Biomedicines (Feb 2024)

L-DOS47 Elevates Pancreatic Cancer Tumor pH and Enhances Response to Immunotherapy

  • Bruna Victorasso Jardim-Perassi,
  • Pietro Irrera,
  • Oluwaseyi E. Oluwatola,
  • Dominique Abrahams,
  • Veronica C. Estrella,
  • Bryce Ordway,
  • Samantha R. Byrne,
  • Andrew A. Ojeda,
  • Christopher J. Whelan,
  • Jongphil Kim,
  • Matthew S. Beatty,
  • Sultan Damgaci-Erturk,
  • Dario Livio Longo,
  • Kim J. Gaspar,
  • Gabrielle M. Siegers,
  • Barbara A. Centeno,
  • Justin Y. C. Lau,
  • Shari A. Pilon-Thomas,
  • Arig Ibrahim-Hashim,
  • Robert J. Gillies

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12020461
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. 461

Abstract

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Acidosis is an important immunosuppressive mechanism that leads to tumor growth. Therefore, we investigated the neutralization of tumor acidity to improve immunotherapy response. L-DOS47, a new targeted urease immunoconjugate designed to neutralize tumor acidity, has been well tolerated in phase I/IIa trials. L-DOS47 binds to CEACAM6, a cell-surface protein that is highly expressed in gastrointestinal cancers, allowing urease to cleave endogenous urea into two NH4+ and one CO2, thereby raising local pH. To test the synergetic effect of neutralizing tumor acidity with immunotherapy, we developed a pancreatic orthotopic murine tumor model (KPC961) expressing human CEACAM6. Using chemical exchange saturation transfer–magnetic resonance imaging (CEST-MRI) to measure the tumor extracellular pH (pHe), we confirmed that L-DOS47 raises the tumor pHe from 4 h to 96 h post injection in acidic tumors (average increase of 0.13 units). Additional studies showed that combining L-DOS47 with anti-PD1 significantly increases the efficacy of the anti-PD1 monotherapy, reducing tumor growth for up to 4 weeks.

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