Huet Heather A, Growney Joseph D, Johnson Jennifer A, Li Jing, Bilic Sanela, Ostrom Lance, Zafari Mohammad, Kowal Colleen, Yang Guizhi, Royo Axelle, Jensen Michael, Dombrecht Bruno, Meerschaert Kris R A, Kolkman Joost A, Cromie Karen D, Mosher Rebecca, Gao Hui, Schuller Alwin, Isaacs Randi, Sellers William R, Ettenberg Seth A
a Oncology Research; Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research ; Cambridge , MA USA.
MAbs. 2014;6(6):1560-70. doi: 10.4161/19420862.2014.975099.
Multiple therapeutic agonists of death receptor 5 (DR5) have been developed and are under clinical evaluation. Although these agonists demonstrate significant anti-tumor activity in preclinical models, the clinical efficacy in human cancer patients has been notably disappointing. One possible explanation might be that the current classes of therapeutic molecules are not sufficiently potent to elicit significant response in patients, particularly for dimeric antibody agonists that require secondary cross-linking via Fcγ receptors expressed on immune cells to achieve optimal clustering of DR5. To overcome this limitation, a novel multivalent Nanobody approach was taken with the goal of generating a significantly more potent DR5 agonist. In the present study, we show that trivalent DR5 targeting Nanobodies mimic the activity of natural ligand, and furthermore, increasing the valency of domains to tetramer and pentamer markedly increased potency of cell killing on tumor cells, with pentamers being more potent than tetramers in vitro. Increased potency was attributed to faster kinetics of death-inducing signaling complex assembly and caspase-8 and caspase-3 activation. In vivo, multivalent Nanobody molecules elicited superior anti-tumor activity compared to a conventional DR5 agonist antibody, including the ability to induce tumor regression in an insensitive patient-derived primary pancreatic tumor model. Furthermore, complete responses to Nanobody treatment were obtained in up to 50% of patient-derived primary pancreatic and colon tumor models, suggesting that multivalent DR5 Nanobodies may represent a significant new therapeutic modality for targeting death receptor signaling.
多种死亡受体5(DR5)治疗激动剂已被开发并正在进行临床评估。尽管这些激动剂在临床前模型中显示出显著的抗肿瘤活性,但在人类癌症患者中的临床疗效却明显令人失望。一种可能的解释是,目前的治疗分子类别效力不足,无法在患者中引发显著反应,特别是对于二聚体抗体激动剂而言,它们需要通过免疫细胞上表达的Fcγ受体进行二次交联,以实现DR5的最佳聚集。为了克服这一限制,我们采用了一种新型的多价纳米抗体方法,目标是生成一种效力显著更高的DR5激动剂。在本研究中,我们表明靶向DR5的三价纳米抗体模拟了天然配体的活性,此外,将结构域的价态增加到四聚体和五聚体显著提高了对肿瘤细胞的细胞杀伤效力,五聚体在体外比四聚体更有效。效力的提高归因于死亡诱导信号复合物组装以及半胱天冬酶-8和半胱天冬酶-3激活的更快动力学。在体内,与传统的DR5激动剂抗体相比,多价纳米抗体分子引发了更强的抗肿瘤活性,包括在一种对常规治疗不敏感的患者来源的原发性胰腺肿瘤模型中诱导肿瘤消退的能力。此外,在高达50%的患者来源的原发性胰腺和结肠肿瘤模型中,纳米抗体治疗获得了完全缓解,这表明多价DR5纳米抗体可能代表了一种针对死亡受体信号传导的重要新治疗方式。