Abstract

Abstract Members of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) superfamily of costimulatory receptors have emerged as promising targets for modulation of tumor infiltrating lymphocytes. Among these, 4-1BB (CD137) has a prominent role in promoting survival and expansion of cytotoxic CD8 T cells as well as activation of CD4 T cells, NK cells, and antigen presenting cells. The clinical relevance of 4-1BB agonism is currently being evaluated for two antibodies: urelumab (IgG4) and utomilumab (IgG2). However, it has been established that for the trimeric TNF receptor family, the homotrimeric ligands are superior activators compared to bivalent agonistic antibodies. Here we describe a prototype 4-1BB agonist consisting of three human 4-1BB ligands linked together as a single polypeptide chain and fused to the C-terminus of human IgG1 Fc (STIM-41BBL). Compared to a clinically relevant human 4-1BB antibody, STIM-41BBL shows increased activation of 4-1BB in a NF-kappa B reporter cell line. STIM-4-1BBL also shows augmented cytokine release compared to the antibody in CD8 T cells. Furthermore, we have developed a mouse STIM-41BBL and like the human counterpart, the ligand fusion induced greater cytokine release than an agonistic mouse 4-1BB antibody (IgG2a) in CD8 T cells. We have also introduced mutations (D265A/N297A) to the mouse 4-1BB antibody to make it effectorless in order to better approximate the clinical 4-1BB antibodies. Subsequently, we demonstrate that the murine STIM-41BBL had greater anti-tumor activity than the 4-1BB antibody in a MC38 tumor model. These results support the continued development of a 4-1BB ligand based therapeutic and suggests the greater potential of a STIM-41BBL fusion to a targeting antibody for more precise activation of immune system. Citation Format: Eric Tam, Galina Craig, Sara Ghassemifar, Alexander Koshkaryev, Sara Movassaghian, Cormac Cosgrove, James Sampson, Daryl Drummond, Andreas Raue. Development of 4-1BB agonists: Ligand fusion shows greater anti-tumor activity than antibodies in vivo [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2018; 2018 Apr 14-18; Chicago, IL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2018;78(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 2716.

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