Immunotherapy using IgE or CAR T cells for cancers expressing the tumor antigen SLC3A2

Author:

Pellizzari GiuliaORCID,Martinez OlivierORCID,Crescioli SilviaORCID,Page RobertORCID,Di Meo Ashley,Mele SilviaORCID,Chiaruttini GiuliaORCID,Hoinka JanORCID,Batruch Ihor,Prassas IoannisORCID,Grandits MelanieORCID,López-Abente JacoboORCID,Bugallo-Blanco EvaORCID,Ward MalcolmORCID,Bax Heather JORCID,French Elise,Cheung Anthony,Lombardi SaraORCID,Figini MariangelaORCID,Lacy Katie EORCID,Diamandis Eleftherios PORCID,Josephs Debra HORCID,Spicer JamesORCID,Papa SophieORCID,Karagiannis Sophia NORCID

Abstract

BackgroundCancer immunotherapy with monoclonal antibodies and chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapies can benefit from selection of new targets with high levels of tumor specificity and from early assessments of efficacy and safety to derisk potential therapies.MethodsEmploying mass spectrometry, bioinformatics, immuno-mass spectrometry and CRISPR/Cas9 we identified the target of the tumor-specific SF-25 antibody. We engineered IgE and CAR T cell immunotherapies derived from the SF-25 clone and evaluated potential for cancer therapy.ResultsWe identified the target of the SF-25 clone as the tumor-associated antigen SLC3A2, a cell surface protein with key roles in cancer metabolism. We generated IgE monoclonal antibody, and CAR T cell immunotherapies each recognizing SLC3A2. In concordance with preclinical and, more recently, clinical findings with the first-in-class IgE antibody MOv18 (recognizing the tumor-associated antigen Folate Receptor alpha), SF-25 IgE potentiated Fc-mediated effector functions against cancer cells in vitro and restricted human tumor xenograft growth in mice engrafted with human effector cells. The antibody did not trigger basophil activation in cancer patient blood ex vivo, suggesting failure to induce type I hypersensitivity, and supporting safe therapeutic administration. SLC3A2-specific CAR T cells demonstrated cytotoxicity against tumor cells, stimulated interferon-γ and interleukin-2 production in vitro. In vivo SLC3A2-specific CAR T cells significantly increased overall survival and reduced growth of subcutaneous PC3-LN3-luciferase xenografts. No weight loss, manifestations of cytokine release syndrome or graft-versus-host disease, were detected.ConclusionsThese findings identify efficacious and potentially safe tumor-targeting of SLC3A2 with novel immune-activating antibody and genetically modified cell therapies.

Funder

NIHR Biomedical Research Centre, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London

Cancer Research UK King’s Health Partners Centre at King’s College London

The Reece Foundation

Breast Cancer Now

Cancer Research UK

CRUK/NIHR in England/DoH for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland Experimental Cancer Medicine Centre

Medical Research Council

Guy’s and St Thomas’s Foundation Trust Charity Melanoma Special Fund

The Academy of Medical Sciences

The Inman Charity

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cancer Research,Pharmacology,Oncology,Molecular Medicine,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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