A split, conditionally active mimetic of IL-2 reduces the toxicity of systemic cytokine therapy

Author:

Quijano-Rubio AlfredoORCID,Bhuiyan Aladdin M.,Yang Huilin,Leung Isabel,Bello ElisaORCID,Ali Lestat R.,Zhangxu KevinORCID,Perkins JillianeORCID,Chun Jung-Ho,Wang Wentao,Lajoie Marc J.,Ravichandran Rashmi,Kuo Yun-Huai,Dougan Stephanie K.ORCID,Riddell Stanley R.,Spangler Jamie B.ORCID,Dougan Michael,Silva Daniel-AdrianoORCID,Baker DavidORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe therapeutic potential of recombinant cytokines has been limited by the severe side effects of systemic administration. We describe a strategy to reduce the dose-limiting toxicities of monomeric cytokines by designing two components that require colocalization for activity and that can be independently targeted to restrict activity to cells expressing two surface markers. We demonstrate the approach with a previously designed mimetic of cytokines interleukin-2 and interleukin-15—Neoleukin-2/15 (Neo-2/15)—both for trans-activating immune cells surrounding targeted tumor cells and for cis-activating directly targeted immune cells. In trans-activation mode, tumor antigen targeting of the two components enhanced antitumor activity and attenuated toxicity compared with systemic treatment in syngeneic mouse melanoma models. In cis-activation mode, immune cell targeting of the two components selectively expanded CD8+ T cells in a syngeneic mouse melanoma model and promoted chimeric antigen receptor T cell activation in a lymphoma xenograft model, enhancing antitumor efficacy in both cases.

Funder

Foundation for the National Institutes of Health

"la Caixa" Foundation

National Science Foundation

Melanoma Research Alliance

Emerson Collective

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Washington Research Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Molecular Medicine,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Bioengineering,Biotechnology

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