Pandey Apurva, Rohweder Peter J, Chan Lieza M, Ongpipattanakul Chayanid, Chung Dong Hee, Paolella Bryce, Quimby Fiona M, Nguyen Ngoc, Verba Kliment A, Evans Michael J, Craik Charles S
Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Cancer Res. 2025 Jan 15;85(2):329-341. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-24-2450.
Antibody-based therapies have emerged as a powerful strategy for the management of diverse cancers. Unfortunately, tumor-specific antigens remain challenging to identify and target. Recent work established that inhibitor-modified peptide adducts derived from KRAS G12C are competent for antigen presentation via MHC I and can be targeted by antibody-based therapeutics, offering a means to directly target an intracellular oncoprotein at the cell surface with combination therapies. Here, we validated the antigen display of "haptenated" KRAS G12C peptide fragments on tumors in mouse models treated with the FDA-approved KRAS G12C covalent inhibitor sotorasib using PET/CT imaging of an 89Zr-labeled P1B7 IgG antibody, which selectively binds sotorasib-modified KRAS G12C-MHC I complexes. Targeting this peptide-MHC I complex with radioligand therapy using 225Ac- or 177Lu-P1B7 IgG effectively inhibited tumor growth in combination with sotorasib. Elucidation of the 3.1 Å cryo-EM structure of P1B7 bound to a haptenated KRAS G12C peptide-MHC I complex confirmed that the sotorasib-modified KRAS G12C peptide is presented via a canonical binding pose and showed that P1B7 binds the complex in a T-cell receptor-like manner. Together, these findings demonstrate the potential value of targeting unique oncoprotein-derived, haptenated MHC I complexes with radioligand therapeutics and provide a structural framework for developing next generation antibodies. Significance: Radioligand therapy using an antibody targeting KRAS-derived, sotorasib-modified MHC I complexes elicits antitumor effects superior to those of sotorasib alone and provides a potential strategy to repurpose sotorasib as a hapten to overcome resistance.
基于抗体的疗法已成为治疗多种癌症的有力策略。不幸的是,肿瘤特异性抗原的识别和靶向仍然具有挑战性。最近的研究表明,源自KRAS G12C的抑制剂修饰肽加合物能够通过MHC I进行抗原呈递,并且可以被基于抗体的疗法靶向,这为通过联合疗法在细胞表面直接靶向细胞内癌蛋白提供了一种手段。在这里,我们使用89Zr标记的P1B7 IgG抗体的PET/CT成像,验证了在接受FDA批准的KRAS G12C共价抑制剂索托拉西布治疗的小鼠模型中,“半抗原化”KRAS G12C肽片段在肿瘤上的抗原展示,该抗体选择性结合索托拉西布修饰的KRAS G12C-MHC I复合物。使用225Ac或177Lu-P1B7 IgG进行放射性配体疗法靶向这种肽-MHC I复合物,与索托拉西布联合使用时可有效抑制肿瘤生长。对与半抗原化KRAS G12C肽-MHC I复合物结合的P1B7的3.1 Å冷冻电镜结构的解析证实,索托拉西布修饰的KRAS G12C肽通过典型的结合构象呈递,并表明P1B7以类似T细胞受体的方式结合该复合物。总之,这些发现证明了用放射性配体疗法靶向独特的癌蛋白衍生的、半抗原化的MHC I复合物的潜在价值,并为开发下一代抗体提供了结构框架。意义:使用靶向KRAS衍生的、索托拉西布修饰的MHC I复合物的抗体进行放射性配体疗法,产生的抗肿瘤效果优于单独使用索托拉西布,并提供了一种将索托拉西布重新用作半抗原来克服耐药性的潜在策略。