Abstract

To explore the role of TWEAK in tumor growth and antitumor immune response and the activity and mechanism of RG7212, an antagonistic anti-TWEAK antibody, in tumor models. TWEAK-induced signaling and gene expression were explored in tumor cell lines and inhibition of these effects and antitumor efficacy with RG7212 treatment was assessed in human tumor xenograft-, patient-derived xenograft, and syngeneic tumor models and phase I patients. Genetic features correlated with antitumor activity were characterized. In tumor cell lines, TWEAK induces proliferation, survival, and NF-κB signaling and gene expression that promote tumor growth and suppress antitumor immune responses. TWEAK-inducible CD274, CCL2, CXCL-10 and -11 modulate T-cell and monocyte recruitment, T-cell activation, and macrophage differentiation. These factors and TWEAK-induced signaling were decreased, and tumor, blood, and spleen immune cell composition was altered with RG7212 treatment in mice. RG7212 inhibits tumor growth in vivo in models with TWEAK receptor, Fn14, expression, and markers of pathway activation. In phase I testing, signs of tumor shrinkage and stable disease were observed without dose-limiting toxicity. In a patient with advanced, Fn14-positive, malignant melanoma with evidence of tumor regression, proliferation markers were dramatically reduced, tumor T-cell infiltration increased, and tumor macrophage content decreased. Antitumor activity, a lack of toxicity in humans and animals and no evidence of antagonism with standard of care or targeted agents in mice, suggests that RG7212 is a promising agent for use in combination therapies in patients with Fn14-positive tumors.

Highlights

  • TWEAK and the TWEAK receptor, Fn14, are upregulated in cancer, and TWEAK-induced signaling promotes multiple processes known to contribute to tumor growth

  • With respect to understanding the role of TWEAK in driving tumor growth, it is notable that the most strongly, consistently induced gene changes across a range of tumor cell lines regulate cellular proliferation, survival, NF-kB pathway activity, immune cell recruitment, and function and here we show that a number of these, at the mRNA and/or protein level, are decreased in mice treated with RG7212

  • RG7212 has shown antitumor efficacy in multiple diverse tumor models in mice with efficacy associated with tumor Fn14 expression and pathway activation

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Summary

Introduction

TWEAK and the TWEAK receptor, Fn14, are upregulated in cancer, and TWEAK-induced signaling promotes multiple processes known to contribute to tumor growth. This TNF superfamily ligand has been described as mediating diverse effects ranging from proliferation to apoptosis. Fn14 is expressed in multiple cell types, but expression levels are low in normal cells and have been shown to increase with tissue injury, in inflammatory diseases, and in cancer [12]. TWEAK and Fn14 expression are negatively correlated with patient overall and disease-free survival in renal cell carcinoma TWEAK and Fn14 are expressed in neuroblastoma cell lines and primary tumors, and increased levels of both are observed in high-stage

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