OncoImmunology (Jan 2021)

Engineering of a trispecific tumor-targeted immunotherapy incorporating 4-1BB co-stimulation and PD-L1 blockade

  • Stefan Warmuth,
  • Tea Gunde,
  • Daniel Snell,
  • Matthias Brock,
  • Christopher Weinert,
  • Alexandre Simonin,
  • Christian Hess,
  • Julia Tietz,
  • Maria Johansson,
  • Fabio Mario Spiga,
  • Robin Heiz,
  • Naomi Flückiger,
  • Sandro Wagen,
  • Julia Zeberer,
  • Dania Diem,
  • Dana Mahler,
  • Belinda Wickihalder,
  • Simone Muntwiler,
  • Bithi Chatterjee,
  • Benjamin Küttner,
  • Bettina Bommer,
  • Yasemin Yaman,
  • Peter Lichtlen,
  • David Urech

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2021.2004661
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1

Abstract

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Co-stimulatory 4–1BB receptors on tumor-infiltrating T cells are a compelling target for overcoming resistance to immune checkpoint inhibitors, but initial clinical studies of 4–1BB agonist mAbs were accompanied by liver toxicity. We sought to engineer a tri-specific antibody-based molecule that stimulates intratumoral 4–1BB and blocks PD-L1/PD-1 signaling without systemic toxicity and with clinically favorable pharmacokinetics. Recombinant fusion proteins were constructed using scMATCH3 technology and humanized antibody single-chain variable fragments against PD-L1, 4–1BB, and human serum albumin. Paratope affinities were optimized using single amino acid substitutions, leading to design of the drug candidate NM21-1480. Multiple in vitro experiments evaluated pharmacodynamic properties of NM21-1480, and syngeneic mouse tumor models assessed antitumor efficacy and safety of murine analogues. A GLP multiple-dose toxicology study evaluated its safety in non-human primates. NM21-1480 inhibited PD-L1/PD-1 signaling with a potency similar to avelumab, and it potently stimulated 4–1BB signaling only in the presence of PD-L1, while exhibiting an EC50 that was largely independent of PD-L1 density. NM21-1480 exhibited high efficacy for co-activation of pre-stimulated T cells and dendritic cells. In xenograft models in syngeneic mice, NM21-1480 induced tumor regression and tumor infiltration of T cells without causing systemic T-cell activation. A GLP toxicology study revealed no evidence of liver toxicity at doses up to 140 mg/kg, and pharmacokinetic studies in non-human primates suggested a plasma half-life in humans of up to 2 weeks. NM21-1480 has the potential to overcome checkpoint resistance by co-activating tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes without liver toxicity.

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