Zhou, Xueyuan ; Geyer, Felix Klaus ; Happel, Dominic ; Takimoto, Jeffrey ; Kolmar, Harald ; Rabinovich, Brian (2024)
Using protein geometry to optimize cytotoxicity and the cytokine window of a ROR1 specific T cell engager.
In: Frontiers in Immunology, 2024, 15
doi: 10.26083/tuprints-00027164
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Item Type: | Article |
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Type of entry: | Secondary publication |
Title: | Using protein geometry to optimize cytotoxicity and the cytokine window of a ROR1 specific T cell engager |
Language: | English |
Date: | 4 June 2024 |
Place of Publication: | Darmstadt |
Year of primary publication: | 22 February 2024 |
Place of primary publication: | Lausanne |
Publisher: | Frontiers Media S.A. |
Journal or Publication Title: | Frontiers in Immunology |
Volume of the journal: | 15 |
Collation: | 16 Seiten |
DOI: | 10.26083/tuprints-00027164 |
Corresponding Links: | |
Origin: | Secondary publication DeepGreen |
Abstract: | T cell engaging bispecific antibodies have shown clinical proof of concept for hematologic malignancies. Still, cytokine release syndrome, neurotoxicity, and on-target-off-tumor toxicity, especially in the solid tumor setting, represent major obstacles. Second generation TCEs have been described that decouple cytotoxicity from cytokine release by reducing the apparent binding affinity for CD3 and/or the TAA but the results of such engineering have generally led only to reduced maximum induction of cytokine release and often at the expense of maximum cytotoxicity. Using ROR1 as our model TAA and highly modular camelid nanobodies, we describe the engineering of a next generation decoupled TCE that incorporates a “cytokine window” defined as a dose range in which maximal killing is reached but cytokine release may be modulated from very low for safety to nearly that induced by first generation TCEs. This latter attribute supports pro-inflammatory anti-tumor activity including bystander killing and can potentially be used by clinicians to safely titrate patient dose to that which mediates maximum efficacy that is postulated as greater than that possible using standard second generation approaches. We used a combined method of optimizing TCE mediated synaptic distance and apparent affinity tuning of the TAA binding arms to generate a relatively long but persistent synapse that supports a wide cytokine window, potent killing and a reduced propensity towards immune exhaustion. Importantly, this next generation TCE induced significant tumor growth inhibition in vivo but unlike a first-generation non-decoupled benchmark TCE that induced lethal CRS, no signs of adverse events were observed. |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | T cell engager, cytokine release syndrome, ROR1, decoupling of cytotoxicity, VHH |
Identification Number: | Artikel-ID: 1323049 |
Status: | Publisher's Version |
URN: | urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-271645 |
Additional Information: | Sec. Cancer Immunity and Immunotherapy |
Classification DDC: | 500 Science and mathematics > 540 Chemistry 500 Science and mathematics > 570 Life sciences, biology 600 Technology, medicine, applied sciences > 610 Medicine and health |
Divisions: | Interdisziplinäre Forschungsprojekte > Centre for Synthetic Biology 07 Department of Chemistry > Clemens-Schöpf-Institut > Fachgebiet Biochemie |
Date Deposited: | 04 Jun 2024 12:47 |
Last Modified: | 07 Jun 2024 07:26 |
SWORD Depositor: | Deep Green |
URI: | https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/id/eprint/27164 |
PPN: | 518862321 |
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