preclinical: It depleted both B7-H3+ tumor cells as well as B7-H3+ tumor endothelial cells leading to the eradication of established tumors. Moderate expression of B7-H3 was detected also on normal tissues. | [ |
| Anti-B7-H3 | Anti-B7-H3 mAb linked to chlorin e6 for photodynamic therapy | Preclinical | [ |
| Anti-B7-H4 (h1D11 TDC) | PBD linked to engineered cysteines of an anti-B7-H4 mAb via a protease-labile linker. | Preclinical: This ADC induced durable regression in different mouse models of TNBC. | [ |
| anti-TIM-1 (CDX-014) | Human anti-TIM-1 linked to MMAE | Clinical: NCT02837991, phase I in RCC, development now discontinued. | [ |
| Anti-PD-L1 (STM-108) | Mab anti-glycosylated PD-L1 linked to MMAE | Preclinical: Induced bystander killing on PD-L1- tumor cells. | [ |
| Anti-PD-L1 | scFv-PD-L1 linked to the maytansinoid DM1 | Preclinical: Specific binding to PD-L1+ tumor cells and antiproliferative activity in vitro. | [ |
| Anti-PD-L1 (atezolizumab) | Atezolizumab linked to doxorubicin | Preclinical: Induced cell killing, disruption of tumor spheroids and induced apoptosis in a breast cancer cell line. | [ |
| Bispecific Antibodies | |||
| Anti-B7-H3xanti-CD3 | Preclinical: MEK inhibitor trametinib augmented expression of B7-H3. Combined therapy (trametinib + bispecific mAb) increased T cell infiltration and significantly suppressed tumor growth. | [ | |
| Anti-B7-H3xanti-CD3 | Preclinical: On hematological tumor cells, redirected T cells exhibited significant cytotoxicity, secreted more cytokines and granzyme B and expressed higher levels of activating marker CD69 compared to non-redirected T cells. | [ | |
| Anti-B7-H3xanti-CD3 | Preclinical: On cells of ENKTCL redirected T cells killed tumor cells in vitro and suppressed the growth of NKTCL tumors in mouse models. | [ | |
| Anti-B7-H4xanti-CD3 (mAb clone #25xOKT3) | Two constructs: one Fab (anti-B7-H4) xscFv (anti-CD3),one scFvxscRv | Preclinical: In a humanized mouse model of breast cancer the bispecific Ab had strong antitumor activity and promoted the infiltration of CD8+ CTLs into the tumor without any adverse effects over the long term. | [ |
| Anti-CD155xanti-CD3 | Preclinical | [ | |
| CAR T or NK Cells | |||
| Anti-PD-L1 CAR T cells | T cells expressing theextracellular domain of human PD-1 or the scFv of an anti-PD-L1 | Preclinical: Induced regression of established PDAC cancer by >80% in both xenograft and orthotopic models. | [ |
| Anti-B7-H3 CAR T cells (376.96 mAb) | Preclinical: Control of the growth of PDAC, ovarian cancer and neuroblastoma in xenograft mouse models and in a syngeneic tumor model without toxicity. | [ | |
| Anti-B7-H3 CAR T cells | scFv from an anti-B7-H3 mAb + PD-1 decoy receptor. | Preclinical: Potent antitumor activity in B7-H3+/B7-H1+ tumors in vivo. | [ |
| Anti-B7-H3 CAR T cells | scFv derived from the anti-B7-H3 mAb enoblituzumab | Preclinical: Regression of established solid tumors in xenograft models. Efficacy dependent upon high surface antigen density on tumor tissues. | [ |
| Anti-B7-H3 CAR NK cells (CAR-NK-92MI) | Preclinical: Inhibition of tumor growth in mouse xenografts of NSCLC and prolonged survival of mice. | [ | |
| Anti-B7-H4 CAR T cells | Preclinical: Inhibition of growth of B7-H4+ human ovarian tumor xenografts, but lethal toxicity was observed 6-8 weeks after therapy due to expression of B7-H4 in ductal and mucosal epithelial cells in normal tissues. | [ | |
| Anti-CD47 CAR NK cells | scFv from an anti-CD47 mAb | Preclinical: Inhibition of pancreatic xenograft tumor growth after intratumoral injection in mice. | [ |
| Anti-CD70 CAR T cells | Anti-human and -mouse CD70 CAR T cells | Preclinical: Both human and mouse anti-CAR T cells induced regression of established GBM in xenograft and syngeneic models. | [ |
| Anti-CD70 CAR T cells | Truncated CD27, the CD70 receptor, is the CD70 binder | Preclinical: Elimination of CD70-positive HNSCC cells. | [ |
| Anti-CD70 CAR T cells | Truncated CD27, the CD70 receptor, was used as CD70 binder | Preclinical: Adoptively transferred anti-CD70 CAR T cells induced regression of established murine xenografts. | [ |
| Anti-CD70 CAR T cells | Clinical: NCT04662294, phase I in AML, MM, NHL | N.A. | |
| Anti-CD70 CAR T cells | Clinical: NCT03125577, NCT04429438, phase I/II in hematological B-cell malignancies. | N.A. | |
| Anti-CD70 CAR T cells (CTX130) | Anti-CD70 allogeneic T cells. | Clinical: NCT04502446, phase I in relapsed or refractory T or B cell malignancies. | N.A. |
| Antibodies Inducing Cell Death Independently of Effector Functions | |||
| Anti-CD40 mAb (dacetuzumab) | Preclinical: Dacetuzumab + anti-CD20 mAb rituximab gave synergistic apoptotic effects on NHL cells through distinct, but complementary apoptotic signal transduction pathways. | [ | |
| Anti-CD47 (mAb AO-176) | Clinical: NCT03834948, phase I/II, alone or with paclitaxel in solid tumors; NCT04445701, phase I/II alone or with bortezomib in MM.Preclinical: Induced tumor cell phagocytosis and cytotoxicity on human tumor cells but not normal cells. | [ | |
| Anti-CD47 mAb Ad22 | Preclinical: Ad22 induced apoptosis of Jurkat cells and preactivated PBMC | [ | |
| Anti-CD47 (mAb CC2C6) | Preclinical: Soluble CC2C6 induced apoptosis of T-ALL cells, restored phagocytosis, and synergized with low-dose chemotherapeutics to induce apoptosis. | [ | |
| Anti-CD47 (mAb B6H12.2) | Preclinical: Enhanced phagocytosis of a set of human pancreatic CSCs and directly induced apoptosis in the absence of macrophages. | [ | |
| Anti-galectin 9 (mAb P4D2) | Preclinical: Induced MM cell apoptosis, inhibited tumor growth and reduced tumor infiltration of M2 macrophages. | [ | |
| Aptamers | |||
| Anti-PD-L1 aptamer-drug conjugate | Aptamer-paclitaxel conjugate | Preclinical: The anti-PD-L1 aptamer inhibited PD-1/PD-L1 interaction and restored T-cell function. The conjugate inhibited proliferation of PD-L1-overexpressing TNBC cells. | [ |
| Oncolytic Virus | |||
| Oncolytic virus binding to CD155 | Neuroattenuated poliovirus strain PVSRIPO that replicates in and kills only tumor cells | Clinical: NCT03564782, NCT03712358, NCT02986178, NCT03043391, NCT01491893, phase I/II in invasive breast cancer, melanoma, GBM; NCT04479241, NCT04577807, NCT04690699, phase II plus anti-PD-1or -PD-L1 in GBM, melanoma or other solid tumors. | [ |
Abbreviations: Ab, antibody; AML, acute myeloid leukemia; AZA, azacytidine; CAR, chimeric antigen receptor; CML, chronic myeloid leukemia; CSC, cancer stem-like cell; CTL, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte; ENKTCL, Extranodal nasal natural killer (NK)/T cell lymphoma; Fc, fraction crystallizable, GBM, glioblastoma multiforme; HNSCC, head and neck squamous cell carcinoma; LAG-3, lymphocyte-activation gene 3; mAb, monoclonal antibody; MDS, myelodysplastic syndrome; MM, multiple myeloma; MMAE, monomethyl auristatin E; NHL, non-Hodgkin lymphoma; NPC, nasopharyngeal carcinoma; NSCLC, non-small cell lung cancer; PBD, pyrrolobenzodiazepine; PBMC, peripheral blood mononuclear cells; PD-1, programmed cell death protein 1; PD-L1, PD ligand 1; RCC, renal cell carcinoma; scFv, single-chain fragment variable; T-ALL, T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia; TIM-1, TIM-1, T-cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain 1; TNBC, triple-negative breast cancer.
Figure 1A four-step approach for optimal administration of cell-depleting anti-ICPM compounds. The figure depicts four steps that are proposed for the optimal administration of a cell-depleting anti-ICPM compound allowing to achieve the depletion of a maximum number of ICPM-expressing tumor cells. Abbreviations: ICI, immune checkpoint inhibitor; ICPM, immune checkpoint molecule.