抗体依赖性细胞介导的细胞毒性
巨噬细胞
单核细胞
癌症研究
抗体
吞噬作用
免疫学
受体
生物
单克隆抗体
体外
遗传学
作者
Smruthi Vijayaraghavan,Lorraine Lipfert,Kristen Chevalier,Barbara S. Bushey,Benjamin J. Henley,Ryan Lenhart,Jocelyn Sendecki,Marilda Beqiri,Hillary J. Millar,Kathryn Packman,Matthew V. Lorenzi,Sylvie Laquerre,Sheri L. Moores
标识
DOI:10.1158/1535-7163.mct-20-0071
摘要
Abstract Small molecule inhibitors targeting mutant EGFR are standard of care in non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), but acquired resistance invariably develops through mutations in EGFR or through activation of compensatory pathways such as cMet. Amivantamab (JNJ-61186372) is an anti-EGFR and anti-cMet bispecific low fucose antibody with enhanced Fc function designed to treat tumors driven by activated EGFR and/or cMet signaling. Potent in vivo antitumor efficacy is observed upon amivantamab treatment of human tumor xenograft models driven by mutant activated EGFR, and this activity is associated with receptor downregulation. Despite these robust antitumor responses in vivo, limited antiproliferative effects and EGFR/cMet receptor downregulation by amivantamab were observed in vitro. Interestingly, in vitro addition of isolated human immune cells notably enhanced amivantamab-mediated EGFR and cMet downregulation, leading to antibody dose-dependent cancer cell killing. Through a comprehensive assessment of the Fc-mediated effector functions, we demonstrate that monocytes and/or macrophages, through trogocytosis, are necessary and sufficient for Fc interaction-mediated EGFR/cMet downmodulation and are required for in vivo antitumor efficacy. Collectively, our findings represent a novel Fc-dependent macrophage-mediated antitumor mechanism of amivantamab and highlight trogocytosis as an important mechanism of action to exploit in designing new antibody-based cancer therapies.
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