A Novel Tetravalent Bispecific Immune Cell Engager Activates Natural Killer Cells to Kill Cancer Cells without Mediating Fratricide

Author:

Yang Ge1ORCID,Nikkhoi Shahryar Khoshtinat1ORCID,Owji Hajar1,Li Geng1,Massumi Mohammad1,Cervelli Jessica2,Vandavasi Venu Gopal3ORCID,Hatefi Arash14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmaceutics, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA

2. Environmental and Occupational Health Science Institute, Flow Cytometry Core Facility, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA

3. Department of Chemistry, Biophysics Core Facility, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA

4. Cancer Pharmacology Program, Cancer Institute of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA

Abstract

We previously reported the structure, affinity, and anticancer activity of a bivalent bispecific natural killer cell engager (BiKE) composed of one anti-CD16a VHH and one anti-HER2 VHH fused via a linker. In this study, we explored the engineering of a tetravalent BiKE by fusing two anti-CD16a and two anti-HER2 VHHs in tandem, using bivalent BiKE as a template. The tetravalent BiKE was genetically engineered, and its tertiary structure was predicted using in silico modeling. The antigen binding and affinity of the tetravalent BiKE were assessed using ELISA, flow cytometry, and biolayer interferometry. The ability of the BiKEs to kill cancer cells was evaluated through classical and residual antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) assays. Additionally, we investigated the potential for NK cell fratricide via CD16a-CD16a crosslinking. Our results revealed that the tetravalent BiKE exhibited at least 100-fold higher affinity toward its target antigens compared to its bivalent counterpart. The residual ADCC assay indicated that the tetravalent BiKE was more effective in killing cancer cells than the bivalent BiKE, attributable to its lower Koff value, which prolonged its binding to NK cell surfaces. Fratricide assays demonstrated that neither the bivalent nor the tetravalent BiKE mediated fratricide. Notably, our findings showed that daratumumab-induced NK fratricide was restricted to CD38-CD38 crosslinking and was not related to ADCC via CD16a-CD38 crosslinking. This study is the first in the literature to show the successful engineering of a tetravalent immune cell engager composed of tandem VHH units, which achieves high affinity and anticancer activity without mediating fratricide.

Funder

NIH/NCI

NIH/NHLBI/Rutgers HealthAdvance joint program

Publisher

MDPI AG

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