1. Academic Validation
  2. Depleting MET-Expressing Tumor Cells by ADCC Provides a Therapeutic Advantage over Inhibiting HGF/MET Signaling

Depleting MET-Expressing Tumor Cells by ADCC Provides a Therapeutic Advantage over Inhibiting HGF/MET Signaling

  • Cancer Res. 2015 Aug 15;75(16):3373-83. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-15-0356.
Anna Hultberg 1 Virginia Morello 2 Leander Huyghe 3 Natalie De Jonge 4 Christophe Blanchetot 4 Valérie Hanssens 4 Gitte De Boeck 4 Karen Silence 4 Els Festjens 4 Raimond Heukers 5 Benjamin Roux 6 Fabienne Lamballe 6 Christophe Ginestier 7 Emmanuelle Charafe-Jauffret 7 Flavio Maina 6 Peter Brouckaert 3 Michael Saunders 4 Alain Thibault 4 Torsten Dreier 4 Hans de Haard 4 Paolo Michieli 8
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 arGEN-X BVBA, Zwijnaarde, Belgium. paolo.michieli@ircc.it ahultberg@argen-x.com.
  • 2 Department of Oncology, University of Torino Medical School, Candiolo, Turin, Italy. Laboratory of Experimental Therapy, Candiolo Cancer Institute-FPO, IRCCS, Candiolo, Turin, Italy.
  • 3 Department of Molecular Biomedical Research, Inflammation Research Center, Ghent University, Zwijnaarde, Belgium.
  • 4 arGEN-X BVBA, Zwijnaarde, Belgium.
  • 5 Department of Biology, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
  • 6 Aix-Marseille Université, IBDM, CNRS UMR 7288, Parc Scientifique de Luminy, Marseille, France.
  • 7 Aix-Marseille Université, CRCM, Institut Paoli-Calmettes, CNRS UMR 7258, Marseille, France.
  • 8 Department of Oncology, University of Torino Medical School, Candiolo, Turin, Italy. Laboratory of Experimental Therapy, Candiolo Cancer Institute-FPO, IRCCS, Candiolo, Turin, Italy. paolo.michieli@ircc.it ahultberg@argen-x.com.
Abstract

Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and its receptor MET represent validated targets for Cancer therapy. However, HGF/MET inhibitors being explored as Cancer therapeutics exhibit cytostatic activity rather than cytotoxic activity, which would be more desired. In this study, we engineered an antagonistic anti-MET antibody that, in addition to blocking HGF/MET signaling, also kills MET-overexpressing Cancer cells by antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC). As a control reagent, we engineered the same antibody in an ADCC-inactive form that is similarly capable of blocking HGF/MET activity, but in the absence of any effector function. In comparing these two antibodies in multiple mouse models of Cancer, including HGF-dependent and -independent tumor xenografts, we determined that the ADCC-enhanced antibody was more efficacious than the ADCC-inactive antibody. In orthotopic mammary carcinoma models, ADCC enhancement was crucial to deplete circulating tumor cells and to suppress metastases. Prompted by these results, we optimized the ADCC-enhanced molecule for clinical development, generating an antibody (ARGX-111) with improved pharmacologic properties. ARGX-111 competed with HGF for MET binding, inhibiting ligand-dependent MET activity, downregulated cell surface expression of MET, curbing HGF-independent MET activity, and engaged natural killer cells to kill MET-expressing Cancer cells, displaying MET-specific cytotoxic activity. ADCC assays confirmed the cytotoxic effects of ARGX-111 in multiple human Cancer cell lines and patient-derived primary tumor specimens, including MET-expressing Cancer stem-like cells. Together, our results show how ADCC provides a therapeutic advantage over conventional HGF/MET signaling blockade and generates proof-of-concept for ARGX-111 clinical testing in MET-positive oncologic malignancies.

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