Fibroblast Activation Protein α-Targeted CD40 Agonism Abrogates Systemic Toxicity and Enables Administration of High Doses to Induce Effective Antitumor Immunity.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_C5DC576E690C
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Fibroblast Activation Protein α-Targeted CD40 Agonism Abrogates Systemic Toxicity and Enables Administration of High Doses to Induce Effective Antitumor Immunity.
Journal
Clinical cancer research
Author(s)
Sum E., Rapp M., Fröbel P., Le Clech M., Dürr H., Giusti A.M., Perro M., Speziale D., Kunz L., Menietti E., Brünker P., Hopfer U., Lechmann M., Sobieniecki A., Appelt B., Adelfio R., Nicolini V., Freimoser-Grundschober A., Jordaan W., Labiano S., Weber F., Emrich T., Christen F., Essig B., Romero P., Trumpfheller C., Umaña P.
ISSN
1557-3265 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1078-0432
Publication state
Published
Issued date
15/07/2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
27
Number
14
Pages
4036-4053
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
CD40 agonists hold great promise for cancer immunotherapy (CIT) as they enhance dendritic cell (DC) activation and concomitant tumor-specific T-cell priming. However, the broad expression of CD40 accounts for sink and side effects, hampering the efficacy of anti-CD40 antibodies. We hypothesized that these limitations can be overcome by selectively targeting CD40 agonism to the tumor. Therefore, we developed a bispecific FAP-CD40 antibody, which induces CD40 stimulation solely in presence of fibroblast activation protein α (FAP), a protease specifically expressed in the tumor stroma.
FAP-CD40's in vitro activity and FAP specificity were validated by antigen-presenting cell (APC) activation and T-cell priming assays. In addition, FAP-CD40 was tested in subcutaneous MC38-FAP and KPC-4662-huCEA murine tumor models.
FAP-CD40 triggered a potent, strictly FAP-dependent CD40 stimulation in vitro. In vivo, FAP-CD40 strongly enhanced T-cell inflammation and growth inhibition of KPC-4662-huCEA tumors. Unlike nontargeted CD40 agonists, FAP-CD40 mediated complete regression of MC38-FAP tumors, entailing long-term protection. A high dose of FAP-CD40 was indispensable for these effects. While nontargeted CD40 agonists induced substantial side effects, highly dosed FAP-CD40 was well tolerated. FAP-CD40 preferentially accumulated in the tumor, inducing predominantly intratumoral immune activation, whereas nontargeted CD40 agonists displayed strong systemic but limited intratumoral effects.
FAP-CD40 abrogates the systemic toxicity associated with nontargeted CD40 agonists. This enables administration of high doses, essential for overcoming CD40 sink effects and inducing antitumor immunity. Consequently, FAP-targeted CD40 agonism represents a promising strategy to exploit the full potential of CD40 signaling for CIT.
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
05/04/2021 9:12
Last modification date
05/01/2022 6:36
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