Frontiers in Immunology (Jan 2022)

TGFβ2 Induces the Soluble Isoform of CTLA-4 – Implications for CTLA-4 Based Checkpoint Inhibitor Antibodies in Malignant Melanoma

  • Rahul C. Khanolkar,
  • Chu Zhang,
  • Farah Al-Fatyan,
  • Linda Lawson,
  • Ivan Depasquale,
  • Fiona M. Meredith,
  • Frank Muller,
  • Marianne Nicolson,
  • Lekh Nath Dahal,
  • Rasha Abu-Eid,
  • Rasha Abu-Eid,
  • Sanjay Rajpara,
  • Robert Norman Barker,
  • Anthony D. Ormerod,
  • Frank James Ward

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.763877
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Malignant melanoma is an aggressive form of cancer, which can be treated with anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor antibodies but while anti-CTLA-4 antibodies have clear benefits for some patients with melanoma, productive responses are difficult to predict and often associated with serious immune related adverse events. Antibodies specific to CTLA-4 bind two major isoforms of CTLA-4 in humans, the receptor isoform and a second naturally secretable, soluble isoform - sCTLA-4. The primary aim here was to examine the effect of selectively blocking the function of sCTLA-4 on in vitro immune responses from volunteer healthy or melanoma patient PBMC samples. Addition of recombinant sCTLA-4 to healthy PBMC samples demonstrated sCTLA-4 to have immunosuppressive capacity comparable to recombinant CTLA4-Ig, partially reversible upon antibody blockade. Further, we identified a mechanistic relationship where melanoma patient TGFβ2 serum levels correlated with sCTLA-4 levels and provided the basis for a novel protocol to enhance sCTLA-4 production and secretion by T cells with TGFβ2. Finally, a comparison of selective antibody blockade of sCTLA-4 demonstrated that both healthy and melanoma patient effector cytokine responses can be significantly increased. Overall, the data support the notion that sCTLA-4 is a contributory factor in cancer immune evasion.

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