作者
Samanthi A. Perera,Johnny E. Kopinja,Yanhong Ma,Eric S. Muise,Jason Laskey,Kalyan Chakravarthy,Yiping Chen,Long Cui,Jeremy Presland,Manjiri Sathe,Sarah Javaid,Ellen C. Minnihan,Heidi Ferguson,Jennifer Piesvaux,Bo-Sheng Pan,Shuxia Zhao,Sharad K. Sharma,Hyun Chong Woo,Vincenzo Pucci,Ian Knemeyer,Saso Cemerski,Jared N. Cumming,B. Wesley Trotter,Archie Tse,Anuradha D. Khilnani,Sheila Ranganath,Brian Long,David Jonathan Bennett,George H. Addona
摘要
The innate immune agonist STING (STimulator of INterferon Genes) binds its natural ligand 2'3'-cGAMP (cyclic guanosine-adenosine monophosphate) and initiates type I IFN production. This promotes systemic antigen-specific CD8+ T-cell priming that eventually provides potent antitumor activity. To exploit this mechanism, we synthesized a novel STING agonist, MSA-1, that activates both mouse and human STING with higher in vitro potency than cGAMP. Following intratumoral administration of MSA-1 to a panel of syngeneic mouse tumors on immune-competent mice, cytokine upregulation and its exposure were detected in plasma, other tissues, injected tumors, and noninjected tumors. This was accompanied by effective antitumor activity. Mechanistic studies in immune-deficient mice suggested that antitumor activity of intratumorally dosed STING agonists is in part due to necrosis and/or innate immune responses such as TNF-α activity, but development of a robust adaptive antitumor immunity is necessary for complete tumor elimination. Combination with PD-1 blockade in anti-PD-1-resistant murine models showed that MSA-1 may synergize with checkpoint inhibitors but can also provide superior tumor control as a single agent. We show for the first time that potent cyclic dinucleotides can promote a rapid and stronger induction of the same genes eventually regulated by PD-1 blockade. This may have contributed to the relatively early tumor control observed with MSA-1. Taken together, these data strongly support the development of STING agonists as therapy for patients with aggressive tumors that are partially responsive or nonresponsive to single-agent anti-PD-1 treatment by enhancing the anti-PD-1 immune profile.