A TRAILR2/CDH3 bispecific antibody demonstrates selective apoptosis and tumor regression in CDH3-positive pancreatic cancer

Exploitation of extrinsic apoptosis signaling via TRAILR2 activation represents a promising therapeutic concept in cancer treatment. The limited clinical success of previous TRAILR2 agonistic agents, to date, has been ascribed to either poor efficacy or hepatotoxicity. TR2/CDH3 BAB is a human bispec...

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Veröffentlicht in:mAbs 2024-12, Vol.16 (1), p.2438173
Hauptverfasser: Jung, Peter, Glaser, Stefan P, Han, Jing, Popa, Alexandra, Pisarsky, Laura, Feng, Ningping, Geyer, Antonia, Haderk, Franziska, Alpar, Donat, Bristow, Christopher, Schmittner, Susanne, Traexler, Paula-Elena, Mahendra, Mikhila, Poehn, Birgit, Gandhi, Poojabahen, Fiorelli, Roberto, Awate, Sanket, Budano, Nicole, Martin, Florian, Albrecht, Christoph, Drobits-Handl, Barbara, Anand, Sathanandam S, Kasturirangan, Srinath, Trapani, Francesca, Schweifer, Norbert, Marszalek, Joseph R, Tontsch-Grunt, Ulrike, Pearson, Mark, Heffernan, Timothy P, Kraut, Norbert, Vellano, Christopher P, García-Martínez, Juan Manuel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Exploitation of extrinsic apoptosis signaling via TRAILR2 activation represents a promising therapeutic concept in cancer treatment. The limited clinical success of previous TRAILR2 agonistic agents, to date, has been ascribed to either poor efficacy or hepatotoxicity. TR2/CDH3 BAB is a human bispecific antibody that relies on binding both CDH3 and TRAILR2 on cell surfaces to achieve TRAILR2 hyperclustering and efficient apoptosis induction by TRAILR2 signaling selectively in CDH3-expressing tumor cells. We demonstrate target-dependent TR2/CDH3 BAB anti-tumor activity in CRISPR/Cas9-engineered or knock-out cells. By utilizing the cell line screening platform PRISM, we found selective TR2/CDH3 BAB efficacy in various cancer types, such as pancreatic, gastric, colorectal, and triple negative breast cancer. The efficacy of TR2/CDH3 BAB correlated with caspase activation in cancer cell lines and in xenograft tumor tissues. In pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), where patient benefit from current cytotoxic therapy options is unsatisfactory, a close to uniform cell surface expression of CDH3 and TRAILR2 was observed, which will qualify the majority of PDAC patients for TR2/CDH3 BAB-based treatment. TR2/CDH3 BAB demonstrated anti-tumor activity in a panel of PDAC patient-derived xenograft models, including tumor regressions. By combining TR2/CDH3 BAB with chemotherapeutic agents, deeper and more sustained anti-tumor responses were observed when compared to monotherapy. Together with the potential to deliver a favorable safety profile, these data support clinical testing of TR2/CDH3 BAB in patients with PDAC.
ISSN:1942-0862
1942-0870
1942-0870
DOI:10.1080/19420862.2024.2438173