Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer (Jan 2021)

Enhanced antitumor immunity by a novel small molecule HPK1 inhibitor

  • Chan Gao,
  • Michael Quigley,
  • Dandan Zhao,
  • Jennifer Koenitzer,
  • Dan You,
  • Stephen Hillerman,
  • Gregory Locke,
  • Charu Chaudhry,
  • Caitlyn Stromko,
  • Anwar Murtaza,
  • Yi Fan,
  • Yali Chen,
  • Stephanie Briceno,
  • Elizabeth Duperret,
  • Johnni Gullo-Brown,
  • John Feder,
  • Joshua Curtin,
  • Andrew P Degnan,
  • Godwin Kumi,
  • Mark Wittman,
  • Benjamin M Johnson,
  • Karen E Parrish,
  • Giridharan Gokulrangan,
  • John T Hunt,
  • Luisa Salter-Cid,
  • Emma Lees,
  • Jinqi Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2020-001402
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1

Abstract

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Background Hematopoietic progenitor kinase 1 (HPK1 or MAP4K1) has been demonstrated as a negative intracellular immune checkpoint in mediating antitumor immunity in studies with HPK1 knockout and kinase dead mice. Pharmacological inhibition of HPK1 is desirable to investigate the role of HPK1 in human immune cells with therapeutic implications. However, a significant challenge remains to identify a small molecule inhibitor of HPK1 with sufficient potency, selectivity, and other drug-like properties suitable for proof-of-concept studies. In this report, we identified a novel, potent, and selective HPK1 small molecule kinase inhibitor, compound K (CompK). A series of studies were conducted to investigate the mechanism of action of CompK, aiming to understand its potential application in cancer immunotherapy.Methods Human primary T cells and dendritic cells (DCs) were investigated with CompK treatment under conditions relevant to tumor microenvironment (TME). Syngeneic tumor models were used to assess the in vivo pharmacology of CompK followed by human tumor interrogation ex vivo.Results CompK treatment demonstrated markedly enhanced human T-cell immune responses under immunosuppressive conditions relevant to the TME and an increased avidity of the T-cell receptor (TCR) to recognize viral and tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) in significant synergy with anti-PD1. Animal model studies, including 1956 sarcoma and MC38 syngeneic models, revealed improved immune responses and superb antitumor efficacy in combination of CompK with anti-PD-1. An elevated immune response induced by CompK was observed with fresh tumor samples from multiple patients with colorectal carcinoma, suggesting a mechanistic translation from mouse model to human disease.Conclusion CompK treatment significantly improved human T-cell functions, with enhanced TCR avidity to recognize TAAs and tumor cytolytic activity by CD8+ T cells. Additional benefits include DC maturation and priming facilitation in tumor draining lymph node. CompK represents a novel pharmacological agent to address cancer treatment resistance.