| Literature DB >> 34070756 |
Afsaneh Amouzegar1, Manoj Chelvanambi2, Jessica N Filderman2, Walter J Storkus2,3, Jason J Luke1,3.
Abstract
The interrogation of intrinsic and adaptive resistance to cancer immunotherapy has identified lack of antigen presentation and type I interferon signaling as biomarkers of non-T-cell-inflamed tumors and clinical progression. A myriad of pre-clinical studies have implicated the cGAS/stimulator of interferon genes (STING) pathway, a cytosolic DNA-sensing pathway that drives activation of type I interferons and other inflammatory cytokines, in the host immune response against tumors. The STING pathway is also increasingly understood to have other anti-tumor functions such as modulation of the vasculature and augmentation of adaptive immunity via the support of tertiary lymphoid structure development. Many natural and synthetic STING agonists have entered clinical development with the first generation of intra-tumor delivered cyclic dinucleotides demonstrating safety but only modest systemic activity. The development of more potent and selective STING agonists as well as novel delivery systems that would allow for sustained inflammation in the tumor microenvironment could potentially augment response rates to current immunotherapy approaches and overcome acquired resistance. In this review, we will focus on the latest developments in STING-targeted therapies and provide an update on the clinical development and application of STING agonists administered alone, or in combination with immune checkpoint blockade or other approaches.Entities:
Keywords: STING agonist; anti-tumor immunity; cGAS; drug delivery; stimulator of interferon genes; tumor vasculature; type I interferon
Year: 2021 PMID: 34070756 PMCID: PMC8198217 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13112695
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Novel STING agonist strategies and agents in development.
STING agonists in clinical development. HNSCC: head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, IM: intramuscular, IT: intratumoral, IV: intravenous, SQ: subcutaneous.
| Agent | Route of Delivery | Phase | Type of Cancer | Clinical Trial NCT Code | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADU-S100/MIW815 | Single agent or + Ipilimumab | IT | Phase I | Advanced/Metastatic Solid Tumors or Lymphomas | NCT02675439 |
| + Pembrolizumab | IT | Phase II | PD-L1 positive recurrent or metastatic HNSCC | NCT03937141 | |
| + PDR001 | IT | Phase Ib | Advanced/Metastatic Solid Tumors or Lymphomas | NCT03172936 | |
| MK-1454 | Single agent or + Pembrolizumab | IT | Phase I | Advanced/Metastatic Solid Tumors or Lymphomas | NCT03010176 |
| + Pembrolizumab | IT | Phase II | Metastatic or Unresectable, Recurrent HNSCC | NCT04220866 | |
| MK-2118 | + Pembrolizumab | IT/SQ | Phase I | Advanced/Metastatic Solid Tumors or Lymphomas | NCT03249792 |
| SB11285 | Single agent or + Atezolizumab | IV | Phase Ia/Ib | Advanced Solid Tumors | NCT04096638 |
| GSK3745417 | Single agent or + Pembrolizumab | IV | Phase I | Advanced Solid Tumors | NCT03843359 |
| BMS-986301 | Single agent or + Nivolumab/ Ipilimumab | IT/IM | Phase I | Advanced Solid Tumors | NCT03956680 |
| BI-STING (BI 1387446) | Single agent or + BI 754091 (anti-PD1 monoclonal antibody) | IT | Phase I | Advanced Solid Tumors | NCT04147234 |
| E7766 | Single agent | IT | Phase I/Ib | Advanced Solid Tumors or Lymphomas | NCT04144140 |
| TAK-676 | Single agent or + Pembrolizumab | IV | Phase I | Advanced Solid Tumors | NCT04420884 |
| SNX281 | Single agent or + Pembrolizumab | IV | Phase I | Advanced Solid Tumors or Lymphomas | NCT04609579 |
| SYNB1891 | Single agent or + Atezolizumab | IT | Phase I | Advanced Solid Tumors or Lymphomas | NCT04167137 |
STING-targeting compounds in pre-clinical stage.
| Agent | Structure/Properties | Route of Delivery | Tumor Model | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| JNJ-67544412 (JNJ-4412) | Cyclic dinucleotide, Potently binds to all major human STING alleles | Intratumoral | Subcutaneous syngeneic murine tumor models |
Tumor regression, induction of proinflammatory cytokines such as IFN-α, IFN-β, IP-10, TNF-α, IL-6 and MCP-1 in tumor and plasma, inhibition in growth of contralateral tumors. Enhanced dose-dependent efficacy when combined with anti-PD1. | [ |
| BI-STING | Mimics natural STING ligand | Intratumoral | Subcutaneous syngeneic murine tumor models |
Single dose of intratumoral BI-STING results in transient increase in cytokine levels, dose-dependent local tumor control. No tumor developed upon re-challenge. Tumor control improved when combined with anti-PD1 ELISPOT: higher number of immunospots in splenocytes from BI-STING-treated animals showing induction of tumor specific immune response. | [ |
| 3′3′-cyclic 3′3′-cAIMP | Cyclic dinucleotide | Not specified | Mouse model of mutagen-induced hepatocellular carcinoma |
Treatment of mice after HCC development efficiently reduced tumor size. Initiation of treatment at later stage of disease development resulted in regression of the majority of tumors, but new treatment-unresponsive tumors were detected. | [ |
| GSK532 | Cyclic dinucleotide | Intratumoral | CT26 murine syngeneic model |
Strong anti-tumor effect in both the injected and uninjected tumors. Cured mice were resistant to re-challenge with the same tumor cell line. | [ |
|
| |||||
| Ryvu’s agonists | Selective non-nucleotide, non-macrocyclic, small molecule compounds, potential for systemic administration | Not specified | CT26 murine syngeneic model |
Dose-dependent upregulation of STING-dependent pro-inflammatory cytokines. Complete tumor remission and development of immunological memory against cancer cells. | [ |
| GF3-002 | Novel low-molecular-weight organic molecule, not based on a CDN | In vitro | In vitro assays |
Confirmed binding to WT STING and production of IFN-β after treatment of dendritic cells with GF3-002. | [ |
| Selvita agonists | Selective non-nucleotide, non-macrocyclic, small molecule compounds, structurally unrelated to known CDNs, tunable properties with enhanced plasma stability and permeability, potential for systemic administration | In vitro | In vitro assays |
Induction of cytokine responses (IFN-β, TNF-α) in human PBMC, human monocyte derived macrophage, and human DCs with various STING haplotypes including refractory alleles. Induction of pro-inflammatory cytokine profile and up-regulation of the maturation markers on human APCs. | [ |
| TTI-10001 | Non-CDN small molecule STING agonist | Intratumoral | Multiple syngeneic murine tumor models |
Well-tolerated in vivo; results in increased expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines, and anti-tumor activity. | [ |
| JNJ-‘6196 | Next-generation STING agonist; binds to STING with weaker affinity and a faster off rate, but more potent than other CDNs in activating dendritic cells | Intravenous | Murine tumor models (not specified) |
Eliminates bilateral tumors, and provides immunity to further re-challenge. Increases the effectiveness of checkpoint inhibitors, turning a PD-1 resistant model into a responsive model. | [ |
| CRD5500 | Next-generation small molecule STING agonist. Activates all five common human STING variants. Delivery via different routes (IV or SC) or as an antibody drug conjugate | Intravenous, subcutaneous, Antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) with Trastuzumab | CT26 syngeneic murine model |
In vitro: causes maturation of hDCs and the release of innate and adaptive inflammatory cytokines such as IFN-β and TNF-α. In vivo administration (IT or systemically): tumor regression in CT26 syngeneic tumors containing human STING. | [ |
| CS-1018, CS-1020 and CS-1010 | STING agonists with higher potency in activating mouse and human STING variants than natural ligand cGAMP | Intratumoral | B16F10 and MC38 murine tumor models |
All compounds showed dose-dependent anti-tumor activity in MC38 or B16F10 syngeneic models. Tumor-free treated mice developed tumor specific immunologic memory in MC38 murine model. | [ |
| MSA-1 | Novel STING agonist with higher potency in activating STING protein than cGAMP | Intratumoral | MC38 syngeneic tumors, CT26 and B16-F10 tumor models |
Complete responses observed in 100% of MC38 tumors. Restoration of T cell responses (in serum and tumors) of mice with anti-PD1 unresponsive tumors when combined with anti-PD1. | [ |
| ALG-031048 | Novel STING agonist with high potency and superior stability | Intratumoral, Subcutaneous | Syngeneic CT26 colorectal, B16F10 melanoma, and Hepa1–6 HCC models |
Tumor regression in 90% of mice bearing CT26 tumors (vs. 44% with ADU-S100). Treated mice were resistant to tumor development after re-challenge. Mean tumor regression of 88% in HCC tumor-bearing mice vs. 72.4% regression with anti-PD1 antibody. Dose-dependent increase in plasma levels of IFN-β1, IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-6, MIP-1α and MCP-1 Subcutaneous ALG-031048 improved anti-tumor efficacy of anti-PDL-1 agent, atezolizumab. | [ |
|
| |||||
| E7766 | Macrocyclic STING agonist with superior in vitro activity against all major human STING genotypes, chemical and metabolic stability, conferred by conformational rigidity of the unique macrocycle bridge | Intravesical, Intratumoral | Murine anti-PD1 insensitive NMIBC tumor models, subcutaneous tumor models |
Intravesical: dose-dependent anti-tumor effect vs. anti-PD1 which was ineffective. Tumor-free animals rejected re-challenge of same tumor cell line. Activation of IFN pathway, T cell infiltration, NK activity, induction of IFN-β and CXCL10 inside the bladder cavity and in the urine. Intratumoral: single IT injection led to complete regression or significant tumor growth delay. | [ |
|
| |||||
| SR-8541A | Small molecule ENPP1 inhibitor | In vitro | In vitro assays |
Stimulates the migration and infiltration of immune cells (PBMC) into cancer spheroids, increases expression of IFN-β, ISG15 and CXCL10. ENPP1 CRISPR knockout cell models confirmed that the drug effect is ENPP1-dependent. | [ |
| SR-8314 | Analog of SR-8291 (a highly selective ENPP1 inhibitor) | Intraperitoneal | Syngeneic murine tumor model |
Increase in gene expression of IFN-β, ISG15 and CXCL10 and secretion of IFN-β in SR-8314-treated THP1 cells. Anti-tumor activity, increase in CD3+, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in both SR-8314 and SR-8291-treated tumors, decrease in tumor-associated macrophages in SR-8314-treated tumors. | [ |
| Orally available ENPP1 inhibitors | Small molecule compounds with strong binding affinity towards ENPP1 | In vitro | In vitro assays |
Specific and high binding affinity to ENPP1 with no effect on other members of the ENPP family, activation of STING pathway. One of lead compounds is currently under investigation for ADME-Tox, PK and efficacy. | [ |
| MV-626 | Selective ENPP1 inhibitor with 100% oral bioavailability | Intraperitoneal | Panc02-SIY and MC38 murine tumor models |
Therapeutic doses were well tolerated in mice, without toxicity or clinically significant increases in systemic cytokine levels. Systemic MV- 626 monotherapy caused tumor growth delay. MV-626 plus radiation therapy significantly increased overall survival. | [ |
|
| |||||
| Antibody drug conjugates (ADC) | STING agonist ADCs | Intravenous | Multiple xenograft and syngeneic murine models |
100-fold more potency in inducing inflammatory cytokine expression compared to free agonist. Inflammatory cytokines were tumor localized while systemic levels remained low. Single IV injection of targeted STING ADC in tumor-bearing mice significantly inhibited tumor growth compared to systemically injected diABZI. | [ |
| ONM-500 nanovaccine | Novel pH-sensitive polymer that forms an antigen-encapsulating nanoparticle and functions both as a carrier for antigen delivery to DCs and as an adjuvant, activating the STING pathway | Subcutaneous | TC-1 cervical cancer murine model |
Effective binding to human STING protein. Effective delivery of antigens in vivo to LNs to elicit an antigen-specific CTL response. ONM-500 nanovaccine containing full-length E6/E7 protein resulted in 100% overall survival of TC-1 bearing mice at 55 days. Long-term antigen-specific anti-tumor memory response in re-challenge study. | [ |
| Neoantigen nanovaccine | Redox-responsive neoantigen-polymer conjugates and a STING agonist DMXAA | Subcutaneous | B16-F10 melanoma murine model |
Nanovaccine combined with anti-PD1 treatment led to 50% survival rate on day 38, compared to 20% in mice receiving non-formulated neoantigen peptides. | [ |
| exoSTING | Engineered exosome therapeutic that delivers STING agonist to tumor resident APCs | Intratumoral | Checkpoint refractory B16-F10 melanoma murine model |
exoSTING is retained within the injected tumor, and does not induce systemic cytokine production. exoSTING treatment results in significant induction of PD-L1 expression. In combination with PD1 checkpoint blockade, exoSTING shows enhanced anti-tumor efficacy over high-dose free STING agonist. | [ |
| STACT-TREX1 | Inhibitory microRNA to TREX1, introduced into the STACT strain. | Intravenous | CT26 and MC38 colon carcinoma models, and B16-F10 melanoma model |
Tumor-specific colonization of STACT-TREX1, immune correlates consistent with STING activation and CD8+ T-cell-dependent immune response. Potent tumor growth inhibition and complete tumor regressions with STACT-TREX1 monotherapy. Immunity to tumor re-challenge | [ |
| STING-NPs | Liposomal nanoparticles (NPs) to deliver the STING agonist, cGAMP | Intravenous | Basal-like triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) murine model |
cGAMP-NPs accumulate within macrophages at the tumor, induce M2 to M1-like phenotype, MHC and co-stimulatory molecule expression, enhanced CD4+ and CD8+ T cell infiltration, and tumor apoptosis. Effective tumor suppression achieved in anti-PD-L1 non-responsive tumors. Induction of durable anti-tumor T cell responses and prevention of secondary tumor development. | [ |