M9657 is a bispecific tumor-targeted anti-CD137 agonist that induces MSLN-dependent antitumor immunity without liver inflammation.


Journal

Cancer immunology research
ISSN: 2326-6074
Titre abrégé: Cancer Immunol Res
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101614637

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
13 Dec 2023
Historique:
accepted: 11 12 2023
received: 22 03 2023
revised: 13 07 2023
medline: 13 12 2023
pubmed: 13 12 2023
entrez: 13 12 2023
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

The costimulatory receptor CD137 (also known as TNFRSF9 or 4-1BB) sustains effective cytotoxic T-cell responses. Agonistic anti-CD137 cancer immunotherapies are being investigated in clinical trials. Development of the first-generation CD137-agonist monotherapies utomilumab and urelumab was unsuccessful due to low antitumor efficacy mediated by the epitope recognized on CD137 or hepatotoxicity mediated by FcγR ligand-dependent CD137 activation, respectively. M9657 was engineered as a tetravalent bispecific antibody (mAb2 TM) in a human IgG1 backbone with LALA mutations to reduce binding to Fcγ receptors. Here, we report that M9657 selectively binds to mesothelin (MSLN) and CD137 with similar affinity in humans and cynomolgus monkeys. In a cellular functional assay, M9657 enhanced CD8+ T cell-mediated cytotoxicity and cytokine release in the presence of tumor cells, which was dependent on both MSLN expression and TCR/CD3 activation. Both FS122m, a murine surrogate with the same protein structure as M9657, and chimeric M9657, a modified M9657 antibody with the Fab portion replaced with an anti-murine MSLN motif, demonstrated in vivo antitumor efficacy against various tumors in wild-type and human CD137 knock-in mice, and this was accompanied by activated CD8+ T-cell infiltration in the tumor microenvironment. The antitumor immunity of M9657 and FS122m depended on MSLN expression density and the mAb2 TM structure. Compared with 3H3, a murine surrogate of urelumab, FS122m and chimeric M9657 displayed significantly lower on-target/off-tumor toxicity. Taken together, M9657 exhibits a promising profile for development as a tumor-targeting immune agonist with potent anticancer activity without systemic immune activation and associated hepatotoxicity.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38091375
pii: 731722
doi: 10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-23-0243
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Auteurs

Chunxiao Xu (C)

EMD Serono Research Center, Billerica, United States.

Xueyuan Zhou (X)

EMD Serono Research Center, Billerica, United States.

Lindsay Webb (L)

EMD Serono Research Center, Billerica, United States.

Sireesha Yalavarthi (S)

EMD Serono Research Center, Billerica, United States.

Wenxin Zheng (W)

EMD Serono Research Center, Billerica, United States.

Somdutta Saha (S)

Springworks Therapeutics, Durham, NC, United States.

Rene Schweickhardt (R)

EMD Serono Research Center, Billerica, United States.

Maria Soloviev (M)

EMD Serono Research Center, Billerica, MA, United States.

Molly H Jenkins (MH)

EMD Serono Research Center, Billerica, United States.

Susanne Brandstetter (S)

the healthcare business of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany.

Natalya Belousova (N)

EMD Serono Research Center, Billerica, United States.

Marat Alimzhanov (M)

EMD Serono Research Center, Billerica, United States.

Brian Rabinovich (B)

Fuse Biotherapeutics, Billerica, United States.

Amit M Deshpande (AM)

EMD Serono Research Center, Billerica, United States.

Neil Brewis (N)

F-star Therapeutics, Cambridge, United Kingdom.

Laura Helming (L)

EMD Serono Research Center, Billerica, United States.

Classifications MeSH