Abstract B7-H4, a member of the B7-family of immune-regulatory ligands, has emerged in recent years as a promising target for immune checkpoint therapy development. B7-family ligands bind via extracellular tandem immunoglobulin-like domains to CD28-family receptors on lymphocytes to communicate co-stimulatory or co-inhibitory signals. B7-H4 remains an orphan ligand, although evidence from knockout mice suggests a co-inhibitory role and its expression on cancer cells and tumor-associated macrophages is associated with inhibition of proliferation, cell cycle progression, and cytokine secretion in T cells. B7-H4 is highly expressed in a variety of tumors (e.g., renal, gastric, breast, and ovarian carcinomas) and plays less well-appreciated roles in autoimmune diseases, viral infections, and maternal-fetal immunity. Negative regulation of T cell responses by B7-H4 has also been shown to induce tolerance of islet allografts in mouse models of Type I diabetes. A range of B7-H4-targeted immunotherapy agents have been successfully developed, including monoclonal antibodies, antibody-drug conjugates, B7-H4/CD3-targeting bispecific antibodies, and B7-H4-specific CAR-T cells. To evaluate the efficacy of a B7-H4 antibody, Biocytogen generated humanized B-hB7-H4 mice. Our targeting strategy was to replace the murine B7-H4 extracellular domain sequences with their corresponding human sequences. We verified mRNA and protein expression of human B7-H4 in the humanized B-hB7-H4 mice by RT-PCR and Western Blot, respectively. An in vivo efficacy study demonstrated that B7-H4 antibodies significantly inhibited tumor growth in B-hB7-H4 mice bearing tumors derived from the B16-F10 murine melanoma line. These data confirm that the B-hB7-H4 humanized mouse model is a powerful tool for evaluating the preclinical potential of B7-H4-targeting immune-therapeutics. Keywords: Humanized mice, B7-H4, Immunotherapy Citation Format: Ruili Lyu, Chonghui Liu, John Charpentier, Suman Zhao, Luke (Zhaoxue) Yu. A humanized mouse model of the promising immune checkpoint molecule B7-H4 [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr 1652.
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