Frontiers in Oncology (Jul 2023)
BAT6026, a novel anti-OX40 antibody with enhanced antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity effect for cancer immunotherapy
Abstract
OX40 (CD134), a member of the TNF receptor superfamily, is a widely studied costimulatory immune checkpoint. Several OX40 agonistic antibodies are in the clinical stage for cancer treatment, among which PF-04518600 is the leader and currently in phase II trial. It has been recognized that one potential mode of action for anti-OX40 antibodies is the deletion of intratumoral Tregs. Thus, a novel human anti-OX40 antibody, BAT6026, was generated with enhanced antibody dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) via fucose deletion to strengthen its Treg depletion activity. This characteristic of BAT6026 differentiates it from other previously reported anti-OX40 antibodies in the field of tumor therapy. The affinity of BT6026 to OX40 was 0.28nM, approximately 8 times stronger than that of PF-04518600. BAT6026 effectively competed for the binding of ligand OX40L to OX40, whereas PF-04518600 only partially competed. Moreover, compared to PF-04518600, BAT6026 activated T cells more effectively when clustered by FcγRs engagement and stimulated SEB-pretreated PBMCs to secrete IL-2 cytokines in vitro. In addition, BAT6026 demonstrated stronger anti-tumor activity than PF-04518600 in an OX40-humanized mouse MC38 tumor model. BAT6026 also showed a significantly synergistic effect on tumor inhibition when combined treatment with PD-1 antibody. Analysis of tumor-infiltrating T cells revealed that BAT6026 treatment significantly reduced Treg cells and increased CD8+ T cells in tumor. Preclinical safety assessment in non-human primates demonstrated a good safety profile for BAT6026. Together these data warrant further development of BAT6026 into clinical trials for patients with cancer.
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