| Literature DB >> 35410313 |
Vivian Changying Jiang1, Yang Liu1, Alexa Jordan1, Angela Leeming1, Joseph McIntosh1, Shengjian Huang1, Rongjia Zhang1, Qingsong Cai1, Zhihong Chen1, Yijing Li1, Yuxuan Che1, Lei Nie1, Ingrid Karlsson2, Linda Mårtensson2, Mathilda Kovacek2, Ingrid Teige2, Björn Frendéus2, Michael Wang3,4.
Abstract
Inevitable relapses remain as the major therapeutic challenge in patients with mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) despite FDA approval of multiple targeted therapies and immunotherapies. Fc gamma receptors (FcγRs) play important roles in regulating antibody-mediated immunity. FcγRIIB, the unique immune-checkpoint inhibitory member of the FcγR family, has been implicated in immune cell desensitization and tumor cell resistance to the anti-CD20 antibody rituximab and other antibody-mediated immunotherapies; however, little is known about its expression and its immune-modulatory function in patients with aggressive MCL, especially those with multi-resistance. In this study, we found that FcγRIIB was ubiquitously expressed in both MCL cell lines and primary patient samples. FcγRIIB expression is significantly higher in CAR T-relapsed patient samples (p < 0.0001) compared to ibrutinib/rituximab-naïve, sensitive or resistant samples. Rituximab-induced CD20 internalization in JeKo-1 cells was completely blocked by concurrent treatment with BI-1206, a recombinant human monoclonal antibody targeting FcγRIIB. Combinational therapies with rituximab-ibrutinib, rituximab-venetoclax and rituximab-CHOP also induced CD20 internalization which was again effectively blocked by BI-1206. BI-1206 significantly enhanced the in vivo anti-MCL efficacy of rituximab-ibrutinib (p = 0.05) and rituximab-venetoclax (p = 0.02), but not the rituximab-CHOP combination in JeKo-1 cell line-derived xenograft models. In patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models, BI-1206, as a single agent, showed high potency (p < 0.0001, compared to vehicle control) in one aggressive PDX model that is resistant to both ibrutinib and venetoclax but sensitive to the combination of rituximab and lenalidomide (the preclinical mimetic of R2 therapy). BI-1206 sensitized the efficacy of rituximab monotherapy in a PDX model with triple resistance to rituximab, ibrutinib and CAR T-therapies (p = 0.030). Moreover, BI-1206 significantly enhanced the efficacy of the rituximab-venetoclax combination (p < 0.05), which led to long-term tumor remission in 25% of mice. Altogether, these data support that targeting this new immune-checkpoint blockade enhances the therapeutic activity of rituximab-based regimens in aggressive MCL models with multi-resistance.Entities:
Keywords: BI-1206; CAR T; Combination; FcγRIIB; Mantle cell lymphoma; Therapeutic resistance
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35410313 PMCID: PMC8996600 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-022-01257-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1FcγRIIB is ubiquitously expressed in MCL cells and targeting FcγRIIB by BI-1206 effectively blocks CD20 internalization upon rituximab-based treatment in MCL cells. a, b Flow cytometry analysis was performed to detect FcγRIIB expression on MCL cell lines (a) and primary patient MCL cells (b) including ibrutinib/rituximab-naïve (n = 4), ibrutinib/rituximab-sensitive (n = 13), ibrutinib/rituximab-resistant (n = 5) and CAR T-relapsed (n = 3) MCL samples. c Percentage of rituximab bound CD20 on JeKo-1 cells upon treatment with rituximab (5 μg/ml) with or without BI-1206 (5 μg/ml) for 0, 2 and 5 h. d–f Percentage of rituximab bound CD20 on JeKo-1 cells after 48 h pre-treatment in vitro with increasing concentrations of ibrutinib (d), venetoclax (e) or CHOP (f) followed by treatment with rituximab with or without BI-1206 for 0, 2 and 5 h (Mean ± SD; n = 4). *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001; ****P < 0.0001
Fig. 2BI-1206 enhanced the in vivo efficacy of rituximab-based therapy in various MCL PDX models with multi-resistance in addition to intrinsic anti-MCL activity. a–c An ibrutinib-venetoclax dual resistant MCL PDX model (PDX-A) was derived from a patient with MCL with subsequent relapse from ibrutinib and venetoclax therapy. The PDX cells were inoculated intravenously into NOD.Cg-Prkdc Il2rg/SzJ (NSG) mice. At 2 weeks post-cell inoculation, the mice (n = 10 per group) were randomly grouped and treated with isotype control (10 mg/kg, twice a week), BI-1206 (10 mg/kg, twice a week) or Rituximab (Rit, 10 mg/kg, twice a week) plus Lenalidomide (LEN, 2 mg/kg, daily). At the end of the experiment, the mice were euthanized, and spleen, liver, bone marrow and peripheral blood were collected. a, b The mouse spleen (a) and liver (b) were imaged (left panels) and weighed (middle panels). The cells in the spleen and liver were isolated and subject to flow analysis by dual staining with CD5 and CD20 antibodies. The percentage of CD5+CD20+ cells representing MCL tumor cells were plotted (right panels). c The cells in the bone marrow (left panel) and peripheral blood (right panel) were isolated and subject to flow analysis by dual staining with CD5 and CD20 antibodies. The percentage of CD5+CD20+ cells representing MCL tumor cells were plotted. d–g A rituximab-ibrutinib-CAR T-triple resistant MCL PDX model (PDX-B) was derived from a patient with MCL with subsequent relapse from rituximab, ibrutinib and CAR T-therapy. The PDX cells were inoculated subcutaneously into NSG mice. At 2 weeks post-cell inoculation, the mice (n = 5 per group) were randomly grouped and treated with isotype control (10 mg/kg, twice a week), BI-1206 (10 mg/kg, twice a week), Rituximab (Rit, 10 mg/kg, twice a week) or Rit + BI-1206 combo. One mouse in the rituximab-treated group died due to treatment-irrelevant technical event. Tumor size (d) and mouse body weight (g) were measured every week. At the end of the experiment, the mice were euthanized, and subcutaneous tumors were collected, imaged (e) and weighed (f). h An ibrutinib-rituximab-venetoclax triple-resistant MCL PDX (PDX-C) model was derived from a patient with MCL with relapse from ibrutinib plus rituximab therapy and venetoclax therapy. The PDX cells were inoculated subcutaneously into NSG mice. At 2 weeks post-cell inoculation, the mice (n = 8 per group) were randomly grouped and treated with vehicle control, BI-1206 (10 mg/kg, twice a week), Rituximab (Rit, 10 mg/kg, twice a week), Rituximab + BI-1206 (Rit + BI-1206), venetoclax (Ven, 50 mg/kg, daily), venetoclax + Rituximab (Ven + Rit) or venetoclax + Rituximab + BI-1206 (Ven + Rit + BI-1206). Mouse survival was monitored and plotted