Nature Communications (Jul 2024)

Tumor cell-directed STING agonist antibody-drug conjugates induce type III interferons and anti-tumor innate immune responses

  • Naniye Malli Cetinbas,
  • Travis Monnell,
  • Jahna Soomer-James,
  • Pamela Shaw,
  • Kelly Lancaster,
  • Kalli C. Catcott,
  • Melissa Dolan,
  • Rebecca Mosher,
  • Caitlin Routhier,
  • Chen-Ni Chin,
  • Dorin Toader,
  • Jeremy Duvall,
  • Raghida Bukhalid,
  • Timothy B. Lowinger,
  • Marc Damelin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49932-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

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Abstract Activating interferon responses with STING agonists (STINGa) is a current cancer immunotherapy strategy, and therapeutic modalities that enable tumor-targeted delivery via systemic administration could be beneficial. Here we demonstrate that tumor cell-directed STING agonist antibody-drug-conjugates (STINGa ADCs) activate STING in tumor cells and myeloid cells and induce anti-tumor innate immune responses in in vitro, in vivo (in female mice), and ex vivo tumor models. We show that the tumor cell-directed STINGa ADCs are internalized into myeloid cells by Fcγ-receptor-I in a tumor antigen-dependent manner. Systemic administration of STINGa ADCs in mice leads to STING activation in tumors, with increased anti-tumor activity and reduced serum cytokine elevations compared to a free STING agonist. Furthermore, STINGa ADCs induce type III interferons, which contribute to the anti-tumor activity by upregulating type I interferon and other key chemokines/cytokines. These findings reveal an important role for type III interferons in the anti-tumor activity elicited by STING agonism and provide rationale for the clinical development of tumor cell-directed STINGa ADCs.