| Literature DB >> 34124272 |
Saghar Pahlavanneshan1, Ali Sayadmanesh2, Hamidreza Ebrahimiyan2, Mohsen Basiri2.
Abstract
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are expressed and play multiple functional roles in a variety of immune cell types involved in tumor immunity. There are plenty of data on the pharmacological targeting of TLR signaling using agonist molecules that boost the antitumor immune response. A recent body of research has also demonstrated promising strategies for improving the cell-based immunotherapy methods by inducing TLR signaling. These strategies include systemic administration of TLR antagonist along with immune cell transfer and also genetic engineering of the immune cells using TLR signaling components to improve the function of genetically engineered immune cells such as chimeric antigen receptor-modified T cells. Here, we explore the current status of the cancer immunotherapy approaches based on manipulation of TLR signaling to provide a perspective of the underlying rationales and potential clinical applications. Altogether, reviewed publications suggest that TLRs make a potential target for the immunotherapy of cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34124272 PMCID: PMC8166496 DOI: 10.1155/2021/9912188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
A summary of TLR agonists with their corresponding TLR targets.
| Target TLR | Agonist | Molecule type | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| TLR2 | Pam3Cys | Lipoproteins | [ |
| SMP-105 | Cell wall skeleton components | [ | |
| CBLB612 | Lipopeptide | [ | |
| TLR3 | Poly I:C | Synthetic dsRNA | [ |
| Poly-ICLC | [ | ||
| Poly-IC12U | [ | ||
| IPH 3102 | [ | ||
| ARNAX | [ | ||
| TLR4 | MPLA | Lipid | [ |
| GLA-SE | Lipid | [ | |
| AS04 | MPL and aluminum hydroxide | [ | |
| OK-432 | Low virulence | [ | |
| TLR5 | CBLB502 | Protein | [ |
| M-VM3 | Adenoviral vector | [ | |
| TLR7 | Bistriazolyl | Small molecule | [ |
| TLR8 | VTX1463 | Small molecule | [ |
| TLR9 | MGN1703 | Polynucleotide | [ |
| CpG-7909 | Oligonucleotide | [ | |
| IMO2055 | [ | ||
| dSLIM | [ | ||
| SD-101 | [ | ||
| KSK-CpG | [ | ||
| ODN M362 | [ | ||
| CpG-1826 | [ |
Figure 1Targeting TLRs expressed on the immune cells in the tumor microenvironment with TLR agonists. Examples of TLR agonists are shown at the top. TLRs which are expressed in human cell surface or intracellular compartments are shown in the middle. The expression of each TLR on different immune cell types is indicated by color-coded lines. Some reported low-level expressions of TLRs with unknown functional status are ignored in this figure.
Figure 2TLR-based strategies for improvement of CAR T cells. (a) Schematic presentation of wild-type T cell proteins from which signaling domains are derived to construct chimeric synthetic receptors. (b) Traditional second-generation CAR containing an scFV domain for antigen recognition on the extracellular portion and CD3ζ and costimulatory signaling domains on the cytosolic side (CD28 domain is shown here as an example). (c) A third-generation CAR with a TIR signaling domain derived from TLRs. (d) A CD40-MyD88 fusion protein tethered to a first-generation CAR through an inefficient 2A linker. (e) The CD40-MyD88 fusion is linked to a rimiducid-binding domain from an FKBP protein to form a pharmacological switch that can transmit a costimulatory signal by dimerization upon rimiducid treatment.
Clinical studies on the application of TLR agonists for cancer treatment published since 2016.
| Target TLR | TLR agonist | Companion treatment | Conditions | Phase | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TLR2 | CADI-05 | Chemotherapy (cisplatin-paclitaxel) | Non-small-cell lung cancer | II | No survival benefit was observed with the addition of CADI-05 to chemotherapy. | [ |
| TLR3 | Poly-ICLC | NY-ESO-1 peptide vaccine | Melanoma | I/II | Enhanced specific CD8+ T cell response. | [ |
| Peptide-pulsed DCs | Pancreatic cancer | I | The treatment was safe and induced a measurable tumor-specific T cell population. | [ | ||
| TLR3, TLR4 | Poly-ICLC, LPS | Multipeptide vaccine and incomplete Freund's adjuvant | Melanoma | I | Combinations of poly-ICLC or LPS with peptide vaccine and incomplete Freund's adjuvant are safe and induce T cell response. | [ |
| TLR4 TLR9 | AS15 | Recombinant MAGE-A3 vaccine | Melanoma | I | The treatment was tolerated and produced durable Ab responses. | [ |
| TLR7 | Imiquimod | Chemotherapy (paclitaxel) | Breast cancer cutaneous metastases | II | The combination was effective in inducing disease regression, but responses were short-lived. | [ |
| TLR8 | Motolimod | Anti-EGFR (cetuximab) | Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | I | The addition of TLR agonist enhanced the cellular antitumor immune response. | [ |
| TLR9 | GNKG168 | N/A | Minimal residual disease positive acute leukemia | I | Immunologic changes were observed. | [ |
A summary of recent ongoing clinical trials on TLR agonists started after 2019.
| Target TLR | TLR agonist | Companion treatment | Conditions∗ | Phase | Status | NCT number |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TLR2/4 | BCG, PPD, Typhim Vi | Chemotherapy, radiofrequency ablation | Colorectal cancer | I | Not yet recruiting |
|
| TLR3 | Poly-ICLC | Peptide vaccine, anti-CD40 | Melanoma | I/II | Recruiting |
|
| Rintatolimod | Anti-PD-1, chemotherapy | Ovarian cancer recurrent | I/II | Recruiting |
| |
| TLR4 | GLA-SE | N/A | Lymphoma, T cell, cutaneous | II | Withdrawn |
|
| Anti-CTLA-4, anti-PD-1, chemotherapy | Colorectal cancer metastatic | I | Withdrawn |
| ||
| TLR7 | BNT411 | Anti-PDL-1, chemotherapy | Solid tumor, lung cancer | I/II | Recruiting |
|
| Imiquimod | Anti-PD-1, focused ultrasound ablation | Multiple solid tumors | I | Recruiting |
| |
| RO7119929 | Anti-IL-6 receptor | Biliary tract and liver cancer | I | Recruiting |
| |
| SHR2150 | Chemotherapy, anti-PD-1, anti-CD47 | Solid tumor | I/II | Recruiting |
| |
| TLR7/8 | TransCon | Anti-PD-1 | Solid tumors | I/II | Recruiting |
|
| TLR8 | Motolimod | Anti-PD-1 | Carcinoma, squamous cell | I | Recruiting |
|
| TLR9 | CMP-001 | Anti-OX40 | Pancreatic cancer, unresectable solid neoplasm | I/II | Not yet recruiting |
|
| Anti-PD-1 | Melanoma | II | Recruiting |
| ||
|
| ||||||
| SD-101 | Radiation therapy, anti-PD-1 | Pancreatic cancer | I | Recruiting |
| |
| Anti-OX40 | Malignant solid neoplasm | I | Recruiting |
| ||
| Tilsotolimod | Anti-CTLA-4, anti-PD-1 | Advanced cancer | I | Recruiting |
|
∗Indicated conditions are summarized in this table. Complete information is available via the provided ClinicalTrials.gov identifier (NCT number).