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  2. Both intratumoral regulatory T cell depletion and CTLA-4 antagonism are required for maximum efficacy of anti-CTLA-4 antibodies

Both intratumoral regulatory T cell depletion and CTLA-4 antagonism are required for maximum efficacy of anti-CTLA-4 antibodies

  • Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023 Aug;120(31):e2300895120. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2300895120.
Brianna M Lax 1 2 Joseph R Palmeri 1 2 Emi A Lutz 1 3 Allison Sheen 1 3 Jordan A Stinson 1 3 Lauren Duhamel 1 3 Luciano Santollani 1 2 Alan Kennedy 4 Adrienne M Rothschilds 1 3 Stefani Spranger 1 5 David M Sansom 4 K Dane Wittrup 1 2 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139.
  • 2 Department of Chemical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139.
  • 3 Department of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139.
  • 4 Institute of Immunity and Transplantation, University College London, London NW3 2PP, United Kingdom.
  • 5 Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139.
Abstract

Anti-CTLA-4 antibodies have successfully elicited durable tumor regression in the clinic; however, long-term benefit is limited to a subset of patients for select Cancer indications. The incomplete understanding of their mechanism of action has hindered efforts at improvement, with conflicting hypotheses proposing either antagonism of the CTLA-4:B7 axis or Fc effector-mediated regulatory T cell (Treg) depletion governing efficacy. Here, we report the engineering of a nonantagonistic CTLA-4 binding domain (b1s1e2) that depletes intratumoral Tregs as an Fc fusion. Comparison of b1s1e2-Fc to 9d9, an antagonistic anti-CTLA-4 antibody, allowed for interrogation of the separate contributions of CTLA-4 antagonism and Treg depletion to efficacy. Despite equivalent levels of intratumoral Treg depletion, 9d9 achieved more long-term cures than b1s1e2-Fc in MC38 tumors, demonstrating that CTLA-4 antagonism provided additional survival benefit. Consistent with prior reports that CTLA-4 antagonism enhances priming, treatment with 9d9, but not b1s1e2-Fc, increased the percentage of activated T cells in the tumor-draining lymph node (tdLN). Treg depletion with either construct was restricted to the tumor due to insufficient surface CTLA-4 expression on Tregs in Other compartments. Through intratumoral administration of diphtheria toxin in Foxp3-DTR mice, we show that depletion of both intratumoral and nodal Tregs provided even greater survival benefit than 9d9, consistent with Treg-driven restraint of priming in the tdLN. Our data demonstrate that anti-CTLA-4 therapies require both CTLA-4 antagonism and intratumoral Treg depletion for maximum efficacy-but that potential future therapies also capable of depleting nodal Tregs could show efficacy in the absence of CTLA-4 antagonism.

Keywords

CTLA-4; Tregs; cancer; immunotherapy; protein engineering.

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