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Archive for the ‘Advanced Drug Manufacturing Technology’ Category

Summary to Metabolomics

Summary to Metabolomics

Author and Curator: Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP 

This concludes a long step-by-step journey into rediscovering biological processes from the genome as a framework to the remodeled and reconstituted cell through a number of posttranscription and posttranslation processes that modify the proteome and determine the metabolome.  The remodeling process continues over a lifetime. The process requires a balance between nutrient intake, energy utilization for work in the lean body mass, energy reserves, endocrine, paracrine and autocrine mechanisms, and autophagy.  It is true when we look at this in its full scope – What a creature is man?

http://masspec.scripps.edu/metabo_science/recommended_readings.php
 Recommended Readings and Historical Perspectives

Metabolomics is the scientific study of chemical processes involving metabolites. Specifically, metabolomics is the “systematic study of the unique chemical fingerprints that specific cellular processes leave behind”, the study of their small-molecule metabolite profiles.[1] The metabolome represents the collection of all metabolites in a biological cell, tissue, organ or organism, which are the end products of cellular processes.[2] mRNA gene expression data and proteomic analyses reveal the set of gene products being produced in the cell, data that represents one aspect of cellular function. Conversely, metabolic profiling can give an instantaneous snapshot of the physiology of that cell. One of the challenges of systems biology and functional genomics is to integrate proteomic, transcriptomic, and metabolomic information to provide a better understanding of cellular biology.

The term “metabolic profile” was introduced by Horning, et al. in 1971 after they demonstrated that gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) could be used to measure compounds present in human urine and tissue extracts. The Horning group, along with that of Linus Pauling and Arthur B. Robinson led the development of GC-MS methods to monitor the metabolites present in urine through the 1970s.

Concurrently, NMR spectroscopy, which was discovered in the 1940s, was also undergoing rapid advances. In 1974, Seeley et al. demonstrated the utility of using NMR to detect metabolites in unmodified biological samples.This first study on muscle highlighted the value of NMR in that it was determined that 90% of cellular ATP is complexed with magnesium. As sensitivity has improved with the evolution of higher magnetic field strengths and magic angle spinning, NMR continues to be a leading analytical tool to investigate metabolism. Efforts to utilize NMR for metabolomics have been influenced by the laboratory of Dr. Jeremy Nicholson at Birkbeck College, University of London and later at Imperial College London. In 1984, Nicholson showed 1H NMR spectroscopy could potentially be used to diagnose diabetes mellitus, and later pioneered the application of pattern recognition methods to NMR spectroscopic data.

In 2005, the first metabolomics web database, METLIN, for characterizing human metabolites was developed in the Siuzdak laboratory at The Scripps Research Institute and contained over 10,000 metabolites and tandem mass spectral data. As of September 2012, METLIN contains over 60,000 metabolites as well as the largest repository of tandem mass spectrometry data in metabolomics.

On 23 January 2007, the Human Metabolome Project, led by Dr. David Wishart of the University of Alberta, Canada, completed the first draft of the human metabolome, consisting of a database of approximately 2500 metabolites, 1200 drugs and 3500 food components. Similar projects have been underway in several plant species, most notably Medicago truncatula and Arabidopsis thaliana for several years.

As late as mid-2010, metabolomics was still considered an “emerging field”. Further, it was noted that further progress in the field depended in large part, through addressing otherwise “irresolvable technical challenges”, by technical evolution of mass spectrometry instrumentation.

Metabolome refers to the complete set of small-molecule metabolites (such as metabolic intermediates, hormones and other signaling molecules, and secondary metabolites) to be found within a biological sample, such as a single organism. The word was coined in analogy with transcriptomics and proteomics; like the transcriptome and the proteome, the metabolome is dynamic, changing from second to second. Although the metabolome can be defined readily enough, it is not currently possible to analyse the entire range of metabolites by a single analytical method. The first metabolite database(called METLIN) for searching m/z values from mass spectrometry data was developed by scientists at The Scripps Research Institute in 2005. In January 2007, scientists at the University of Alberta and the University of Calgary completed the first draft of the human metabolome. They catalogued approximately 2500 metabolites, 1200 drugs and 3500 food components that can be found in the human body, as reported in the literature. This information, available at the Human Metabolome Database (www.hmdb.ca) and based on analysis of information available in the current scientific literature, is far from complete.

Each type of cell and tissue has a unique metabolic ‘fingerprint’ that can elucidate organ or tissue-specific information, while the study of biofluids can give more generalized though less specialized information. Commonly used biofluids are urine and plasma, as they can be obtained non-invasively or relatively non-invasively, respectively. The ease of collection facilitates high temporal resolution, and because they are always at dynamic equilibrium with the body, they can describe the host as a whole.

Metabolites are the intermediates and products of metabolism. Within the context of metabolomics, a metabolite is usually defined as any molecule less than 1 kDa in size.
A primary metabolite is directly involved in the normal growth, development, and reproduction. A secondary metabolite is not directly involved in those processes.  By contrast, in human-based metabolomics, it is more common to describe metabolites as being either endogenous (produced by the host organism) or exogenous. Metabolites of foreign substances such as drugs are termed xenometabolites. The metabolome forms a large network of metabolic reactions, where outputs from one enzymatic chemical reaction are inputs to other chemical reactions.

Metabonomics is defined as “the quantitative measurement of the dynamic multiparametric metabolic response of living systems to pathophysiological stimuli or genetic modification”. The word origin is from the Greek μεταβολή meaning change and nomos meaning a rule set or set of laws. This approach was pioneered by Jeremy Nicholson at Imperial College London and has been used in toxicology, disease diagnosis and a number of other fields. Historically, the metabonomics approach was one of the first methods to apply the scope of systems biology to studies of metabolism.

There is a growing consensus that ‘metabolomics’ places a greater emphasis on metabolic profiling at a cellular or organ level and is primarily concerned with normal endogenous metabolism. ‘Metabonomics’ extends metabolic profiling to include information about perturbations of metabolism caused by environmental factors (including diet and toxins), disease processes, and the involvement of extragenomic influences, such as gut microflora. This is not a trivial difference; metabolomic studies should, by definition, exclude metabolic contributions from extragenomic sources, because these are external to the system being studied.

Toxicity assessment/toxicology. Metabolic profiling (especially of urine or blood plasma samples) detects the physiological changes caused by toxic insult of a chemical (or mixture of chemicals).

Functional genomics. Metabolomics can be an excellent tool for determining the phenotype caused by a genetic manipulation, such as gene deletion or insertion. Sometimes this can be a sufficient goal in itself—for instance, to detect any phenotypic changes in a genetically-modified plant intended for human or animal consumption. More exciting is the prospect of predicting the function of unknown genes by comparison with the metabolic perturbations caused by deletion/insertion of known genes.

Nutrigenomics is a generalised term which links genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics to human nutrition. In general a metabolome in a given body fluid is influenced by endogenous factors such as age, sex, body composition and genetics as well as underlying pathologies. The large bowel microflora are also a very significant potential confounder of metabolic profiles and could be classified as either an endogenous or exogenous factor. The main exogenous factors are diet and drugs. Diet can then be broken down to nutrients and non- nutrients.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metabolomics

Jose Eduardo des Salles Roselino

The problem with genomics was it was set as explanation for everything. In fact, when something is genetic in nature the genomic reasoning works fine. However, this means whenever an inborn error is found and only in this case the genomic knowledge afterwards may indicate what is wrong and not the completely way to put biology upside down by reading everything in the DNA genetic as well as non-genetic problems.

Coordination of the transcriptome and metabolome by the circadian clock PNAS 2012

Coordination of the transcriptome and metabolome by the circadian clock PNAS 2012

analysis of metabolomic data and differential metabolic regulation for fetal lungs, and maternal blood plasma

conformational changes leading to substrate efflux.img

conformational changes leading to substrate efflux.img

The cellular response is defined by a network of chemogenomic response signatures.

The cellular response is defined by a network of chemogenomic response signatures.

Dynamic Construct of the –Omics

Dynamic Construct of the –Omics

 genome cartoon

genome cartoon

central dogma phenotype

central dogma phenotype

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Antimalarial flow synthesis closer to commercialisation.

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NIH Considers Guidelines for CAR-T therapy: Report from Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee

Reporter: Stephen J. Williams, Ph.D.

UPDATED 5/27/2024

The practice of pharmacovigilence, both premarketing and postmarketing, has very well defined best practices concerning most small molecule drugs and even medical devices.  However, for many cell based therapies and many gene based therapies, often still administered within the university, academic setting, pharmacovigilence reporting and adherence may be a not as efficient and thorough as conducted by large big pharmaceutical firms.  Big pharma will devote massive resources for the conduct of pharmacovigilence data collecting and analysis.  For many cell based therapies, like CAR-T therapies and some gene therapies are almost conducted as clinical trials within university medical centers, which may not have the resources for a large pharmacovigilence program.

In a report by IQVIA, oncologists were asked about their concerns with cell based therapies.  A recurring concern involved the lack of information on the adverse events related to these therapies, especially after an oncologist’s patient would return from administration of their CAR-T therapy and then both patient and oncologist felt ‘on their own’.

Most recently the FDA has issued black box warning on many CAR-T therapies for their risk in inducing secondary malignancies (see What does this mean for Immunotherapy? FDA put a temporary hold on Juno’s JCAR015, Three Death of Cerebral Edema in CAR-T Clinical Trial and Kite Pharma announced Phase II portion of its CAR-T ZUMA-1 trial).

Source: https://www.fiercepharma.com/ai-and-machine-learning/oncologists-have-shopping-car-t-full-complaints-safety-questions-cell?utm_medium=email&utm_source=nl&utm_campaign=LS-NL-FiercePharma+Tracker&oly_enc_id=2360C5096034F3G

Note: the IQVIA will be submitted as an abstract at the current ASCO meeting

UPDATED 5/10/2022

In the mid to late 1970’s a public debate (and related hysteria) had emerged surrounding two emerging advances in recombinant DNA technology;

  1. the development of vectors useful for cloning pieces of DNA (the first vector named pBR322) and
  2. the discovery of bacterial strains useful in propagating such vectors

As discussed by D. S, Fredrickson of NIH’s Dept. of Education and Welfare in his historical review” A HISTORY OF THE RECOMBINANT DNA GUIDELINES IN THE UNITED STATES” this international concern of the biological safety issues of this new molecular biology tool led the National Institute of Health to coordinate a committee (the NIH Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee) to develop guidelines for the ethical use, safe development, and safe handling of such vectors and host bacterium. The first conversations started in 1974 and, by 1978, initial guidelines had been developed. In fact, as Dr. Fredrickson notes, public relief was voiced even by religious organizations (who had the greatest ethical concerns)

On December 16, 1978, a telegram purporting to be from the Vatican was hand delivered to the office of Joseph A. Califano, Jr., Secretary of Health, Education,

and Welfare. “Habemus regimen recombinatum,” it proclaimed, in celebration of the

end of a long struggle to revise the NIH Guidelines for Research Involving

Recombinant DNA Molecules

The overall Committee resulted in guidelines (2013 version) which assured the worldwide community that

  • organisms used in such procedures would have limited pathogenicity in humans
  • vectors would be developed in a manner which would eliminate their ability to replicate in humans and have defined antibiotic sensitivity

So great was the success and acceptance of this committee and guidelines, the NIH felt the Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee should meet regularly to discuss and develop ethical guidelines and clinical regulations concerning DNA-based therapeutics and technologies.

A PowerPoint Slideshow: Introduction to NIH OBA and the History of Recombinant DNA Oversight can be viewed at the following link:

http://www.powershow.com/view1/e1703-ZDc1Z/Introduction_to_NIH_OBA_and_the_History_of_Recombinant_DNA_Oversight_powerpoint_ppt_presentation

Please see the following link for a video discussion between Dr. Paul Berg, who pioneered DNA recombinant technology, and Dr. James Watson (Commemorating 50 Years of DNA Science):

http://media.hhmi.org/interviews/berg_watson.html

The Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee has met numerous times to discuss new DNA-based technologies and their biosafety and clinical implication including:

A recent Symposium was held in the summer of 2010 to discuss ethical and safety concerns and discuss potential clinical guidelines for use of an emerging immunotherapy technology, the Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-Cells (CART), which at that time had just been started to be used in clinical trials.

Considerations for the Clinical Application of Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells: Observations from a Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee Symposium Held June 15, 2010[1]

Contributors to the Symposium discussing opinions regarding CAR-T protocol design included some of the prominent members in the field including:

Drs. Hildegund C.J. Ertl, John Zaia, Steven A. Rosenberg, Carl H. June, Gianpietro Dotti, Jeffrey Kahn, Laurence J. N. Cooper, Jacqueline Corrigan-Curay, And Scott E. Strome.

The discussions from the Symposium, reported in Cancer Research[1]. were presented in three parts:

  1. Summary of the Evolution of the CAR therapy
  2. Points for Future Consideration including adverse event reporting
  3. Considerations for Design and Implementation of Trials including mitigating toxicities and risks

1. Evolution of Chimeric Antigen Receptors

Early evidence had suggested that adoptive transfer of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, after depletion of circulating lymphocytes, could result in a clinical response in some tumor patients however developments showed autologous T-cells (obtained from same patient) could be engineered to express tumor-associated antigens (TAA) and replace the TILS in the clinical setting.

However there were some problems noticed.

  • Problem: HLA restriction of T-cells. Solution: genetically engineer T-cells to redirect T-cell specificity to surface TAAs
  • Problem: 1st generation vectors designed to engineer T-cells to recognize surface epitopes but engineered cells had limited survival in patients.   Solution: development of 2nd generation vectors with co-stimulatory molecules such as CD28, CD19 to improve survival and proliferation in patients

A summary table of limitations of the two types of genetically-modified T-cell therapies were given and given (in modified form) below

                                                                                                Type of Gene-modified T-Cell

Limitations aβ TCR CAR
Affected by loss or decrease of HLA on tumor cells yes no
Affected by altered tumor cell antigen processing? yes no
Need to have defined tumor target antigen? no yes
Vector recombination with endogenous TCR yes no

A brief history of construction of 2nd and 3rd generation CAR-T cells given by cancer.gov:

http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/research-updates/2013/CAR-T-Cells

cartdiagrampic

Differences between  second- and third-generation chimeric antigen receptor T cells. (Adapted by permission from the American Association for Cancer Research: Lee, DW et al. The Future Is Now: Chimeric Antigen Receptors as New Targeted Therapies for Childhood Cancer. Clin Cancer Res; 2012;18(10); 2780–90. doi:10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-11-1920)

Constructing a CAR T Cell (from cancer.gov)

The first efforts to engineer T cells to be used as a cancer treatment began in the early 1990s. Since then, researchers have learned how to produce T cells that express chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) that recognize specific targets on cancer cells.

The T cells are genetically modified to produce these receptors. To do this, researchers use viral vectors that are stripped of their ability to cause illness but that retain the capacity to integrate into cells’ DNA to deliver the genetic material needed to produce the T-cell receptors.

The second- and third-generation CARs typically consist of a piece of monoclonal antibody, called a single-chain variable fragment (scFv), that resides on the outside of the T-cell membrane and is linked to stimulatory molecules (Co-stim 1 and Co-stim 2) inside the T cell. The scFv portion guides the cell to its target antigen. Once the T cell binds to its target antigen, the stimulatory molecules provide the necessary signals for the T cell to become fully active. In this fully active state, the T cells can more effectively proliferate and attack cancer cells.

2. Adverse Event Reporting and Protocol Considerations

The symposium had been organized mainly in response to two reported deaths of patients enrolled in a CART trial, so that clinical investigators could discuss and formulate best practices for the proper conduct and analysis of such trials. One issue raised was lack of pharmacovigilence procedures (adverse event reporting). Although no pharmacovigilence procedures (either intra or inter-institutional) were devised from meeting proceedings, it was stressed that each institution should address this issue as well as better clinical outcome reporting.

Case Report of a Serious Adverse Event Following the Administration of T Cells Transduced With a Chimeric Antigen Receptor Recognizing ERBB2[2] had reported the death of a patient on trial.

In A phase I clinical trial of adoptive transfer of folate receptor-alpha redirected autologous T cells for recurrent ovarian cancer[3] authors: Lana E Kandalaft*, Daniel J Powell and George Coukos from University of Pennsylvania recorded adverse events in pilot studies using a CART modified to recognize the folate receptor, so it appears any adverse event reporting system is at the discretion of the primary investigator.

Other protocol considerations suggested by the symposium attendants included:

  • Plan for translational clinical lab for routine blood analysis
  • Subject screening for pulmonary and cardiac events
  • Determine possibility of insertional mutagenesis
  • Informed consent
  • Analysis of non T and T-cell subsets, e.g. natural killer cells and CD*8 cells

3. Consideration for Design of Trials and Mitigating Toxicities

  • Early Toxic effectsCytokine Release Syndrome– The effectiveness of CART therapy has been manifested by release of high levels of cytokines resulting in fever and inflammatory sequelae. One such cytokine, interleukin 6, has been attributed to this side effect and investigators have successfully used an IL6 receptor antagonist, tocilizumab (Acterma™), to alleviate symptoms of cytokine release syndrome (see review Adoptive T-cell therapy: adverse events and safety switches by Siok-Keen Tey).

 

Below is a video form Dr. Renier Brentjens, M.D., Ph.D. for Memorial Sloan Kettering concerning the finding he made that the adverse event from cytokine release syndrome may be a function of the tumor cell load, and if they treat the patient with CAR-T right after salvage chemotherapy the adverse events are alleviated..

Please see video below:

http link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Gg6elUMIVE

  • Early Toxic effects – Over-activation of CAR T-cells; mitigation by dose escalation strategy (as authors in reference [3] proposed). Most trials give billions of genetically modified cells to a patient.
  • Late Toxic Effectslong-term depletion of B-cells . For example CART directing against CD19 or CD20 on B cells may deplete the normal population of CD19 or CD20 B-cells over time; possibly managed by IgG supplementation

Below is a curation of various examples of the need for developing a Pharmacovigilence Framework for Engineered T-Cell Therapies

As shown above the first reported side effects from engineered T-cell or CAR-T therapies stemmed from the first human trial occuring at University of Pennsylvania, the developers of the first CAR-T therapy.  The clinical investigators however anticipated the issue of a potential cytokine storm and had developed ideas in the pre-trial phase of how to ameliorate such toxicity using anti-cytokine antibodies.  However, until the trial was underway they were unsure of which cytokines would be prominent in causing a cytokine storm effect from the CAR-T therapy.  Fortunately, the investigators were able to save patient 1 (described here in other posts) using anti-IL1 and 10 antibodies.  

 

Over the years, however, multiple trials had to be discontinued as shown below in the following posts:

What does this mean for Immunotherapy? FDA put a temporary hold on Juno’s JCAR015, Three Death of Celebral Edema in CAR-T Clinical Trial and Kite Pharma announced Phase II portion of its CAR-T ZUMA-1 trial

The NIH has put a crimp in the clinical trial work of Steven Rosenberg, Kite Pharma’s star collaborator at the National Cancer Institute. The feds slammed the brakes on the production of experimental drugs at two of its facilities–including cell therapies that Rosenberg works with–after an internal inspection found they weren’t in compliance with safety and quality regulations.

In this instance Kite was being cited for manufacturing issues, apparantly fungal contamination in their cell therapy manufacturing facility.  However shortly after other CAR-T developers were having tragic deaths in their initial phase 1 safety studies.

Juno Halts Cancer Trial Using Gene-Altered Cells After 3 Deaths

 

Juno halts its immunotherapy trial for cancer after three patient deaths

By DAMIAN GARDE @damiangarde and MEGHANA KESHAVAN @megkesh

JULY 7, 2016

In Juno patient deaths, echoes seen of earlier failed company

By SHARON BEGLEY @sxbegle

JULY 8, 2016

https://www.statnews.com/2016/07/08/juno-echoes-of-dendreon/

After a deadly clinical trial, will immune therapies for cancer be a bust?

By DAMIAN GARDE @damiangarde

JULY 8, 2016

This led to warnings by FDA and alteration of their trials as well as the use of their CART as a monotherapy

Hours after Juno CAR-T study deaths announced, Kite enrolls CAR-T PhII

Well That Was Quick! FDA Lets Juno Restart Trial With a New Combination Chemotherapuetic

 at Seattle Times

FDA lets Juno restart cancer-treatment trial

Certainly with so many issues there would seem to be more rigorous work to either establish a pharmacovigilence framework or to develop alternative engineered T cells with a safer profile

However here we went again

New paper sheds fresh light on Tmunity’s high-profile CAR-T deaths
Jason Mast
Editor
The industry-wide effort to push CAR-T therapies — wildly effective in several blood cancers — into solid tumors took a hit last year when Tmunity, a biotech founded by CAR-T pioneer Carl June and backed by several blue-chip VCs, announced it shut down its lead program for prostate cancer after two patients died.

On a personal note this trial was announced in a Bio International meeting here in Philadelphia a few years ago in 2019

see Live Conference Coverage on this site

eProceedings for BIO 2019 International Convention, June 3-6, 2019 Philadelphia Convention Center; Philadelphia PA, Real Time Coverage by Stephen J. Williams, PhD @StephenJWillia2

and the indication was for prostate cancer, in particular hormone resistant castration resistant.  Another one was planned for pancreatic cancer from the same group and the early indications were favorable.

From Onclive

Source: https://www.onclive.com/view/car-t-cell-therapy-trial-in-solid-tumors-halted-following-2-patient-deaths 

Tmunity Therapeutics, a clinical-stage biotherapeutics company, has halted the development of its lead CAR T-cell product following the deaths of 2 patients who were enrolled to a trial investigating its use in solid tumors.1

The patients reportedly died from immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS), which is a known adverse effect associated with CAR T-cell therapies.

“What we are discovering is that the cytokine profiles we see in solid tumors are completely different from hematologic cancers,” Oz Azam, co-founder of Tmunity said in an interview with Endpoints News. “We observed ICANS. And we had 2 patient deaths as a result of that. We navigated the first event and obviously saw the second event, and as a result of that we have shut down the version one of that program and pivoted quickly to our second generation.”

Previously, with first-generation CAR T-cell therapies in patients with blood cancers, investigators were presented with the challenge of overcoming cytokine release syndrome. Now ICANS, or macrophage activation, is proving to have deadly effects in the realm of solid tumors. Carl June, the other co-founder of Tmunity, noted that investigators will now need to dedicate their efforts to engineering around this, as had been done with tocilizumab (Actemra) in 2012.

The company is dedicated to the development of novel approaches that produce best-in-class control over T-cell activation and direction in the body.2 The product examined in the trial was developed to utilize engineered patient cells to target prostate-specific membrane antigen; it was also designed to use a dominant TGFβ receptor to block an important checkpoint involved in cancer.

Twenty-four patients were recruited for the dose-escalating study and the company plans to release data from high-dose cohorts later in 2021.

“We are going to present all of this in a peer-reviewed publication because we want to share this with the field,” Azam said. “Because everything we’ve encountered, no matter what…people are going to encounter this when they get into the clinic, and I don’t think they’ve really understood yet because so many are preclinical companies that are not in the clinic with solid tumors. And the rubber meets the road when you get in the clinic, because the ultimate in vivo model is the human model.”

Azam added that the company plans to develop a new investigational new drug for version 2, which they hope will result in a safer product.

References

  1. Carroll J. Exclusive: Carl June’s Tmunity encounters a lethal roadblock as 2 patient deaths derail lead trial, raise red flag forcing rethink of CAR-T for solid tumors. Endpoints News. June 2, 2021. Accessed June 3, 2021. https://bit.ly/3wPYWm0
  2. Research and Development. Tmunity Therapeutics website. Accessed June 3, 2021. https://bit.ly/3fOH3OR

Forward to 2022

Reprogramming a new type of T cell to go after cancers with less side effects, longer impact

A Sloan Kettering Institute research team thinks new, killer, innate-like T cells could make promising candidates to treat cancers that so far haven’t responded to immunotherapy treatments. (koto_feja)

Immunotherapy is one of the more appealing and effective kinds of cancer treatment when it works, but the relatively new approach is still fairly limited in the kinds of cancer it can be used for. Researchers at the Sloan Kettering Institute have discovered a new kind of immune cell and how it could be used to expand the reach of immunotherapy treatments to a much wider pool of patients.

The cells in question are called killer innate-like T cells, a threatening name for a potentially lifesaving innovation. Unlike normal killer T cells, killer innate-like T cells stay active much longer and can burrow further into potentially cancerous tissue to attack tumors. The research team first reported these cells in 2016, but it’s only recently that they were able to properly understand and identify them.

“We think these killer innate-like T cells could be targeted or genetically engineered for cancer therapy,” said the study’s lead author, Ming Li, Ph.D., in a press release. “They may be better at reaching and killing solid tumors than conventional T cells.”

Below is the referenced paper from Pubmed:

Evaluation of the safety and efficacy of humanized anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy in older patients with relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma based on the comprehensive geriatric assessment system

Affiliations 

Abstract

Anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy has led to unprecedented results to date in relapsed/refractory (R/R) diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), yet its clinical application in elderly patients with R/R DLBCL remains somewhat limited. In this study, a total of 31 R/R DLBCL patients older than 65 years of age were enrolled and received humanized anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy. Patients were stratified into a fit, unfit, or frail group according to the comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA). The fit group had a higher objective response (OR) rate (ORR) and complete response (CR) rate than that of the unfit/frail group, but there was no difference in the part response (PR) rate between the groups. The unfit/frail group was more likely to experience AEs than the fit group. The peak proportion of anti-CD19 CAR T-cells in the fit group was significantly higher than that of the unfit/frail group. The CGA can be used to effectively predict the treatment response, adverse events, and long-term survival.

Introduction

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common subtype of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), accounting for 30–40% of cases, with the median age of onset being older than 65 years [1]. Although the five-year survival rate for patients with DLBCL has risen to more than 60% with the application of standardized treatments and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, nearly half of patients progress to relapsed/refractory (R/R) DLBCL. Patients with R/R DLBCL, especially elderly individuals, have a poor prognosis [2,3], so new treatments are needed to prolong survival and improve the prognosis of this population.

As a revolutionary immunotherapy therapy, anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy has achieved unprecedented results in hematological tumors [4]. As CD19 is expressed on the surface of most B-cell malignant tumors but not on pluripotent bone marrow stem cells, CD19 has been used as a target for B-cell malignancies, including B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, NHL, multiple myeloma, and chronic lymphocytic leukemia [5]. Despite the wide application and high efficacy of anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy, reports of adverse events (AEs) such as cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and immune effector cell-associated neurotoxic syndrome (ICANS) have influenced its use [6]. Especially in elderly patients, AEs associated with anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy might be more obvious.

Although anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy has been reported in the treatment of NHL, including R/R DLBCL, few studies to date have assessed the safety of anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy in elderly R/R DLBCL patients, and its clinical application in the elderly R/R DLBCL population is limited. In ZUMA-1 [7] to R/R DLBCL patients who received CAR T-cell therapy, the CR rate in patients ≥65 years was higher than that of in patients <65 years (75% vs. 53%). Lin et al. [8] reported 49 R/R DLBCL patients (24 patients >65 years, 25 patients <65 years) who received CAR T-cell therapy with a median follow-up of 179 days. The CR rate at 100 days was 51%, while the 6-month progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were 48% and 71%, respectively. Neither of the two studies carried out a comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) of fit, unfit, and frail groups of R/R DLBCL patients over 65 years of age and further analyzed the differences in efficacy and side effects in the three groups. The CGA is an effective system designed to evaluate the prognosis and improve the survival of elderly patients with cancer. The CGA system includes age, activities of daily living (ADL), instrumental ADL (IADL), and the Cumulative Illness Rating Score for Geriatrics (CIRS-G) [9].

In this study, elderly R/R DLBCL patients were grouped according to their CGA results (fit vs. unfit/frail) before receiving humanized anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy. We then analyzed the efficacy and AEs of anti-CD19 CAR T-cell therapy and compared findings between these groups.

 

Well it appears that the discriminator was only fitness going into the trial  a bit odd that the whole field appears to be lacking in development of Safety Biomarkers.

 

 

However Genentech (subsidiary of Roche) may now be using some data to develop therapies which may combat resistance to CART therapies which may provide at least, for now, a toxicokinetic approach to reducing AEs by lowering the amount of CARTs needed to be administered.

 

Source: https://www.fiercebiotech.com/research/genentech-uncovers-how-cancer-cells-resist-t-cell-attack-potential-boon-immunotherapy

Roche’s Genentech is exploring inhibiting ESCRT as an anticancer strategy, said Ira Mellman, Ph.D., Genentech’s vice president of cancer immunology. (Roche)

Cancer cells deploy various tactics to avoid being targeted and killed by the immune system. A research team led by Roche’s Genentech has now identified one such method that cancer cells use to resist T-cell assault by repairing damage.

To destroy their targets, cancer-killing T cells known as cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) secrete the toxin perforin to form little pores in the target cells’ surface. Another type of toxin called granzymes are delivered directly into the cells through those portals to induce cell death.

By using high-res imaging in live cells, the Genentech-led team found that the membrane damage caused by perforin could trigger a repair response. The tumor cells could recruit endosomal sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRT) proteins to remove the lesions, thereby preventing granzymes from entering, the team showed in a new study published in Science.

The following is the Science paper

Membrane repair in target cell defenses

Killer T cells destroy virus-infected and cancer cells by secreting two protein toxins that act as a powerful one-two punch. Pore-forming toxins, perforins, form holes in the plasma membrane of the target cell. Cytotoxic proteins released by T cells then pass through these portals, inducing target cell death. Ritter et al. combined high-resolution imaging data with functional analysis to demonstrate that tumor-derived cells fight back (see the Perspective by Andrews). Protein complexes of the ESCRT family were able to repair perforin holes in target cells, thereby delaying or preventing T cell–induced killing. ESCRT-mediated membrane repair may thus provide a mechanism of resistance to immune attack. —SMH

Abstract

Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) and natural killer cells kill virus-infected and tumor cells through the polarized release of perforin and granzymes. Perforin is a pore-forming toxin that creates a lesion in the plasma membrane of the target cell through which granzymes enter the cytosol and initiate apoptosis. Endosomal sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRT) proteins are involved in the repair of small membrane wounds. We found that ESCRT proteins were precisely recruited in target cells to sites of CTL engagement immediately after perforin release. Inhibition of ESCRT machinery in cancer-derived cells enhanced their susceptibility to CTL-mediated killing. Thus, repair of perforin pores by ESCRT machinery limits granzyme entry into the cytosol, potentially enabling target cells to resist cytolytic attack.
Cytotoxic lymphocytes, including cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) and natural killer (NK) cells, are responsible for identifying and destroying virus-infected or tumorigenic cells. To kill their targets, CTLs and NK cells secrete a pore-forming toxin called perforin through which apoptosis-inducing serine proteases (granzymes) are delivered directly into the cytosol. Successful killing of target cells often requires multiple hits from single or multiple T cells (1). This has led to the idea that cytotoxicity is additive, often requiring multiple rounds of sublethal lytic granule secretion events before a sufficient threshold of cytosolic granzyme activity is reached to initiate apoptosis in the target (2).
Loss of plasma membrane integrity induced by cytolytic proteins or mechanical damage leads to a membrane repair response. Damage results in an influx of extracellular Ca2+, which has been proposed to lead to the removal of the membrane lesion by endocytosis, resealing of the lesions by lysosomal secretion, or budding into extracellular vesicles (3). Perforin pore formation was initially reported to enhance endocytosis of perforin (4), but subsequent work has challenged this claim (5). Endosomal sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRT) proteins can repair small wounds and pores in the plasma membrane caused by bacterial pore-forming toxins, mechanical wounding, and laser ablation (67). ESCRT proteins are transiently recruited to sites of membrane damage in a Ca2+-dependent fashion, where they assemble budding structures that shed to eliminate the wound and restore plasma membrane integrity. ESCRT-dependent membrane repair has been implicated in the resealing of endogenous pore-mediated plasma membrane damage during necroptosis (8) and pyroptosis (9).

Localization of target-derived ESCRT proteins to the cytolytic synapse

To investigate whether ESCRT-mediated membrane repair might be involved in the removal of perforin pores during T cell killing, we first determined whether ESCRT proteins in cancer-derived cells were recruited to sites of CTL engagement after perforin secretion. We used CTLs from OT-I mice that express a high-affinity T cell receptor (TCR) that recognizes the ovalbumin peptide SIINFEKL (OVA257-264) bound to the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) allele H-2Kb (10). We performed live-cell microscopy of OT-I CTLs engaging SIINFEKL-pulsed target cells that express enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)–tagged versions of Tsg101 or Chmp4b, two ESCRT proteins implicated in membrane repair (6). To correlate recruitment of ESCRT proteins with perforin exposure in time, we monitored CTL-target interaction in media with a high concentration of propidium iodide (PI), a cell-impermeable fluorogenic dye that can rapidly diffuse through perforin pores to bind and illuminate nucleic acids in the cytosol and nucleus of the target (5). EGFP-tagged ESCRT proteins were consistently recruited to the site of CTL engagement within 30 to 60 s after PI influx (Fig. 1, A and B). EGFP-Tsg101 and EGFP-Chmp4b in target cells accumulated at the cytolytic synapse after PI influx in 25 of 27 (92.6%) and 31 of 33 (93.9%) of conjugates monitored, respectively, compared with a cytosolic EGFP control, which was not recruited (Fig. 1C and movies S1 to S3). Notably, ESCRT-laden material, presumably membrane fragments, frequently detached from the target cell and adhered to the surface of the CTL (Fig. 1, D and E, and movie S2). We observed this phenomenon in ~60% of conjugates imaged in which targets expressed EGFP-Tsg101 or EGFP-Chmp4b (17 of 27 and 20 of 33 conjugates, respectively; Fig. 1D). Shedding of ESCRT-positive membrane from the cell after repair occurs after laser-induced plasma membrane wounding (67). Plasma membrane fragments shed from the target cell into the synaptic cleft likely contain ligands for CTL-resident receptors. Target cell death would separate the CTL and target, revealing target-derived material on the CTL surface.
FIG. 1. Fluorescently tagged ESCRT proteins in targets localize to site of CTL killing after perforin secretion.
(A) Live-cell spinning disk confocal imaging of a fluorescently labeled OT-I CTL (magenta) engaging an MC38 cancer cell expressing EGFP-Tsg101 (green) in media containing 100 μM PI (red). Yellow arrowheads highlight ESCRT recruitment. T-0:00 is the first frame of PI influx into the target cell (time in minutes:seconds). Scale bar, 10 μm. (B) Graph of EGFP-Tsg101 and PI fluorescence intensity at the IS within the target over time, from example in (A). AU, arbitrary units. (C and D) Quantification of CTL-target conjugates exhibiting accumulation of EGFP at the synapse after PI influx (C) or detectable EGFP-labeled material associated with CTL after target interaction (D) (EGFP condition: N = 22 conjugates in seven independent experiments; EGFP-Tsg101 condition: N = 27 conjugates in nine independent experiments; EGFP-Chmp4b condition: N = 33 conjugates in 24 independent experiments). (E) Live-cell spinning disk confocal imaging of OT-I CTL (magenta) killing MC38 expressing EGFP-Chmp4b (green), demonstrating the presence of target-derived EGFP-Chmp4b material (yellow arrowheads) associated with CTL membrane after a productive target encounter. T-0:00 is the first frame of PI influx into the target cell. Scale bar, 10 μm.
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3D cryo-SIM and FIB-SEM imaging of CTLs caught in the act of killing target cells

Although live-cell imaging indicated that ESCRT complexes were rapidly recruited at sites of T cell–target cell contact, light microscopy alone is of insufficient resolution to establish that this event occurred at the immunological synapse (IS). We thus sought to capture a comprehensive view of the IS in the moments immediately after secretion of lytic granules. We used cryo–fluorescence imaging followed by correlative focused ion beam–scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM), which can achieve isotropic three-dimensional (3D) imaging of whole cells at 8-nm resolution or better (1113). To capture the immediate response of target cells after perforin exposure, we developed a strategy whereby cryo-fixed CTL-target conjugates were selected shortly after perforation, indicated by the presence of a PI gradient in the target (fig. S1A). In live-cell imaging experiments, PI fluorescence across the nucleus of SIINFEKL-pulsed ID8 target cells began as a gradient and became homogeneous 158 ± 64 s, on average, after initial PI influx (N = 31 conjugates; fig. S1, B and C, and movie S4). Thus, fixed CTL-target conjugates that exhibited a gradient of PI across the nucleus would have been captured within ~3 min of perforin exposure.
Coverslips of CTL-target conjugates underwent high-pressure freezing and were subsequently imaged with wide-field cryogenic fluorescence microscopy followed by 3D cryo–structured illumination microscopy (3D cryo-SIM) performed in a customized optical cryostat (14). We selected candidate conjugates for FIB-SEM imaging on the basis of whether a gradient of PI fluorescence was observed across the nucleus of the target emanating from an attached CTL (movie S5). FIB-SEM imaging of the CTL-target conjugate at 8-nm isotropic voxels resulted in a stack of >10,000 individual electron microscopy (EM) images. The image stack was then annotated using a human-assisted machine learning–computer vision platform to segment the plasma membranes of each cell along with cell nuclei and various organelles (https://ariadne.ai/).
We captured four isotropic 3D 8-nm-resolution EM datasets of CTLs killing cancer cells moments after the secretion of lytic granule contents (Fig. 2A and movie S6). Semiautomated segmentation of the cell membranes, nuclei, lytic granules, Golgi apparatus, mitochondria, and centrosomes of the T cells allow for easier visualization and analysis of the 3D EM data. All FIB-SEM datasets and segmentations can be explored online at https://openorganelle.janelia.org (see links in the supplementary materials). Reconstructed views of the segmented data clearly demonstrate the polarization of the centrosome, Golgi apparatus, and lytic granules to the IS—all of which are hallmarks of CTL killing [Fig. 2A, i to iii, and movie S6, time stamp (TS) 1:33] (1516). On the target cell side, we noted cytoplasmic alterations consistent with cell damage including enhanced electron density of mitochondria adjacent to the IS (fig. S2A). Close visual scanning of the postsynaptic target cell membrane in the raw EM data failed to reveal obvious perforin pores, which have diameters (16 to 22 nm) close to the limit of resolution for this technique (17).
FIG. 2. Eight-nm-resolution 3D FIB-SEM imaging of whole CTL-target conjugate.
(A) 3D rendering of segmented plasma membrane predictions derived from isotropic 8-nm-resolution FIB-SEM imaging of a high-pressure frozen OT-I CTL (red) captured moments after secretion of lytic granules toward a peptide-pulsed ID8 ovarian cancer cell (blue). (i) Side-on sliced view corresponding to the gray horizontal line within the inset box in (A). Seen here are 3D renderings of the segmented plasma membrane of the cancer cell (blue) as well as the CTL plasma membrane (red), centrosome (gold), Golgi apparatus (cyan), lytic granules (purple), mitochondria (green), and nucleus (gray). (ii and iii) A zoomed-in view from the dashed white box in (i) shows the details of the IS (ii) and a single corresponding FIB-SEM slice docked onto the segmented data (iii). (B) Single top-down FIB-SEM slice showing overlaid target cell (blue) and CTL (red) segmentation. (i) Zoomed-in view from dashed white box in (B) details the intercellular material (IM) (gray) between the CTL and target at the IS. (C) Zoomed-in image of a 3D rendering of the surface of the target cell plasma membrane (white) opposite the intercellular material (IM) at the IS. Yellow arrowheads mark plasma membrane buds protruding into the synaptic cleft. (i and ii) Accompanying images demonstrate the orientation of the view in (C) with the rendering of the CTL (red) present (i) and removed (ii), and the dashed yellow box in (ii) indicates the area of detail shown in (C).
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The segmentation of the two cells illustrates the detailed topography of the plasma membrane of the CTL and target at the IS (fig. S2B). The raw EM and segmentation data reveal a dense accumulation of particles, vesicles, and multilamellar membranous materials, which crowd the synaptic cleft between the CTL and the target (Fig. 2B and movie S6, TS 0:40 to 0:50). The source of this intercellular material (IM) was likely in part the lytic granules because close inspection revealed similar particles and dense vesicles located within as-yet-unreleased granules (fig. S2C). To determine whether some of the membranous material within the intercellular space might also have been derived from the target cell, we examined the surface topology of the postsynaptic target cell. We noted multiple tubular and bud-like protrusions of the target cell membrane that extended into the synaptic space; thus, at least some of the membrane structures observed were still in continuity with the target cell (Fig. 2C and movie S6, TS 0:58 to 1:11). ESCRT proteins have been shown to generate budding structures in the context of plasma membrane repair (6), which led us to next assess where target-derived ESCRT proteins are distributed in the context of the postsecretion IS.
To map the localization of target-derived ESCRT proteins onto a high-resolution landscape of the IS, we captured three FIB-SEM datasets that have associated 3D cryo-SIM fluorescence data for mEmerald-Chmp4b localization (Fig. 3A, fig. S3, and movie S7). This correlative light and electron microscopy (CLEM) revealed that mEmerald-Chmp4b expressed in the target cell was specifically recruited to the target plasma membrane opposite the secreted IM (Fig. 3, B and C). The topography of the plasma membrane at the site of ESCRT recruitment was markedly convoluted, exhibiting many bud-like projections (movie S7, TS 0:37 to 0:40). mEmerald-Chmp4b fluorescence also overlapped with some vesicular structures in the intercellular synaptic space (Fig. 3C). Together, the live-cell imaging and the 3D cryo-SIM and FIB-SEM CLEM demonstrate the localization of ESCRT proteins at the synapse that was the definitive site of CTL killing and was thus spatially and temporally correlated to perforin secretion. These data implicate the ESCRT complex in the repair of perforin pores.
FIG. 3. Correlative 3D cryo-SIM and FIB-SEM reveal localization of target-derived ESCRT within the cytolytic IS.
(A) Three example datasets showing correlative 3D cryo-SIM and FIB-SEM imaging of OT-I CTLs (red) captured moments after secretion of lytic granules toward peptide-pulsed ID8 cancer cells (blue) expressing mEmerald-Chmp4b (green fluorescence). (B and C) Single FIB-SEM slices corresponding to the orange boxes in (A), overlaid with CTL and cancer cell segmentation (B) or correlative cryo-SIM fluorescence of mEmerald-Chmp4b derived from the target cell (C).
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Function of ESCRT proteins in repair of perforin pores

We next investigated whether ESCRT inhibition could enhance the susceptibility of target cells to CTL-mediated killing. Prolonged inactivation of the ESCRT pathway is itself cytotoxic (9). We thus developed strategies to ablate ESCRT function that would allow us a window of time to assess CTL killing (fig. S4). We used two approaches to block ESCRT function: CRISPR knockout of the Chmp4b gene or overexpression of VPS4aE228Q (E228Q, Glu228 → Gln), a dominant-negative kinase allele that impairs ESCRT function (fig. S4, A to C) (10). We took care to complete our assessment of target killing well in advance of spontaneous target cell death (fig. S4D).
We tested the capacity of OT-I CTLs to kill targets presenting one of four previously characterized peptides that demonstrate a range of potencies at stimulating the OT-I TCR: SIINFEKL (N4), the cognate peptide, and three separate variants (in order of highest to lowest affinity), SIITFEKL (T4), SIIQFEHL (Q4H7), and SIIGFEKL (G4) (1819). Target cells were pulsed with peptide, washed, transferred to 96-well plates, and allowed to adhere before the addition of OT-I CTLs. Killing was assessed by monitoring the uptake of a fluorogenic caspase 3/7 indicator (Fig. 4, A to D, and fig. S5A). Killing was significantly more efficient in ESCRT-inhibited target cells for both CRISPR depletion of Chmp4b (Fig. 4, A to C) and expression of the dominant-negative VPS4aE228Q (Fig. 4D). The difference in killing between the ESCRT-inhibited and control cells was greater when the lower-potency T4, Q4H7, and G4 peptides were used. Nevertheless, ESCRT inhibition moderately improved killing efficiency even in the case of the high-potency SIINFEKL peptide. ESCRT inhibition had no effect on MHC class I expression on the surface of target cells (fig. S5B). Thus, ESCRT inhibition could sensitize target cells to perforin- and granzyme-mediated killing, especially at physiologically relevant TCR-peptide MHC affinities.
FIG. 4. ESCRT inhibition enhances susceptibility of cancer cells to CTL killing and recombinant lytic proteins.
(A) Representative time-lapse data of killing of peptide-pulsed Chmp4b knockout (KO) or control B16-F10 cells by OT-I CTLs. Affinity of the pulsed peptide to OT-I TCR decreases from left to right. Error bars indicate SDs. (B) Images extracted from T4 medium-affinity peptide condition show software-detected caspase 3/7+ events in control and Chmp4b KO conditions. (C and D) Data representing the 4-hour time point of assays measuring OT-I T cells killing either Chmp4b KO (C) or VPS4 dominant-negative (D) target cells with matched controls. Error bars indicate SDs of data. Data are representative of at least three independent experimental replicates. pMHC, peptide-MHC; HA, hemagglutinin. (E and F) Determination of sublytic dose of Prf. B16-F10 cells expressing VPS4a (WT or E228Q) were exposed to increasing concentrations of Prf. Cell viability was determined by morphological gating (E). FSC, forward scatter; SSC, side scatter. (G and H) B16-F10 cells expressing VPS4a (WT or E228Q) were exposed to a sublytic dose of Prf in combination with increasing concentrations of recombinant GZMB (rGZMB). Cell death was determined by Annexin V–allophycocyanin (APC) staining (G). Controls include a condition with no perforin and 5000 ng/ml rGZMB and sublytic perforin with no rGZMB. Graphs in (F) and (H) represent the means of three experiments, and error bars indicate SDs. Statistical significance was determined by multiple unpaired t tests with alpha = 0.05. ns, not significant; *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001.
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We next directly tested the effects of ESCRT inhibition when target cells were exposed to both recombinant perforin (Prf) and granzyme B (GZMB), the most potently proapoptotic granzyme in humans and mice (20). Prf alone at high concentrations can lyse cells (4), so we first determined a sublytic Prf concentration that would temporarily permeabilize the plasma membrane but permit the cells to recover. B16-F10 cells expressing either VPS4aWT (WT, wild-type) or VPS4aE228Q were exposed to a range of Prf concentrations in the presence of PI, and cell viability and PI uptake were assessed using flow cytometry. Cells that expressed dominant-negative VPS4aE228Q were more sensitive to Prf alone than ESCRT-competent cells (Fig. 4, E and F). At 160 ng/ml Prf, there was no significant difference in cell viability for either condition. Cells in the live gate that were PI+ had been permeabilized by Prf but recovered. Although the percentage of PI+ live cells was similar under both sets of conditions, the mean fluorescence intensity of PI was higher in live ESCRT-inhibited cells (fig. S6). A delay in plasma membrane resealing could account for this difference.
We reasoned that delaying perforin pore repair might also enhance GZMB uptake into the target. ESCRT-inhibited cells were more sensitive to combined perforin-GZMB when cell death was measured by Annexin V staining (Fig. 4, G and H). Similar results were observed when these experiments were repeated with a murine lymphoma cancer cell line (fig. S7). The observation that ESCRT-inhibited target cells are more sensitive to both CTL-secreted and Prf-GZMB supports the hypothesis that the ESCRT pathway contributes to membrane repair after Prf exposure.
Escaping cell death is one of the hallmarks of cancer. Our findings suggest that ESCRT-mediated membrane repair of perforin pores may restrict accessibility of the target cytosol to CTL-secreted granzyme, thus promoting survival of cancer-derived cells under cytolytic attack. Although other factors may contribute to setting the threshold for target susceptibility to killing, the role of active repair of perforin pores must now be considered as a clear contributing factor.

Acknowledgments

We thank members of the Mellman laboratory for advice, discussion, and reagents; B. Haley for assistance with plasmid construct design; the Genentech FACS Core Facility for technical assistance; S. Van Engelenburg of Denver University for invaluable discussions and guidance; A. Wanner, S. Spaar, and the Ariande AI AG (https://ariadne.ai/) for assistance with FIB-SEM segmentation, CLEM coregistration, data presentation, and rendering; D. Bennett of the Janelia Research Campus for assisting with data upload to https://openorganelle.janelia.org; and the Genentech Postdoctoral Program for support.
Funding: A.T.R. and I.M. are funded by Genentech/Roche. C.S.X., G.S., A.W., D.A., N.I., and H.F.H. are funded by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI).

Please look for a Followup Post concerning “Developing a Pharmacovigilence Framework for Engineered T-Cell Therapies”

 

References

  1. Ertl HC, Zaia J, Rosenberg SA, June CH, Dotti G, Kahn J, Cooper LJ, Corrigan-Curay J, Strome SE: Considerations for the clinical application of chimeric antigen receptor T cells: observations from a recombinant DNA Advisory Committee Symposium held June 15, 2010. Cancer research 2011, 71(9):3175-3181.
  2. Morgan RA, Yang JC, Kitano M, Dudley ME, Laurencot CM, Rosenberg SA: Case report of a serious adverse event following the administration of T cells transduced with a chimeric antigen receptor recognizing ERBB2. Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy 2010, 18(4):843-851.
  3. Kandalaft LE, Powell DJ, Jr., Coukos G: A phase I clinical trial of adoptive transfer of folate receptor-alpha redirected autologous T cells for recurrent ovarian cancer. Journal of translational medicine 2012, 10:157.

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RAbD Biotech Presents at 1st Pitch Life Sciences-Philadelphia-September 16, 2014

Reporter: Stephen J. Williams, PhD

UPDATE 12/09/2022

The following is background material of RAbD technology, bispecific antibodies:

Current landscape and future directions of bispecific antibodies in cancer immunotherapy

Jing Wei1†Yueyao Yang2†Gang Wang2 and Ming Liu1*
  • 1Gastric Cancer Center/Cancer Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China
  • 2National Engineering Research Center for Biomaterials, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China

Recent advances in cancer immunotherapy using monoclonal antibodies have dramatically revolutionized the therapeutic strategy against advanced malignancies, inspiring the exploration of various types of therapeutic antibodies. Bispecific antibodies (BsAbs) are recombinant molecules containing two different antigens or epitopes identifying binding domains. Bispecific antibody-based tumor immunotherapy has gained broad potential in preclinical and clinical investigations in a variety of tumor types following regulatory approval of newly developed technologies involving bispecific and multispecific antibodies. Meanwhile, a series of challenges such as antibody immunogenicity, tumor heterogeneity, low response rate, treatment resistance, and systemic adverse effects hinder the application of BsAbs. In this review, we provide insights into the various architecture of BsAbs, focus on BsAbs’ alternative different mechanisms of action and clinical progression, and discuss relevant approaches to overcome existing challenges in BsAbs clinical application.

1 Introduction

Immunotherapy breakthroughs in cancer treatment with synthetic multifunctional biotherapeutics have fueled cancer immunotherapy and the exploration of antibody alternative modes of action (12). Conventional targeted or immunotherapeutic drugs can only be used to inhibit one or one class of targets, thus giving birth to some unique combination drug regimens. Currently, Constant engineering technical breakthroughs in antibody development have aided in producing many BsAb designs (3) (Figures 1C, D). Bispecific antibodies, constructed via quadroma, chemical conjugation, and genetic recombination (4), exert effector functions beyond natural antibodies through redirecting cells or modulating different pathways, providing numerous possibilities for therapeutic application and contributing to improving treatment responses in refractory tumor patients. Although more than a hundred BsAbs are currently under clinical evaluation in cancer treatment, most are still in the early stages (4), and only four BsAbs have been approved by FDA (Table 1). These include Catumaxomab (Fresenius/Trion’s Removab®) which was withdrawn from the market in 2017, Blinatumomab (Amgen’s Blincyto®), Amivantamab-vmjw (Janssen’s Rybrevant®), and Tebentafusp-tebn (Immunocore’s Kimmtrak®) (511).

Figure 1
www.frontiersin.orgFIGURE 1 CD3+ bispecific T-cell engaging antibodies exert function in Hematological Malignancies and recruit immune cells into the solid tumor microenvironment for cancer immunotherapy. The schematic depicts the mechanism of action of BsAbs in solid tumors (A) and Hematological Malignancies (B). besides, there shows partial fragments of antibody as well as the derivatives formats constructed from them in diagram (C) and various architecture of BsAbs in diagram (D) mentioned in this review.

Table 1
www.frontiersin.orgTABLE 1 Bispecific Antibody Approved by the FDA.

Furthermore, multiple studies investigate the mechanisms of action by which BsAbs detect various tumor targets such as angiogenesis, proliferation, invasion, and immune modulation. However, potential immunotherapy side effects must be considered, whereas toxicity in normal tissues and systemic immune responses limit the use of BsAbs (1215). We concentrate on the advances in BsAbs design, mechanisms of action, and clinical trial development in this review (Table 2). We also talk about difficulties and potential solutions for enhancing drug delivery.

Table 2
www.frontiersin.orgTABLE 2 Bispecific Antibody Clinical Trials Ongoing.

2 BsAb construct formats

In natural bivalent antibodies, the two antigen binding sites are identical and consist of variable regions of the heavy chain and light chain. Bispecific antibodies (BsAbs) are dual-specificity molecules binding two different epitopes simultaneously, the concept of which has been first described decades ago by Nisonoff et al. (1). Since there are no naturally occurring bispecific antibodies, BsAbs were initially developed by chemically coupling two monoclonal antibody fragments or creating quadroma cell lines combined with two homologous hybridomas. The field of recombinant bispecific antibodies for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes has been transformed by the quickly developing engineering technologies and pharmaceutical industry, leading to a variety of BsAbs with varying size, half-life, valency, flexibility, and permeability (2). Recombinant DNA technology is now the most used technique for producing bispecific antibodies.

IgG-like antibody types (containing an Fc unit) and non-IgG-like (without an Fc unit) antibody formats are the two broad categories into which BsAbs can be generally categorized (3). The intention of this classification mechanism well emphasizes the existence of the Fc domain, which not only facilitates the functionality mentioned above but contributes to the solubility, stability, and purification of the BsAbs (4). Additionally, this region can be genetically altered to abolish antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) or complement dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) while retaining the potential for a lengthy half-life (5). Although non-IgG-like antibody formats exert therapeutic activities depending on antigen-recognition domains, smaller size enables them to enhance tissue penetration while rapid renal clearance results in a relatively short plasma half-life.

Heavy and light chain mispairing poses serious problems for bispecific antibodies made in IgG formats from two distinct polypeptides, leading to ineffective antibodies or unwanted homodimers. In the interim, mitigation measures have been taken for such issues. For example, the “knobs-into-hole” approach has been developed to mutate the corresponding amino acid size of the third constant domain of the antibody for correctly pairing the heavy chain (6). In contrast, “the light chain mispairing” problems can be well circumvented by the “CrossMab” strategy by swapping the CL (light chain constant region) domain of the light chain with the corresponding CH1 domain of the heavy chain to construct a correct light chain association (712). Other established and mature techniques to prevent light chain mispairing include Eli Lilly’s “Orthogonal Fab interface” by introducing amino acid mutations to the light chain and the tcBsIgG (tethered-variable CL bispecific IgG) platform developed by the Genentech, which focuses on linking the VL (light chain variable region) to VH (heavy chain variable region) via the G4S linker (89). In addition, the asymmetric heavy chains also form the basis for constructing multi-specific antibodies, such as trispecific, trivalent, or tetravalent antibodies, with greater targeting specificities for cancer therapy.

The production of non-IgG-like BsAbs without an Fc unit can be accomplished using Fab fragments or by joining the variable light-heavy domains of two antibodies. These antibodies can be broadly categorized into scFv (single-chain variable fragment)-based bsAbs, Nanobodies, Dock-and-lock (DNL) method-building antibodies, and other bispecific/multi-specific molecules (10). The specificity and ability to bind to antigens of full-length antibodies are maintained by scFv, composed of the VL and VH domains connected by a flexible peptide. Additionally, the linker length significantly impacts how scFv molecules associate, resulting in various polymerizations such as dimers, trimers, or tetramers. The Tandem scFvs constructed by the Bispecific T-cell Engager (BiTE®) antibody platform link two scFvs with a repeat glycine-serine short motifs (11), which enables antigen recognizing sites to rotate flexibly.

In contrast, the linking method of the Diabody format is slightly different from Tandem scFvs (13). Heterodimerization of those fragments is induced by crossing the VH and VL domains of the two scFvs by two shorter polypeptide chains. Even if the two peptides linker facilitates the molecular stability to a certain extent, the intramolecular association between the VH and VL domains from the same scFv is hampered (14).

Further research on crystal structures suggests that the Fv contact’s instability impacts overall flexibility, and the diabodies are too rigid to crystallize. As a result, “Dual-affinity retargeting molecules”—an inter-chain disulfide bond—have been created to strengthen the structural stability of the diabodies (DARTs) (1516). However, the small size of this format makes the DARTs molecule rapidly eliminate from the serum, and this issue has been well solved by the strategy of Fc fragment fusion to the part of the DARTs, promoting FcRn-mediated recycling at the same time. The emergence of this constructive format of bispecific antibodies called “DART-Fc” was designed by MacroGenics. Besides, the polymerization of two diabodies connected by two polypeptide chains forms the “Tandem diabodies” (TandAbs), the tetravalent derivatives possessing two antigen-recognizing moieties for each antigen.

In addition to being synthesized from the constituents of various antibodies, BsAbs can be fused to other protein domains to improve their functions for future adaptive therapeutic uses. For example, the scFv-based BsAbs have relatively great tissue permeability and decreased immunogenicity for the lack of Fc unit. However, short half-lives caused by relatively low molecular mass will affect the serum circulating level, which induces the Increased administration and doses of therapeutic agents, thus limiting the clinical promoting application. The format “scFv-HSA-scFv”, fusing two scFvs to the albumin, and conjugation of Polyethylene glycol PEGylation are available application strategies for circulating half-life extension (17). Furthermore, the Dock-and-lock (DNL) method, creating multivalent and multifunctional antibody derivatives such as trivalent bispecific antibodies by heterodimerizing protein domains fused with Fab domains or integral antibodies, is another available antibody platform enabling more promising antibody construction with retained bioactivity (18) (Figure 1C).

3 BsAbs redirecting immune effector cells and reactivating anti-tumor immunity

3.1 Bispecific T-Cell Engagers (BiTE) recruiting adaptive effector cells for tumor redirection

Adaptive immunity is essential for monitoring and suppressing tumorigenesis and cancerous progression. T-cells are the focal point of many immunotherapies and have a potent tumor-killing effect as a crucial part of adaptive immunity. BiTE is a potential immunological drug that directs T lymphocytes against tumor cells to treat a variety of malignancies. The ideal BiTE molecular design needs to consider the following factors: firstly, a suitable CD3 binding arm should be selected; secondly, the affinity between TAA binding sites and anti-CD3 units should differ by at least 10-fold to achieve sequential binding to tumor cells and immune cells, thus reducing the risk of severe cytokine release syndrome (CRS); finally, an appropriate physical distance between the two antibody binding units can also play a role in improving the efficacy and reducing the risk of CRS.

The high affinity of CD3 binding will allow BiTE to occupy CD3 antigen and activate T cells continuously, eventually leading to T cell depletion. However, suitable affinity will bind to and dissociate from the CD3 antigen of distinct T cells and the repeated binding to T cells will cause a “waterfall effect” to cluster T cells, ultimately resulting in many T cells activating to attain the greatest tumor-killing effect. In addition, high CD3 binding affinity will make BiTE more concentrated in the spleen, thus making it difficult to reach tumor tissues, especially solid tumors. Physically bridging T cells with tumor cells by BiTEs enables catalyzing the formation of an optimal immunologic synapse, which’s important for T cells activation and robust cytotoxicity to target tumor cells, ultimately leading to apoptosis via membrane disruption mediated by perforin releasing. In addition, multiple cytokine secretion from T cells activated by BiTEs, like IL-2, IFN-γ, and TNF-α, enhance their effectiveness in the anti-tumor function (Figures 1A, B). Strategies that harness the potential of T cells to identify and kill cancer cells in a targeted manner have ushered in a new era of cancer therapy and led to the development of a wide range of immunotherapy devices.

3.1.1 BiTEs in hematologic malignancies

Due to the distinct traits of hematopoietic malignancies, immunotherapy for leukemia and lymphoma has assumed a leadership role and made significant advancements. Given the unique property of the hematological system, malignancy cells constantly interact with immune cells, making it easier for BiTE to exert anti-tumor actions (19). Among various forms of immunotherapy, engaging T cells in hematological malignancies mediated by bispecific antibodies (BsAbs) has been demonstrated as an attractive strategy for providing alternative treatment options for recurrent and/or refractory hematological malignancies patients (20). Bispecific T-cell engagers (BiTEs), consisting of two binding sites simultaneously for a selective tumor antigen and CD3 molecule expressed on host T cells, has been emerged as the most promising BsAb form (Figure 1B). A diverse variety of BiTEs have emerged for cancer immunotherapy, and the specific targets are mainly CD19, CD20, CD123, CD33, CD38, and B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA) in hematological malignancies. Ideal target antigens must satisfy the criteria uniquely expressed on malignant cells to avoid on-target/off-cancer toxicity and reduce the possibility of antigen-loss variants. Even though few target antigens satisfy the above demands simultaneously (2122), various types of BiTE with different antigen-recognition domains have been under exploration for hematological malignancies.

Blinatumomab (MT103), the first BiTE tested in clinical trials specifically designed to target T cells based on the recognition of CD3ϵ to CD19 expressing B cell hematologic malignancies, can induce immune-mediated B-cell lymphoblasts lysis led by cytotoxic T cells. CD19 is a transmembrane molecule relatively specific to B cells persisting throughout B-cell differentiation and existed on the surface of most B cell hematologic malignancies, which is a superior target for cancer immunotherapy achieving exceptional curative effect with R/R B cell ALL (Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia) patients. And the body’s function will not be seriously affected while the missing of normal B cells or bone marrow cells can be continuously replenished by hematopoietic stem cells.

A 7.1-month overall survival and a CR/CRh of 36%, including partial patients with a T315I mutation, were achieved in an open-label phase II study evaluating the efficacy and tolerability of Blinatumomab in Ph-positive (Ph+) B-precursor ALL in the setting of relapsing or refractory to TKI-based therapy. This study findings helped the FDA expand its approval for Ph+ ALL indication in July 2017 (23). MRD is the most powerful prognosticator of relapse in ALL, and MRD-negative status has become increasingly clear that significantly associated with better event-free survival (2425). series of clinical trials have demonstrated the potency and efficacy of Blinatumomab in eradicating persistent or relapsed MRD in B-ALL patients with an increased MRD response rate (2630). Based on these encouraging clinical findings, Blinatumomab acquired accelerated approval by the FDA to expand clinical indications to patients with MRD-positive ALL in 2018 (30). Blinatumomab has also been studied in phase 1/2 dose-escalation experiments for R/R Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), including diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), reaching an overall response rate of more than 40% (3132).

Although the clinical benefits for B-ALL patients from Blinatumomab is obvious, there are still problems with severe neurological events (encephalopathy, aphasia, and seizures) and cytokine release syndrome. In most studies, about 10% of patients reported ≥ grade 3 CRS and/or neurological complications. Dexamethasone or treatment interruption can alleviate these unfavorable side effects. In spite of this, about 10% of patients discontinued with Blinatumomab application because of treatment-related toxicity. Lunsumio (Mosunetuzumab) was recently granted conditional marketing authorization by the European Commission, a CD20 × CD3 T-cell binding bispecific antibody, for treating adult patients with relapsed or refractory follicular lymphoma (FL) who have received at least two prior systemic treatments. Roche is also working on Glofitamab, a CD20 × CD3 bispecific antibody with a different structure than Mosunetuzumab. Mosunetuzumab is similar to a natural human antibody but contains two different Fab regions, one of which targets CD20 and the other targets CD3. Glofitamab has a novel “2:1” structural pattern with two Fab regions targeting CD20 and one Fab region targeting CD3. This novel structural design allows higher binding to CD20 at the B cell surface.

The classification of hematological tumors is complex and varied. Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a genetically diverse disease defined by leukemic cell clonal proliferation. BiTEs are an effective treatment for AML because AML cells are especially vulnerable to the cytotoxic effects of functioning immune cells. CD33 expression is limited in non-hematopoietic tissues but is highly expressed in AML cells. The differential expression of CD33 on the surface of malignant AML cells makes it an ideal target for immunotherapy. AMG 330, the first CD33 × CD3 BiTE applied for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients, has shown promising cytolytic activity against AML cells in preclinical studies even at low CD33 antigen densities on target cells, making it a candidate for targeting a broad range of CD33+ leukemias (3335). AMG330, similar to Blinatumomab, requires a 2-4 week cycle of continuous intravenous (IV) infusion. AMG330 was found to upregulate PD-L1 on primary ALL cells in vitro. As a result, when paired with PD-1/PD-L1 blocking therapy, AMG 330-mediated tumor cell lysis was dramatically increased (3637).

A bifunctional PD-1 × CD3 × CD33 immune checkpoint inhibitory T-cell engaging (CiTE) antibody simultaneously targeting PD-1, CD3 and CD33 has shown high therapeutic effect with complete AML (Acute Myelocytic Leukemia) eradication in preclinical experiments (38). Many clinical trials are ongoing with combination therapy of bispecific T cell-engaging antibodies and PD-1/PD-L1 axis inhibitors. The administration period depends largely on the structure of the antibody. The design of bispecific antibody-like Blinatumomab needs to consider the half-life. AMG673 will have an increased half-life of about 21 days in humans after fusing the binding domain of CD33 and CD3 to the N-terminal end of the IgG Fc region. In this way, the cycle time for intravenous infusion can be reduced. However, more attention needs to be paid to adverse effects. The drug AMV564 has a higher affinity for both antigens and possesses a tetravalent anti-CD33 × anti-CD3 tandem diabody (TandAb) structure with two CD3 binding sites and two CD33 binding sites. Whether T cells are overactivated is a concern for AMV564. Compared to AMG330, AMV564 is administered by continuous intravenous infusion at 14-day intervals. Preclinical studies in vitro and in vivo have demonstrated the ability of AMV564 to induce effective cytotoxicity to CD33+ AML cell lines in a dose-dependent manner.

CRS is the main toxic reaction in patients treated with CD33-targeted bispecific antibodies. Still, differences in the frequency and severity of CRS may depend on the leukemic load, the effector target ratio at baseline, the specific bispecific antibody structure, and its affinity for CD3.

More bispecific antibody for AML is undergoing clinical trials, such as CD123 × CD3 DuoBody (NCT02715011) and CD123 × CD3 DART (NCT02152956), and preclinical evaluation for adult patients, such as targeting CLL-1 and CD47. Target selection and efficacy assessment must be more cautious when treating AML in pediatric patients. More than 30% of AML pediatric patients have a highly tumor-specific target called MSLN. Recently, BsAbs targeting the MSLN and CD3 proximal area epitopes have increased lifetimes by increasing T cell activation and decreasing the tumor’s bone marrow AML cell load in MSLN-positive mice (39).

3.1.2 BiTEs in solid malignancies

Bispecific T cell engagers (BiTEs) have revolutionized success in hematological malignancies treatment and revitalized the field of solid tumor immunotherapy with promising outcomes from preclinical and clinical trials. Even if the checkpoint inhibitors hold the majority of approvals in recent years in various solid tumor types, the T cell redirection and recruitment approaches are extremely promising. Contrarily, the solid tumor microenvironment has incredibly complex features that affect the infiltration, activity, and persistence of immune effector cells vital to anti-tumor immunotherapy (311) (Figure 1A).

Catumaxomab (Removab) was the first bispecific T cell engagers (TCE) approved by the European medicines agency (EMA) for malignant ascites clinical intraperitoneal treatment in 2009 (4041). It is the intact trifunctional mouse/rat chimeric bispecific IgG antibody, with one arm from mouse IgG2a half-antibody identifying epithelial cell adhesion molecule (anti-EpCAM) on tumoral cells and another arm from rat IgG2b targeting CD3 subunit (anti-CD3) on T-cells. Additionally, the functional Fc fragment binds to different immune accessory cells with Fcγ receptors (FcγR), such as natural killer (NK) cells, dendritic cells (DC), monocytes, and macrophages resulting in T-cell-mediated lysis, ADCC, and accessory cells mediating phagocytosis (42). It employs humoral immunity, on the one hand, activates cellular immunity on the other, and delivers co-activation signals via attachable immune cells to eliminate truculent tumor cells, as well as allowing the body’s immune system to generate a specific immune memory, which acts as a cancer vaccine and inhibits tumor metastasis and recurrence. Catumaxomab’s effectiveness has been proven in key phase I/III research and other phase I/II studies (40).

However, intravenous applications of Catumaxomab were connected with severe adverse events like cytokine release syndrome (CRS) and dose-dependent liver toxicity (43), attributing to the off-target activity of other immune cells with FcγRs expressing, and it was withdrawn in 2017 from the market for some commercial reasons (44). The efficacy, safety, and tolerability of Catumaxomab are currently being studied in clinical trials for various indications involving patients with non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) and advanced or recurrent gastric carcinoma with peritoneal metastasis (NCT04819399; NCT04222114) (45).

Driven by the clinical success of Blinatumomab, various T cell-engaging BsAbs targeting solid tumors have been explored and evaluated in preclinical mouse xenograft tumor models and clinical trials. Various antigen being investigated for CD3 TCE bsAbs such as CEA, HER2, prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA), GlycoproteinA33 (gpA33), and Glypican 3 (GPC3), etc. (4649). On-target off-tumor toxicity, a restricted number of effector cells in the tumor microenvironment (TME), and decreased T cell activation in tumors are all problems with CD3 bispecific antibodies in solid tumors. Anti-bispecific antibody designs and techniques for numerous challenges are also available. As a result, several novel formats of TCEs and prodrugs have been investigated for improved efficacy, such as a TCE with a monovalent CD3 binding region and a multivalent TAA binding region, which has been shown to effectively transform a poorly infiltrated tumor microenvironment (TME) into a highly inflamed TME with increased infiltration frequency of activated T cells. Besides, these new multivalent TAA binding regions enable avoiding on-target/off-tumor toxicities after being altered into low-affinity TAA binding domains since most TAAs are also generally expressed at low levels in normal tissue cells (5051).

Dionysos Slaga and colleagues have demonstrated a proof of concept. They have generated an anti-HER2/CD3 TCE BsAbs which can target HER2-overexpressing tumor tissue cells with selectivity and high potency while very low binding to normal tissue cells with low amounts of HER2 expressing, thus circumvents the risk of adverse effects to a certain extent (52). Current prodrugs utilize the characteristics of tumor microenvironment such as lower pH, oxygen levels, and proteolytic enzyme levels, allowing for tumor-specific activation of BsAb that are inactive in the circulation or normal tissue thus avoiding attack normal cells. Furthermore, the most fundamental strategy to avoid on-target/off-tumor toxicity is to choose targets only expressed in solid tumors. Immune-mobilizing monoclonal TCRs against cancer (ImmTAC) is a remarkable TCE bsAb format that targets MHC-presented intracellular neoantigen peptides on the surface of tumoral cells (53). This engineered antibody format consisted of an anti-CD3 scFv and TCR peptides with enhanced affinity, enabling to recruit and selectively activate a majority of polyclonal effector T cells to infiltrate to reverse the “cold” TME into an inflammatory TME and lysis cancer cells with low surface oncoprotein epitope densities in the context of HLA-A*0201 subsequently, which demonstrates significant anti-tumor efficacy (54). Tebentafusp (IMCgp100), an ImmTAC molecule, for example, targets melanocyte differentiation antigen polypeptide glycoprotein100 (gp100), showing clinical activity in Metastatic Uveal Melanoma with low tumor mutational burden. Tebentafusp outperformed a single-agent treatment of ipilimumab, pembrolizumab, or dacarbazine in an open-label phase 3 trial for extending overall survival in newly diagnosed patients with metastatic uveal melanoma (NCT03070392) (55).

Whether changing the valence of antibodies, bispecific antibodies in the form of prodrugs, or finding new targets can only solve the problem of on-target off-tumor, T cell infiltration and activity in solid tumors can mostly only be changed by the mode of administration or combination therapy. TAA-based targeting may underestimate the use of CD3 bispecific antibodies in solid tumors. A bispecific antibody against both PD-L1 and CD3 successfully connected T cells to PD-L1-expressing tumor cells, improved T cell cytotoxicity against multiple NSCLC-derived cell lines by releasing granzyme B and cytokines, and decreased tumor growth in mice (56). However, a more potent mechanism of action may exist for the PD-L1 × CD3 bispecific antibody, which was found to target dendritic cells rather than tumor cells in multiple homozygous tumor mouse models. Bispecific antibodies redirecting T cells to APCs by enhancing B7/CD28 co-stimulation to activate T cells may represent a general means of T-cell rejuvenation for durable cancer immunotherapy. PD-L1 × CD3 treatment is undoubtedly dual-acting by simultaneously blocking negative signaling (PD-L1) and engaging positive signaling (CD3). More targeting approaches are now conceivable with the identification of immune checkpoints, and more mechanisms of action are being examined (57).

Any single technique for treating solid tumors will either limit tumor growth or temporarily remove the tumor. A combination of multiple techniques is required to achieve the optimal treatment result. More target combinations and antibody screening modalities are being developed for solid tumors. Using Patient-derived organoids (PDOs), bispecific antibodies can be screened on a large scale, and their efficacy can be evaluated more reliably than in cell experiments.

3.2 BsAbs recruiting Natural Killer (NK) cells for tumor redirection

NK cells, derived from multipotent hematopoietic stem cells, were identified in 1975 and have been considered the first line of defense against tumor cells with the robust anti-tumor ability (5859). With MHC-independent cytotoxicity, cytokine synthesis, and immunological memory, NK cells have a unique anti-tumor function, making them crucial participants in the innate and adaptive immune response system. These cells are conventionally divided into two subtypes, CD56dim CD16+ NK, and CD56bright CD16 NK cells. The former possesses powerful cytotoxicity and constitutes most of the peripheral blood and spleen subpopulation. At the same time, the latter is mainly equipped with immunomodulatory characteristics and constitutes a major subtype in lymph node tissues with weak cytotoxicity and maturity.

Diverse inhibitory and activating receptors are expressed on the surface of NK cells, determining the outcome of NK-cell activation by mediating the balance between those signals, which is pivotal for distinguishing and eliminating aberrant from normal cells through cytotoxic granules secretion based on TRAIL receptors and FAS ligand (FasL) expression as well as the release of other cytokines, growth factors, and chemokines. Inhibitory receptors on the surface of NK cells can recognize and bind to MHC Class I (MHC-I) molecules to alleviate autoimmune reactions. In contrast, the down-regulated expression of the MHC-I molecule can induce NK cell-mediated killing under cellular stress conditions, known as “missing self-recognition”. During tumorigenesis, the expression of MHC-I molecules is generally lost or in a defective condition for escaping from immune surveillance. Still, the unique characteristic of NK cells plays a necessary role in bypassing downregulated presentation of tumor neoantigens and effectively eliminating early aberrant cells (58).

A high frequency of NK-cell infiltration is usually connected with a better prognosis. However, Clara Degos and colleagues found an impoverished NK cell infiltration in the tumor microenvironment. IFN-γ secretion and cytotoxicity of Tumor-infiltrated NK cells are impaired, with significantly attenuated tumor-killing ability (60). Bispecific killer cell engager (BiKE) is a promising strategy to engage NK cells to tumor cells; Fc receptor (FcγRIII, CD16A)-mediated recruitment as a function of bsAb can be achieved by binding of CD16 on the surface of NK cells to the Fc region of bsAb, or by one end of a bi-specific antibody targeting CD16A (CD16A antibody). By inducing ADCC, the activating NK cell receptor CD16A (FcγRIIIA), which is mostly expressed on mature NK cells, might facilitate the destruction of tumor cells (61).

Both the composition and form of the BiKE affect the effectiveness of ADCC induction. The design of BiKE for Fc-mediated NK cell recruitment faces the challenge that the chosen form needs to ensure the effective binding of the Fc structural domain to CD16. Same as the Fc-mediated ADCC antibodies, the ADCC efficiency of BiKE, which recruits NK cells through partial regional CD16 antibody, is also similarly dependent on the choice of antibody’s form. ADCC-induced binding of the tumor-associated antigen (TAA) CD30 and CD16A is superior to monovalent CD30/CD16A binding in the dual CD16A-bound TandAb (tandem diabody) form than in the diabody form (62).

The AFM13 (ROCK®), a tetravalent bispecific anti-CD30 × anti-CD16A TandAb targeting CD30+ malignancies like Hodgkin lymphoma, has shown efficacy and cytotoxicity in an early clinical trial (NCT01221571) (63). Besides, in a phase 1b study aiming to evaluate the curative effect of AFM13 in combination with pembrolizumab to investigate further a rational treatment modality in patients with relapsed/refractory Hodgkin lymphoma (R/R HL), the objective response rate reached 88% at the highest treatment dose. The overall response rate is 83% for recipients with an acceptable safety profile and tolerability (64). Furthermore, AFM13 has reached a phase II clinical study to improve therapeutic efficacy by optimizing the dosing schedule (63). The AFM24, a different CD16A-based IgG1-scFv fusion BsAb that targets EGFR-expressing tumor cells with varying EGFR expression levels and KRAS/BRAF mutational status, has also demonstrated a strong potential for therapeutic application investigation and is now being studied in clinical trials (NCT04259450) (65).

Apart from targeting CD16A, a small number of studies have targeted activation receptors on NK cells, such as NKG2D, NKp30, and NKp46. A study constructed a homodimeric recombinant antibody combining two NKG2D-binding and two ErbB2 (HER2)-specific single-chain fragment variable (scFv) domains, linked by an IgG4 Fc region in a single tetravalent molecule, known as NKAB-ErbB2 (66).

The NKAB-ErbB2 increased lysis of ErbB2-positive breast carcinoma cells by peripheral blood-derived NK cells endogenously expressing NKG2D. NKG2D is unlike the other targets because mAb-mediated cross-linking does not result in cytokine release. In contrast, stimulation with soluble recombinant NKG2D ligands (MICA, ULBP-1, or ULBP-2) induces the expression of IFN-γ, GM-CSF and MIP-1β. A novel dual-targeting antibody composed of antibody cG7 and MICA was named cG7-MICA. The cG7 part is a natural antibody targeting CD24, and MICA is attached to the antibody behind CH3 via a G4S linker. When cG7-MICA coupled to CD24 on tumor cells, inducing NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity, HCC cells were identified by NK cells via MICA. As the Fc binds to its receptors on the surface of NK cells and macrophages, ADCC, CDC effects, and a longer half-life following engagement with neonatal receptors are all triggered (67). But shedding or downregulation of NKG2D ligands (NKG2DL) can prevent NKG2D activation, resulting in the escape of cancer cells from NKG2D-dependent immune surveillance.

There has been particularly little research into bispecific antibodies targeting NKp30 and NKp46 (68). CTX8573 is the first NKp30 × BCMA bispecific antibody that targets BCMA+ plasma cells and NK cells (69). The C-terminus of the antibody is attached to the anti-NKp30 Fab, and the mismatch is resolved using the same light chain. The Fc-terminus is given a de-fucose treatment to increase the impact on NK cells further. Intrinsic cells are effectively attracted to and activated by the binding of NKp30 and CD16A. Compared to monoclonal antibodies targeting CD16A, the ADCC potency is increased by more than 100 times using the NKp30 bispecific platform, which also maintains activity when CD16A is downregulated. Bispecific antibodies against NK redirection are still mainly used to treat hematological tumors. It is also unclear whether NK cells will enter solid tumors more readily than T cells for solid tumors. NK cells can produce relevant cytokines to attract other immune cells, which may further enhance the anti-tumor response. There is no doubt that strategies to increase the involvement of NK cells in anti-tumor response will be the future of tumor immunotherapy.

3.3 Bispecific antibody targeting immune checkpoint and co-stimulator for immune cell restoration

3.3.1 Immune checkpoint

Clinical cancer therapy approaches have undergone a revolutionary change due to recent discoveries on the roles of immune checkpoints in allowing cancers to avoid the innate/adapted immune system (7071). Immune checkpoint receptors of co-inhibitory molecules such as programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) and/or cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA-4) are critical in maintaining self-tolerance and avoiding immune-mediated adverse effects on the host. However, numerous studies have shown that the (TILs) exhibit substantially elevated co-inhibitory receptors, which represent an exhausted phenotype and limited anti-tumor action (72). In addition, preclinical evidence suggests that T cell response has been inhabited on account of the upregulated expression level of programmed cell death 1 ligand 1 (PD-L1) on the surface of malignant cells to conducive tumor cell’s immune escape and limit the efficacy of anti-tumor immunotherapies (73). Immune checkpoint blockades (ICBs) have been established based on the mechanism mentioned above to break those negative regulators that prevent pre-existing anti-tumor immune responses from being activated. Some ICBs have shown notable efficacy in various cancers and have entered routine clinical implementation (74). Besides, A clinical trial reported the 5-year outcomes that nivolumab (anti-PD-1) combined with ipilimumab (anti-CTLA-4) among advanced melanoma patients has resulted in sustained long-term progression-free and overall survival (52%) compared with nivolumab group (44%) and ipilimumab group (26%) (75).

The therapeutic idea of blocking two inhibitory immune checkpoints has led to the rational design and development of bispecific antibodies that simultaneously target two inhibitory checkpoints expressed on the surface of the same or different cells. This has been made possible by the innovative success of ICBs immunotherapies and the improved clinical benefit rate observed in patients who have received combined treatment with ICBs. MGD019 is a monovalent investigational PD-1 × CTLA-4 bispecific DART compound designed to increase CTLA-4 checkpoint blockage in the TME based on a PD-1 binding mechanism. This single-molecule showed complete blockade of the PD-1/PD-L1 axis and Variable Inhibition of CTLA-4 in vitro and is well tolerated in non-human primates with increased T cell proliferation and expansion. Furthermore, the first-in-human study with MGD019 is ongoing in patients with multiple advanced solid tumors. After the dose-escalation phase, the analysis revealed acceptable safety and objective responses in various tumor types typically unresponsive to checkpoint inhibitor therapy (NCT03761017) (76). MEDI5752, fusing an anti–PD-1 mAb and the variable binding domains of Tremelimumab (anti-CTLA4) onto a DuetMab backbone, optimally designed with triple amino acid mutations of the human IgG1 constant heavy chain to reduce Fc-mediated immune effector functions. Dovedi, S.J. et al. discovered that this engineered molecule preferentially localizes and inhibits CTLA4 on PD-1+ T cells and rapidly induces internalization and degradation of PD-1.

As a result, the affinity for the CTLA4 receptor is markedly increased and saturated, increasing clinical benefit and minimizing further harm. In addition, current first-in-human research using MEDI5752 to treat advanced solid cancers showed promising partial responses with acceptable side effects (77). Different from MEDI5752, AK104 is an anti-PD-1/CTLA-4 bispecific antibody with the symmetrical structure of 4-valent IgG1-scfv developed by Akeso Biology. AK104 can rapidly mediate independent endocytosis of PD-1 or CTLA-4 based on good antigenic differentiated binding with high retention in tumor tissue. Recently, Cadonilimab (AK104) has been approved in China for treating patients with recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer who have failed prior platinum-containing chemotherapy.

Nowadays, most of these BsAbs target the next wave of inhibitory receptors expressed on TILs with one binding arm and block the PD-1/PD-L1 axis with the other binding arm to reverse acquired T cell exhaustion-driven resistance. Dual immunomodulator MGD013 targets LAG-3 and PD-1. Both target molecules are expressed on T cells following antigen stimulation. Based on the DART® form, MGD013 has been shown to effectively inhibit the binding of PD-1 to PD-L1 and PD-L2 while inhibiting the binding of LAG-3 and MHC II, which activate T cells by acting together. This bispecific antibody is in clinical phase I studies (NCT03219268). Similar preclinical dual immunomodulators include FS118 targeting PD-L1/LAG-3 and LY3415244 targeting PD-L1/TIM-3 (7879).

3.3.2 Co-stimulatory molecules

Co-stimulation assists the immune system in determining whether responses to antigenic stimuli and co-stimulatory receptors have been utilized for cancer immunotherapy. The targets of immune co-stimulation mainly focus on the B7-CD28 and TNFR family. In the B7-CD28 family, CD28 and ICOS are the main co-stimulatory receptors. OX40, CD40, CD27, 4-1BB, GITR, and CD30 belong to the TNFR family. CD28, one of the first identified co-stimulatory molecules constructively expressed on the surface of T cells, contributes to lowering the threshold, which is critical for TCR-mediated T cell activation and subsequently results in enhanced T cell proliferation, cytokine production, and release, as well as cell survival (80). Six healthy volunteers who participated in the first human clinical trial for TeGenero’s CD28 hyperagonist antibody TGN1412 had severe cytokine release syndrome and multiple organ failure. Because antibodies activate T cells even when the TCR is not involved, they create an immunological response that targets everyone.

Other co-stimulatory receptors are promising targets, transiently expressed on activated T cells via TCR-mediated signal identification rather than constituent expression like CD28. The affinity of agonistic antibodies for their targets must be optimized, not maximized. It is not the affinity but the intermittent exposure of co-stimulatory receptors that may become more crucial. Excitatory antibodies, though, are still in their infancy compared to immune checkpoint inhibitors. Utilizing excitatory antibodies alone might not be the best course of action. Co-stimulatory receptors play a unique role, and PD-1 therapeutic effectiveness depends on the CD28/B7 co-stimulatory pathway. PD-1 is widely believed to inhibit signal transduction through T-cell receptors (TCR). The study indicated that TCR co-stimulatory receptor CD28 is the primary target of PD-1 signal transduction (81). Lung cancer patients who responded to PD-1 therapy had more CD28+T cells, suggesting that CD28 may predict treatment response. Toxicity can be largely avoided by combining CD28 antibodies with another target.

TSA × CD28 bispecific antibodies have shown little or no toxicity in humanized immune system mice or primate models when used alone or combined with PD-1 antibodies (82). As a result, it might offer a safe “off-the-shelf” combination immunotherapy that could greatly improve anti-tumor effectiveness and trigger long-lasting anti-tumor immunity. Preclinical research on CD28 triple antibodies has recently demonstrated considerable promise, and this therapy is now widely recognized in theory. Sanofi created an anti-HER2, anti-CD3, and anti-CD28 tri-specific antibody to target, stimulate, and prolong the lifespan of T cells in malignancies (83).

The dissociation constants for HER2, CD28, and CD3 are 1.28, 1.0, and 1.43 nM, respectively. Each antigen arm shows a comparable affinity to the analogous single antigen arm in the presence of the other two antigens, demonstrating minimal interference between the various arms. The tri-specific antibody could promote tumor regression at low doses and achieve effective tumor suppression in both high and low HER2 expressing tumors. It was also found that CD4 cells, but not CD8 cells, were critical in promoting tumor growth arrest. The CD137 (4-1BB) is the most promising target in studies targeting co-stimulatory receptors. To reduce the toxicity of systemic CD137 agonists to the liver while maintaining efficacy, targeting CD137 with a bispecific molecule that binds to the tumor-associated antigen (TAA) and confining CD137+ T cell agonists to the tumor microenvironment appears to be an ideal approach. Targeting non-tumor toxic cytokine release syndrome is decreased by triggering only antigen-exposed T cells (CD137+ T cells). Independent of MHC, CD137 activation can expand tumor-reactive memory T cells. Additionally, CD137-targeted antibodies may be more resilient to antigen loss than CD3-targeted antibodies. Nevertheless, the clinical development of bispecific antibodies has been severely hampered by dose-dependent hepatotoxicity found in clinical studies with co-stimulatory molecules recognizing agonistic antibodies (8490).

Thus tumor-localized co-stimulatory bispecific antibodies have been developed to alleviate systemic toxicity after systemic effector T cell co-stimulation. PRS-343, engaging 4-1BB-specific Anticalin proteins to a modified variant of trastuzumab with a mutation modified IgG4 isotype to avoid the risk of ADCC and non–tumor-target activation of 4-1BB-positive lymphocytes, facilitates HER2+ tumor-localized co-stimulation of T cells with reduced peripheral toxicity (84). In addition, PRS-344/S095012, a synthesized tetravalent PD-L1/4-1BB bispecific antibody, showed stronger antitumoral activity and synergistic impact compared to the combination of mAbs via a tumor-localized 4-1BB-mediated activation (91). Preclinical models reflect that PRS-344/S095012-mediated 4-1BB activation depends on PD-L1, reducing the risk of peripheral toxicity and that 4-1BB co-stimulation occurs only in synchrony with TCR signaling, limiting its activity to antigen-specific T cells. Furthermore, DuoBody-PD-L1×4-1BB (GEN1046), the first-in-class bispecific immunotherapy agent, formed by the K409R and F405L mutations in the Fc CH3 region of two IgG1 antibodies and demonstrated pharmacodynamic immune effects and a manageable safety profile in a phase I trial of dose escalation in heavily pre-treated patients with multiple advanced refractory solid tumors (NCT03917381) (92).

In addition to bispecific antibodies, research for the CD28 and the 4-1BB target has been extended to triple and quadruple antibodies. However, the market for numerous distinct cancer antibody therapeutics is still in its infancy, and much research on its effectiveness and safety is still needed. Hepatotoxicity is being studied in the next generation of co-stimulation-targeted bispecific antibodies without compromising efficacy.

4 Bispecific antibody targeting non-immune cells in the TME for restricting tumor diffusion

The tumor microenvironment mainly consists of tumor cells and their surrounding immune and inflammatory cells, cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), nearby mesenchymal tissue, microvasculature, and various cytokines and chemokines (Figure 2). It can be roughly divided into immune microenvironment based on immune cells and non-immune microenvironment. Angiogenesis, the process by which new blood vessels emerge from an already-existing vascular network, is crucial to tumor growth, progression, and metastasis (93). During the process, low oxygen tension (hypoxia) is a significantly important component of the TME driving tumor angiogenesis, which could upregulate multifarious proangiogenic growth factors like VEGF, placenta growth factor (PlGF), and angiopoietin 2 (Ang2) that correlate with the formation of new vessels through directly engaging in vessel growth (9495). VEGF family (VEGF-F) and Ang1-2/Tie-2 pathway are equally important in mediating tumor angiogenesis, and Ang-2 regulates vessel maturation in the later stage of angiogenesis, which contributes to promoting vascular formation with VEGF in the different stages. Upregulated levels of VEGF and Ang-2 demonstrated a worse prognosis factor in various tumor types (96), the blocking of the signaling pathway Ang-2 shows the effect of tumor growth inhibition with the decreased vascular formation. It normalizes remaining blood vessels with increased pericyte coverage (9799). Furthermore, the above blocking pathways have more significant effects when combined with anti-VEGFA drugs, even in certain tumor types with resistance (100102).

Figure 2
www.frontiersin.orgFIGURE 2 Bispecific antibodies exert anti-tumor effects in the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. In the complex tumor microenvironment, activated fibroblasts communicate with tumor cells, various inflammatory cells as well as stroma cells via secreting growth factors (TGFβ, VEGF, etc.) and other chemokines to provide potentially oncogenic signals and interact with the microvasculature, which induces an accelerated oncogenic extracellular-matrix microenvironment. BsAbs, aiming at blocking the interacting mechanism, transform the “cold” immune environment into the “hot” immune environment.

In addition to showing strong anti-tumor, antiangiogenic, and micrometastasis growth reducing effects in subcutaneous and orthotopic syngeneic mouse xenotransplantations, Ang-2-VEGF CrossMab also exhibits these effects in patient or cell line-derived humanized tumor xenografts with acceptable side effects compared to Ang-1 inhibition combined with anti-VEGF treatment on physiologic vessel growth (103). Furthermore, Kloepper, Riedemann et al. found that dual Ang-2/VEGF (CrossMab, A2V) antibody can prolong the survival of mice bearing orthotopic syngeneic (Gl261) GBMs or human (MGG8) GBM xenografts based on only VEGF pathway blocking failing to enhance overall survival of patients with GBM (104). The logical combination therapy of immune checkpoints and angiogenesis provides greater therapeutic effects, according to Schmittnaegel et al. On the other hand, increased intratumoral immune effector cell activation results in increased PD-L1 expression in tumoral endothelial cells (105).

The PD-L1 blockade could prolong the angiostatic effects of angiogenic factors receptor inhibition, enhancing vascular normalization to a certain extent. However, lacking tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes is related to primary resistance to ICIs. At the same time, dysfunctional tumor vasculature restricts lymphocyte T cell permeating into tumors, thus limiting the curative effect of immune-checkpoint blockade. Therefore, rational dual therapy modalities of anti-angiogenesis and immune checkpoint blocking like PD-1/PD-L1 signal pathways have broad clinical applicability (91105). The HB0025, with dual recognition of VEGFR and PD-L1 based on mAb-Trap technology, has shown enhanced anti-tumor benefits than either single drug treatment (106).

In addition to VEGF, the Notch pathway’s essential ligand delta-like ligand 4 (DLL4) plays a key role in tumor neo-angiogenesis and regulates the VEGF pathway’s signaling to prevent excessive vascularization (107). Due to severe target toxicities (such as hepatotoxicity and pulmonary hypertension) seen in the clinic, the DLL4 monoclonal antibody’s development has been stopped. The research strategy then shifted to bispecific antibodies for VEGF and DLL4. Navicixizumab (OMP-305B83), an IgG2 humanized BsAb, targets DLL4 and VEGF simultaneously. The data from the phase 1a study showed manageable toxicities and anti-tumor activity in various tumor types, which encouraged an ongoing phase 1b clinical trial to further assess the curative effect in pre-treated ovarian cancer patients with platinum resistance (NCT03030287) (108). Besides, ABL001 (VEGF × DLL4), with enhanced biological anti-tumor activity in xenograft models than VEGF or DLL4 monoclonal therapeutic antibodies alone, is under phase 1 clinical study to evaluate combination therapy effect with heavy chemotherapy (NCT03292783) (92).

Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs), ranking in the stromal cell population, which compose of diverse subpopulations with distinct functions in cancer, represent the most considerable component of the tumor microenvironment (TME) (109). Abundant studies have confirmed that CAF populations could exert different but mutual functions modulating tumor growth, proliferation, tumor metastatic dissemination, and extracellular matrix components remodeling, simultaneously correlated to immunosuppression TME establishment and chemoradiotherapy resistance (109113). Recently, an in-depth study on the crucial role that CAFs play in the tumor immune microenvironment’s (TIME) pro-oncogenic functions has been done, showing CAFs as a promising therapeutic target (114). Fibroblast Activation Protein (FAP), a marker expressed on the surface of CAFs and detected in various cancer types of poor prognosis, has appeared as a novel strategy for targeted immunotherapies. Bispecific FAP-targeted 4-1BB ligand (RG7826), correctly assembled through CH1-CL domain crossover, knob into hole (KIH) amino acid mutation in the fragment crystallizable (Fc) domain, as well as mutations in CH1 (EE) and CL (RK) (12115), led to intensive IFN-γ and granzyme B secretion in human tumor samples while combined with tumor antigen-targeted (CEA) T cell bispecific (TCB) molecules (89116). A new FAP-DR5 (death receptor 5) tetravalent bispecific antibody called RG7386 aims to activate extrinsic DR5. In preclinical patient-derived xenograft models, hyperclustering dependent on the tumor cells’ apoptotic pathway and binding to FAP-positive stroma led to durable tumor reduction, which is currently being assessed in phase-I clinical research (117118).

5 Bispecific antibody changing TGF-β signal pathway to improve the tumor microenvironment

Transforming growth factor (TGF)-β is a multifunctional cytokine that plays a dual role, tumor suppressor or promoter, in a cellular or context-dependent manner, known as the TGF-β “paradox”. In early-stage tumors, the TGF-β pathway induces apoptosis and inhibits tumor cell proliferation. In contrast, it has a tumor-promoting role in advanced stages by regulating genomic instability, epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), neoangiogenesis, immune evasion, and cell metastasis (Figure 2). Previous research suggests that response rates to TGF-β monoclonal antibody therapy are low, which could be related to the fact that it is not a tumor promoter. As a result, one of the primary avenues of advancement in this sector has been combination therapies, which include combinations with ICIs (e.g., PD-1/PD-L1 antibodies), cytotoxic drugs, radiotherapy, cancer vaccines, and so on.

The discovery that TGF-β antibody induces potent anti-tumor immunity when combined with PD-L1 antibodies was made in a study of patients with uroepithelial carcinoma who metastasized after receiving PD-L1 antibodies (119). In this study, CD8+ T cells were found in the patients’ tumor interstitium containing fibroblasts and collagen but not in the tumor interior, TGF-β signal limits T cell infiltration. At the same time, some researchers fused TGF-β receptor II and PD-L1 antibodies into a tetravalent BsAb, M7824, and found that the bispecific antibody had better anti-tumor effects than the monotherapies in homozygous mouse models of breast and colon carcinoma. The Phase I clinical study (NCT03917381) of M7824 patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) evaluated its efficacy and safety. The median follow-up was 51.9 weeks, with an objective remission rate (ORR) of 21.3%, partial remission (PR) of 21.3%, stable disease (SD) of 16.3%, and disease progression (PD) of 48.8% for all patients; disease control rate (DCR) of 40%; overall survival (OS) of 13.6 months; median progression-free survival (PFS) of 2.6 months; The 12-month PFS rate was 20.1%; median duration of remission (DOR) was 14.1 months. A dose of 1200 mg was determined to be the recommended dose for the Phase II study. But German Merck and collaborator Glaxo finally announced that a Phase III (INTR@PID Lung 037) interim analysis of bintrafusp alfa (M7824) showed that it could not outperform PD-1 antibody Keytruda. Bintrafusp alfa was then stopped as a single-agent second-line treatment for locally progressed or metastatic biliary tract carcinoma (BTC) in Phase II INTR@PID BTC 047 due to failure to reach the primary endpoint. Bintrafusp alfa has failed four clinical trials in a row since 2021. M7824 is also being tested in various indications, including esophageal, biliary tract, and gastric cancers. With the discovery that transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) inhibits T helper cell (Th2)-mediated cancer immunity, researchers constructed a bispecific antibody targeting CD4 and TGF-β, 4T-Trap, which selectively inhibits TGF-β signaling by CD4+ T cells in lymph nodes (120121), leading to cancer cell apoptosis and vascular rearrangement. Due to TGF-β multifunctionality and the potential for major side effects from the total blockade, inhibition of TGF-β in cancer therapy has not been successful. However, 4T-Trap focuses TGF-β blocking compounds directly on CD4+ T cells to minimize adverse effects. And combining 4T-Trap with a VEGF inhibitor may help to prevent the spread of vascular-mediated malignancy.

Due to the diversity of TGF-β signaling, combinations are likely to be effective only when TGF-β is the tumor-promoting signal. The efficacy of anti-TGF-β must be carefully analyzed when TGF-β exerts tumor-suppressive effects or when the receptor for TGF-β is mutated. In addition, the combination of drugs may cause a strong immune response in patients; whether the patient can tolerate it and the deepening of side effects is also a question worthy of consideration. A deeper understanding of the communication and interactions between the various components of the tumor patient’s organism and TGF-β signaling is key to improving clinical efficacy.

6 Approaches to avoid on-target off-tumor adverse effects

A reinvigorated anti-tumor immunity can be a double-edged weapon while many programs explore alternative modes of action correlated with bispecific antibodies’ target pathways. The efficacy of genetically modified bispecific antibodies against cancer has increased greatly at the expense of improved toxicities in normal tissues and systemic cytokine release immune responses (122123). Strategies of conditionally activating T cells within tumors and modifying target affinities to mitigate or conquer the “on-target off-tumor” adverse effect of bispecific antibodies have been taken into consideration and investigation (52124126).

To avoid T cell autoreactivity to normal target-expressing tissues while there is generally lacking tumor-specific targets in solid tumors, Slaga, D., and colleagues have designed and exploited a T cell-dependent bispecific (TDB) antibody with a bivalent low-affinity HER2 recognition binding domain which can selectively target HER2-overexpressing tumor cells from normal human tissues with low amounts of HER2 expressing (52). Besides, antibody binding affinity is a major factor for overall tolerability, while the higher affinity for CD3 is related to rapidly increasing peripheral cytokine concentrations. While having no impact on anti-tumor effectiveness, anti-HER2/CD3 TDBs with lower CD3 binding affinity is better tolerated in vivo. Higher HER2 affinity aids in tumor-killing action but also causes more severe toxicity, including cytokine release syndrome, in HER2-expressing tissues. a dose-fractionation technique, which offers an application strategy for the affinities-modulated antibodies, has been used to address such a problem (124).

Disorganized tumor tissue growth and rapid cell division contribute to complicated extracellular features of the TME, such as a hypoxia environment with low pH, increased extracellular matrix remodeling, and upregulated proteolysis, which has contributed to the exploration of conditionally activating T cells in the TME based on the preferentially binding of BsAbs at hypoxic extracellular conditions as well as local liberation of the BsAbs antigen-binding sites released by tumor-associated proteases (126135). Preclinical research has shown that T cell recruiting BsAbs (TCBs) conditionally activated by intratumorally proteolytic cleavage can prolong therapeutic windows, successfully avoid dose-limiting toxicities, and significantly prolong tumor regression (131133). Furthermore, Geiger, M. and colleagues have generated a protease cleavable activated anti-folate receptor 1 TCB (Prot-FOLR1-TCB) via masking the anti-CD3 binding domain with an anti-idiotypic anti-CD3 scFv N-terminally connected to the anti-CD3 variable heavy chain through a protease cleavable linker, which has shown validly releasing of the anti-CD3 binding moiety in active proteases enriched tumor microenvironment, thus effectively reducing potential on-target toxicity through sparing normal tissues with low degrees FOLR1 expression while mediating efficient anti-tumor ability in FOLR1-positive tumor tissue (126). Besides, binding sites of the BsAb assembling intratumorally from two half-molecules is an ideal approach to further increasing tumor selectivity (125136).

7 Conclusion and prospect

As a result of the FDA’s approval of Blinatumomab for the treatment of recurrent ALL and the ongoing need for BsAbs, novel formats aimed at enhancing therapeutic efficacy and safety have been developing for the treatment of solid tumors as well as hematologic malignancies. BsAbs have gained momentum over the past decade. Despite promising progress in the clinical application field of bispecific immunomodulatory antibodies in part of human tumor types, more prominent anti-tumor efficacy in most solid tumors still needs constant exploration. Furthermore, dozens of BsAbs with different targets combinations have exhibited potent anti-tumor effect in preclinical studies, but most of the positive preclinical outcomes could not be further validated in the clinic. With increasingly diverse BsAbs entering preclinical and clinical trials, various challenges have emerged hampering the development of BsAbs. The development of BsAbs is dimensionally more difficult than that of a monoclonal antibody. Selecting the optimal targets combination is only the first step, followed by the right choosing of a rational format and designing the molecule according to the targets as well as the biology of the diseases. Besides, inappropriate clinical design and administration regimens will expose patients into significantly higher toxicities, which can be avoided via optimization of treatment strategies, dosage, timing, and sequence to some extent. We anticipate that more comprehensive exploration in the field of bispecific immunomodulatory antibodies will broaden the prospect of cancer immunotherapy.

Author contributions

All authors listed have made a substantial, direct, and intellectual contribution to the work, and approved it for publication.

Funding

This work was supported by 1.3.5 Project for Disciplines of Excellence, West China Hospital, Sichuan University (Grant No. ZYJC21043), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31971390), and Sichuan Science and Technology Program (2021YFH0142).

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of insterest.

Publisher’s note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

RAbD is a new biotechnology company founded by Fox  Chase Cancer Center investigators Gregory Adams, Ph.D., Matthew Robinson, Ph.D. and Roland Dunbrack, Ph.D. that is focused on the knowledge-based design of antibodies that bind to key functional, often highly conserved and difficult to target epitopes. We are using homology modeling, crystal structures, protein docking and design software and algorithms to drive combinatorial sampling of CDRs to computationally design new antibodies and then express, validate and perform further design in an iterative manner.Brian Smith, Ph.D., MBA is RAbD Biotech’s Business Development Lead.

Contact information for RAbD Biotech:

Website  http://rabdbiotech.com/

LinkedIn

Twitter @RAbDBiotech

The overall goal of RAbD is to

“drug the undruggable”

The company using in silico design methods to design to produce novel antibodies and biomimetics. The company is developing a first in class biomimetic, RaD-003, for the treatment of ovarian cancer.  Ovarian  cancer is one of the most deadly of all women’s cancers, with very low 5 year survival rates.  An expected 22,000 US women a year will be diagnosed and expected 16,000 will die every year.  Cisplatin/paclitaxel therapy is only approved and effective chemotherapy for ovarian cancer yet resistance develops quickly and is common. RaD-003  targets the MISII receptor (Mullerian Inhibiting Substance Type II Receptor), which is expressed on ovarian cancer cells but not on normal ovarian epithelium.

It has been shown that activation of this receptor by the Mullerian Inhibiting Substance (MIS) has antitumor activity in ovarian cancer.

The MISII receptor had been considered undruggable as

  • MIS is too expensive and difficult to produce
  • previous attempts to develop therapeutic antibodies ot MISIIR have proven difficult

Therefore, the company used their computational platform to produce a “first in class” chimeric biomimetic to more effectively target and activate MISIIR.

For  more information about this meeting and the Mid-Atlantic Bioangels and 1st Pitch please see posting on this site

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LytPhage Presents at 1st Pitch Life Sciences-Philadelphia-September 16, 2014

Reporter: Stephen J. Williams, PhD

 

LytPhage presented at Mid-Atlantic BioAngels 1st Pitch Life Sciences in  Philadelphia Tuesday Sept. 16, 2014.

LytPhage is a new biotech company using novel bioengineering to develop therapeutics to address the worldwide crisis of antibiotic resistant organisms.  They are developing a treatment for vancomycin resistant systemic infections with their platform, which can be adapted for other problematic organisms.  LytPhage is a spin-out form Temple University.

The overall goal is to use genetically modified bacteriophage (bacterial viruses) as an antimicrobial therapy against drug-resistant strains.  Their genetically modifed viruses are only lytic, meaning they result in cell death of the host but do not integrate in the host DNA.  In additon preliminary studies using mainly clinical isolates have shown good efficacy against most drug-resistant strains found in common hospital infections like Clostridium difficile colitis.  The presenters noted that bacteriophage therapy had successfully been used in Europe but no approved therapy in US

For more information about this meeting please see posting on this site

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Hastke Inc. Presents at 1st Pitch Life Sciences-Philadelphia-September 16, 2014

Reporter: Stephen J Williams, PhD

Article ID #150: Hastke Inc. Presents at 1st Pitch Life Sciences-Philadelphia. Published on 9/17/2014

WordCloud Image Produced by Adam Tubman

 

 

Hastke Inc. presented at Mid-Atlantic BioAngels 1st Pitch Life Sciences in  Philadelphia Tuesday Sept. 16, 2014.

Hastke, Inc., a Princeton University spin-out, captures dynamic cellular events IN REAL TIME in live cells at an unprecendented level of detail in 3D using proprietary 3D microscopy in conjunction with nanotechnology-based tags and sensors. The resolution up to 10 nm in all directions and 10 us precision, orders of magnitude superior than other methods, can be achieved.  The company is using this technology to determine extent of uptake of drugs on a cellular level and to visualize drug-receptor interaction.  Their goal is to use their ability to visualize comound-cell interaction and uptake to enhance the drug screening process.

Their company is currently comprised of three team members:

Stephanie Budijono is the President and CEO of Hastke Inc. Prior to Hastke, she developed a nanoparticle platform for targeted cancer therapy and imaging. She received her PhD from Princeton University.

Haw Yang is the leading inventor of the technology. He is a Professor at Princeton University, leading a research lab developing new methods to understand molecular reactivity in complex systems.

Kevin Welsher is a co-invetor of the technology. He is a prolific scientist whose works have been consistently featured in world-leading journals. His previous experience also includes developing new materials for in-vivo fluorescent imaging. He received his PhD from Stanford University.

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Pfizer Cambridge Collaborative Innovation Events: ‘The Role of Innovation Districts in Metropolitan Areas to Drive the Global an | Basecamp Business.

Reporter: Stephen J. Williams, Ph.D.

Monday, September 8 2014 5:30pm – 7:00pm Other Time Presented by:

Event Details:
Date/Time:
Monday, September 8, 2014, 5:30-7PM EDT
Venue: Pfizer Cambridge Seminar Room (ground floor)
Location: Pfizer Inc., 610 Main Street, Cambridge, MA 02139 . Click here for a map to the location
(Corner of Portland and Albany street, Cambridge, MA 02139)
RSVP: To confirm your attendance please RSVP online through this website. This is an ONLINE REGISTRATION-ONLY event (there will not be registration at the door).

The Role of Innovation Districts in Metropolitan Areas to Drive the Global and Local Economy: Cambridge/Boston Case Study

Join Pfizer Cambridge at our new residence for a fascinating evening led by Vise-President and Founding Director, Bruce Katz of Brookings Institution, followed by a networking reception with key partners in our new Cambridge residence; Boston-Cambridge big pharma and biotech, members of the venture capital community, renowned researchers, advocacy groups and Pfizer Cambridge scientists and clinicians.

Boston/Cambridge is one of most prominent biomedical hubs in the world and known for its thriving economy. Recent advances in biomedical innovation and cutting-edge technologies have been a major factor in stimulating growth for the city. The close proximity of big pharma, biotech, academia and venture capital in Boston/Cambridge has particularly been crucial in fostering a culture ripe for such innovation.

Bruce Katz will shed light on the state of the local and global economy and the role innovation districts can play in accelerating therapies to patients. Katz will focus on the success Boston/Cambridge has had thus far in advancing biomedical discoveries as well as offer insights on the city’s future outlook.

The Brookings Institution is a nonprofit public policy organization based in Washington, D.C. Mr. Katz is Founding Director of the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program, which aims to provide decision makers in the public, corporate, and civic sectors with policy ideas for improving the health and prosperity of cities and metropolitan areas.

Agenda:

5:30-6PM      Registration/Gathering (please arrive by no later than 5:45PM EDT with a
                       government issued ID to allow sufficient time for security check)

6-7PM            Welcoming remarks by Cambridge/Boston Site Head and Group Senior 
                       Vice-President WorldWide R&D, Dr. Jose-Carlos Gutierrez-Ramos

                        Keynote speaker: Bruce Katz, 
                        Founding Director Metropolitan Policy Program
                        Vice-president, The Brookings Institution

7-8PM             Open reception and Networking

8PM                 Event ends

This May, Pfizer Cambridge sites are integrating and relocating our research and development teams into our new local headquarters at 610 Main Street, Cambridge, MA 02139. The unified Cambridge presence represents the opportunity to interlace Pfizer’s R&D capability in the densest biomedical community in the world, to potentially expand our already existing collaborations and to embark on forging possible new connections. These events will further drive our collective mission and passion to deliver new medicines to patients in need. Our distinguished invited guests will include leaders in the Boston-Cambridge venture capital and biotech community, renowned researchers, advocacy groups and Pfizer Cambridge scientists and clinicians.  

Online registration:
If you are experiencing issues with online registration, please contact: Cambridge_site_head@pfizer.com  



Hashtags: #bcnet-PCCIE

Monday, September 8 2014 5:30pm – 7:00pm Other Time

Location: Pfizer Inc.
610 Main St
Cambridge, MA 02139
Contact:
 

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Plant-based Nutrition, Neutraceuticals and Alternative Medicine: Article Compilation the Journal PharmaceuticalIntelligence.com

Curator: Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP

 

  1. Green tea polyphenols alleviate early BBB damage
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/07/31/green-tea-polyphenols-alleviate-early-bbb-damage-during/
  2. What do you know about Plants and Neutraceuticals?

Author and Curator, Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/30/what-do-you-know-about-plants-and-neutraceuticals/

  1. The Final Considerations of the Role of Platelets and Platelet Endothelial Reactions in Atherosclerosis and Novel Treatments

Author and Curator: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/10/15/the-final-considerations-of-the-role-of-platelets-and-platelet-endothelial-reactions-in-atherosclerosis-and-novel-treatments/

  1. Endothelial Function and Cardiovascular Disease

Author and Curator: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/25/endothelial-function-and-cardiovascular-disease/

  1. NO Nutritional remedies for hypertension and atherosclerosis. It’s 12 am: do you know where your electrons are?

Author and Reporter: Meg Baker, Ph.D., Registered Patent Agent

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/07/no-nutritional-remedies-for-hypertension-and-atherosclerosis-its-12-am-do-you-know-where-your-electrons-are/

  1. Cocoa and Heart Health

Reporter: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/11/17/cocoa-and-heart-health/

  1. Metabolomics: its applications in food and nutrition research

Reporter and Curator: Dr. Sudipta Saha, Ph.D.

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/05/12/metabolomics-its-applications-in-food-and-nutrition-research/

  1. Japanese knotweed extract (Polygonum cuspidatum) Resveratrol 98%

Reporter: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP   Stanford Lee, Shanghai Natural Bio-engineering Co., Ltd
Key products: resveratrol, curcumin,artemisinin,artemether,artesunate,dihydroartemisinin,Lumefantrine,etc
https://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20140805055958-283555965-japanese-knotweed-extract-polygonum-cuspidatum-resveratrol-98?/

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/08/20/japanese-knotweed-extract-polygonum-cuspidatum-resveratrol-98/

  1. Antimicrobial resistance
    Reporter: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP   
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/08/18/antimicrobial-resistance/
  2. Macrocycles in new drug discovery
    Reporter: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP     Jamie MallinsonIan Collins
    Future Medicinal Chemistry, Jul 2012, Vol. 4, No. 11, Pages 1409-1438.

Natural product macrocycles and their synthetic derivatives

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/08/16/macrocycles-in-new-drug-discovery/

  1. Lipid Metabolism

ALA and LA, LCPUFAs (EPA, DHA, and AA), eicosanoids, delta-3-desaturase, prostaglandins, leukotrienes

Ginseng fights fatigue in cancer patients, Mayo Clinic-led study finds http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/08/15/lipid-metabolism/

  1. Ginseng fights fatigue in cancer patients, Mayo Clinic-led study finds

Reporter: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/08/10/ginseng-fights-fatigue-in-cancer-patients-mayo-clinic-led-study-finds/

  1. Scientists develop new cancer-killing compound from salad plant / 1,200 times more specific in killing certain kinds of cancer cells than currently available drugs
    Reporter: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/17/scientists-develop-new-cancer-killing-compound-from-salad-plant-1200-times-more-specific-in-killing-certain-kinds-of-cancer-cells-than-currently-available-drugs/
  2. Protein heals wounds, boosts immunity and protects from cancer – Lactoferrin
    Reporter: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/17/protein-heals-wounds-boosts-immunity-and-protects-from-cancer-lactoferrin/
  3. Inula helenium ( elecampane ) 100% Effective against MRSA in vitro, 200 Strains
    Reporter: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/15/inula-helenium-elecampane-100-effective-against-mrsa-in-vitro-200-strains/
  4. Thymoquinone, an extract of nigella sativa seed oil, blocked pancreatic cancer cell growth and killed the cells by enhancing the process of programmed cell death.
    Reporter: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/15/thymoquinone-an-extract-of-nigella-sativa-seed-oil-blocked-pancreatic-cancer-cell-growth-and-killed-the-cells-by-enhancing-the-process-of-programmed-cell-death/
  5. Cinnamon is lethal weapon against E. coli O157:H7
    Reporter: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/15/cinnamon-is-lethal-weapon-against-e-coli-o157h7/
  6. Garlic compound fights source of food-borne illness better than antibiotics (100 times more effective than two popular antibiotics )

Reporter: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/15/garlic-compound-fights-source-of-food-borne-illness-better-than-antibiotics-100-times-more-effective-than-two-popular-antibiotics/

  1. Reference Genes in the Human Gut Microbiome: The BGI Catalogue

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/14/reference-genes-in-the-human-gut-microbiome-the-bgi-catalogue/

  1. Study suggests consuming whey protein before meals could help improve blood glucose control in people with diabetes
    Reporter: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/12/study-suggests-consuming-whey-protein-before-meals-could-help-improve-blood-glucose-control-in-people-with-diabetes/
  2. Omega-3 fatty acids, depleting the source, and protein insufficiency in renal disease
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Curator
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/06/omega-3-fatty-acids-depleting-the-source-and-protein-insufficiency-in-renal-disease/
  3. Health benefit of anthocyanins from apples and berries noted for men
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Curator
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/06/health-benefit-of-anthocyanins-from-apples-and-berries-noted-for-men/
  4. Carrots Cut Men’s Prostate Cancer Risk by 50%
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/03/carrots-cut-mens-prostate-cancer-risk-by-50/
  5. A Recipe To Make Cannabis Oil For A Chemotherapy Alternative
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/07/02/a-recipe-to-make-cannabis-oil-for-a-chemotherapy-alternative/
  6. Plant flavonoid found to reduce inflammatory response in the brain: luteolin
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/06/29/plant-flavonoid-found-to-reduce-inflammatory-response-in-the-brain-luteolin/
  7. Omega-3 fatty acids protect eyes against retinopathy, study finds
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/06/28/omega-3-fatty-acids-protect-eyes-against-retinopathy-study-finds/
  8. Scientists identify new pathogenic and protective microbes associated with severe diarrhea
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/06/28/scientists-identify-new-pathogenic-and-protective-microbes-associated-with-severe-diarrhea/
  9. 2,000-year-old herb regulates autoimmunity and inflammation / Chang Shan, from a type of hydrangea that grows in Tibet and Nepal
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/06/27/2000-year-old-herb-regulates-autoimmunity-and-inflammation-chang-shan-from-a-type-of-hydrangea-that-grows-in-tibet-and-nepal/
  10. Turmeric-based drug effective on Alzheimer flies
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/06/27/turmeric-based-drug-effective-on-alzheimer-flies/
  11. Plant flavonoid luteolin blocks cell signaling pathways in colon cancer cells
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/06/26/plant-flavonoid-luteolin-blocks-cell-signaling-pathways-in-colon-cancer-cells/
  12. Study Finds Shu Gan Liang Xue Herbal Formula Has Breast Cancer Anti Tumor Effect
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/06/25/study-finds-shu-gan-liang-xue-herbal-formula-has-breast-cancer-anti-tumor-effect/
  13. HMPC Q&A Documents on Herbal Medicinal Products published
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/06/25/hmpc-qa-documents-on-herbal-medicinal-products-published/
  14. Garden Cress Extract Kills 97% of Breast Cancer Cells in Vitro
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/06/21/garden-cress-extract-kills-97-of-breast-cancer-cells-in-vitro/
  15. Moringa Oleifera Kills 97% of Pancreatic Cancer Cells in Vitro
    Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Reporter
    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/06/21/moringa-oleifera-kills-97-of-pancreatic-cancer-cells-in-vitro/

16. The Discovery and Properties of Avemar – Fermented Wheat Germ Extract: Carcinogenesis Suppressor
Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Author and Curator
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2014/06/09/the-discovery-and-properties-of-avemar-fermented-wheat-germ-extract-carcinogenesis-suppressor-2/

 


 

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New Frontiers in Gene Editing — Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s Inaugural, February 19-20, 2015 | The Inter Continental San Francisco | San Francisco, CA

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s Inaugural

New Frontiers in Gene Editing

Transitioning From the Lab to the Clinic

February 19-20, 2015 | The InterContinental San Francisco | San Francisco, CA
Part of the 22nd International Molecular Medicine Tri-Conference

 

Gene editing is rapidly progressing from being a research/screening tool to one that promises important applications downstream in drug development and cell therapy. Cambridge Healthtech Institute’s inaugural symposium on New Frontiers in Gene Editing will bring together experts from all aspects of basic science and clinical research to talk about how and where gene editing can be best applied. What are the different tools that can be used for gene editing, and what are their strengths and limitations? How does the CRISPR (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats)/Cas system, compare to Transcription Activator-like Effector Nucleases (TALENs), zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) and other systems and where are they being used? Scientists and clinicians from pharma/biotech as well as from academic and government labs will share their experiences leveraging the utility of gene editing for functional screening, creating cell lines and knock-outs for disease modeling, and for cell therapy.

 

KEYNOTE PRESENTATIONS:

Precise Single-Base Genome Engineering for Human Diagnostics and Therapy

Bruce R. Conklin M.D., Investigator, Roddenberry Center for Stem Cell Biology and Medicine, Gladstone Institutes and Professor, Division of Genomic Medicine, University of California, San Francisco

Genome Edited Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells for Drug Screening

Joseph C. Wu, M.D., Ph.D., Director, Stanford Cardiovascular Institute and Professor, Department of Medicine/Cardiology & Radiology, Stanford University School of Medicine

 

USING GENE EDITING FOR FUNCTIONAL SCREENS

Exploration of Cellular Stress and Trafficking Pathways Using shRNA and CRISPR/Cas9-based Systems

Michael Bassik, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Genetics, Stanford University

Gene Editing in Patient-derived Stem Cells for In Vitro Modeling of Parkinson’s Disease

Birgitt Schuele M.D., Associate Professor and Director of Gene Discovery and Stem Cell Modeling, The Parkinson’s Institute

Massively Parallel Combinatorial Genetics to Overcome Drug Resistance in Bacterial Infections and Cancer

Timothy K. Lu, M.D., Ph.D., Associate Professor, Synthetic Biology Group, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Department of Biological Engineering, Synthetic Biology Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

 

TRANSLATING GENE EDITING IN VIVO

CRISPR-Cas: Tools and Applications for Genome Editing

Fei Ann Ran, Ph.D., Post-doctoral Fellow, Laboratory of Dr. Feng Zhang, Broad Institute and Junior Fellow, Harvard Society of Fellows

Anti-HIV Therapies: Genome Engineering the Virus and the Host

Paula M. Cannon Ph.D., Associate Professor, Molecular Microbiology & Immunology, Biochemistry, and Pediatrics, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California

Preventing Transmission of Mitochondrial Diseases by Germline Heteroplasmic Shift Using TALENs

Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte, Ph.D., Professor, Gene Expression Laboratory, Salk Institute

Nuclease-Based Gene Correction for Treating Single Gene Disorders

Gang Bao, Ph.D., Professor, Robert A. Milton Chair in Biomedical Engineering, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University

 

EXPLORING GENE EDITING FOR THERAPEUTIC USES

Gene Editing on the Cusp of Exciting Opportunities for Human Therapeutics

Rodger Novak, M.D., CEO, CRISPR Therapeutics

Genome Editing for Genetic Diseases of the Blood

Matthew Porteus, M.D., Ph.D., Associate Professor, Pediatrics, Stanford University School of Medicine

Genome Engineering Tools for Gene Therapy and Regenerative Medicine

Charles A. Gersbach, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Center for Genomic and Computational Biology, Duke University

 

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LANDSCAPE: OPPORTUNITIES & CONCERNS

CRISPR/Cas-9: Navigating Intellectual Property (IP) Challenges in Gene Editing

Chelsea Loughran, Associate, Litigation Group, Wolf, Greenfield and Sacks, P.C.

Suggested Event Package:

February 15 Afternoon Short Course: Best Practices in Personalized and Translational Medicine
February 15 Dinner Short Course: Regulatory Compliance in Drug-Diagnostics Co-Development
February 16 Morning Short Course: Isolation and Characterization of Cancer Stem Cells
February 16-18 Conference Program: Genome and Transcriptome Analysis

 

 

For more details on the conference, please contact: 
Tanuja Koppal, Ph.D.,
Conference Director
Cambridge Healthtech Institute
E: tkoppal@healthtech.com

For partnering and sponsorship information, please contact: 
Jon Stroup (Companies A-K)
Manager, Business Development
Cambridge Healthtech Institute
T: (+1) 781-972-5483
E: jstroup@healthtech.com

Joseph Vacca (Companies L-Z)
Manager, Business Development
Cambridge Healthtech Institute
T: (+1) 781.972.5431
E: jvacca@healthtech.com

SOURCE

http://www.triconference.com/gene-editing

From: Gene Editing <davem@healthtech.com>
Date: Wed, 27 Aug 2014 12:58:56 -0400
To: <avivalev-ari@alum.berkeley.edu>
Subject: New Frontiers in Gene Editing [preliminary agenda just released]

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