Abstract

BackgroundSignal regulatory protein α (SIRPα) is a myeloid-lineage inhibitory receptor that restricts innate immunity through engagement of its cell surface ligand CD47. Blockade of the CD47–SIRPα interaction synergizes with tumor-specific antibodies and T-cell checkpoint inhibitors by promoting myeloid-mediated antitumor functions leading to the induction of adaptive immunity. Inhibition of the CD47–SIRPα interaction has focused predominantly on targeting CD47, which is expressed ubiquitously and contributes to the accelerated blood clearance of anti-CD47 therapeutics. Targeting SIRPα, which is myeloid-restricted, may provide a differential pharmacokinetic, safety, and efficacy profile; however, SIRPα polymorphisms and lack of pan-allelic and species cross-reactive agents have limited the clinical translation of antibodies against SIRPα. Here, we report the development of humanized AB21 (hAB21), a pan-allelic anti-SIRPα antibody that binds human, cynomolgus monkey, and mouse SIRPα alleles with high affinity and blocks the interaction with CD47.MethodsHuman macrophages derived from donors with various SIRPα v1 and v2 allelic status were used to assess the ability of hAB21 to enhance phagocytosis. HAB21_IgG subclasses were evaluated for targeted depletion of peripheral blood mononuclear cells, phagocytosis and in vivo efficacy in xenograft models. Combination therapy with anti-PD1/anti-PD-L1 in several syngeneic models was performed. Immunophenotyping of tissues from MC38 tumor-bearing mice treated with AB21 and anti-PD-1 was evaluated. PK, PD and tolerability of hAB21 were evaluated in cynomolgus monkeys.ResultsSIRPα blockade with hAB21 promoted macrophage-mediated antibody-dependent phagocytosis of tumor cells in vitro and improved responses to rituximab in the Raji human tumor xenograft mouse model. Combined with PD-1/PD-L1 blockade, AB21 improved response rates by facilitating monocyte activation, dendritic cell activation, and T cell effector functions resulting in long term, durable antitumor immunity. In cynomolgus monkeys, hAB21 has a half-life of 5.3 days at 10 mg/kg and complete target occupancy with no hematological toxicity or adverse findings at doses up to 30 mg/kg.ConclusionsThe in vitro and in vivo antitumor activity of hAB21 broadly recapitulates that of CD47 targeted therapies despite differences in ligand expression, binding partners, and function, validating the CD47–SIRPα axis as a fundamental myeloid checkpoint pathway and its blockade as promising therapeutic intervention for treatment of human malignancies.

Highlights

  • Signal regulatory protein α (SIRPα) is a myeloid-lineage inhibitory receptor that restricts innate immu‐ nity through engagement of its cell surface ligand CD47

  • Utilizing an anti-SIRPα antibody we discovered in human antibody transgenic chickens [22], we demonstrate that pan-allelic anti-SIRPα antibody humanized AB21 (hAB21), which blocks the CD47–SIRPα interaction, broadly recapitulates the functional properties of CD47 antagonists by promoting the anticancer activity of both tumor-specific antibodies and Immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) in a macrophage and Dendritic cell (DC) dependent manner

  • We previously described a family of anti-SIRPα antibodies that antagonize SIRPα through competition for the CD47-binding site located on the IgV domain of SIRPα [22]

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Summary

Introduction

Signal regulatory protein α (SIRPα) is a myeloid-lineage inhibitory receptor that restricts innate immu‐ nity through engagement of its cell surface ligand CD47. Blockade of the CD47–SIRPα interaction synergizes with tumor-specific antibodies and T-cell checkpoint inhibitors by promoting myeloid-mediated antitumor functions leading to the induction of adaptive immunity. ICIs targeting T-cell inhibitory receptors can induce complete and durable tumor immunity in patients with metastatic and treatment-refractory cancers. Dendritic cells (DCs), low in frequency within tumors, are potent and crucial mediators of antitumor immunity [6]. Given their prevalence and immunomodulatory activities, targeting regulators of macrophage and DC function is an attractive strategy to augment antitumor immunity and achieve additive or synergistic efficacy in combination with antitumor antibodies or ICIs

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