Collagen-binding IL-12 enhances tumour inflammation and drives the complete remission of established immunologically cold mouse tumours

 

 

 

Authors:
Aslan Mansurov, Jun Ishihara, Peyman Hosseinchi, Lambert Potin, Tiffany M. Marchell, Ako Ishihara, John-Michael Williford, Aaron T. Alpar, Michal M. Raczy, Laura T. Gray, Melody A. Swartz & Jeffrey A. Hubbell

 

Abstract

Checkpoint-inhibitor (CPI) immunotherapy has achieved remarkable clinical success, yet its efficacy in ā€˜immunologically coldā€™ tumours has been modest. Interleukin-12 (IL-12) is a powerful cytokine that activates the innate and adaptive arms of the immune system; however, the administration of IL-12 has been associated with immune-related adverse events. Here we show that, after intravenous administration of a collagen-binding domain fused to IL-12 (CBDā€“IL-12) in mice bearing aggressive mouse tumours, CBDā€“IL-12 accumulates in the tumour stroma due to exposed collagen in the disordered tumour vasculature. In comparison with the administration of unmodified IL-12, CBDā€“IL-12 induced sustained intratumoural levels of interferon-Ī³, substantially reduced its systemic levels as well as organ damage and provided superior anticancer efficacy, eliciting complete regression of CPI-unresponsive breast tumours. Furthermore, CBDā€“IL-12 potently synergized with CPI to eradicate large established melanomas, induced antigen-specific immunological memory and controlled tumour growth in a genetically engineered mouse model of melanoma. CBDā€“IL-12 may potentiate CPI immunotherapy for immunologically cold tumours.

Reference:Ā  Mansurov, A., Ishihara, J., Hosseinchi, P. et al. Collagen-binding IL-12 enhances tumour inflammation and drives the complete remission of established immunologically cold mouse tumours. Nat Biomed Eng (2020). Retrieved from https://www.nature.com

Product Highlights:

The authors used Bio X Cell's anti-mouse CD3, anti-mouse CTLA-4 (CD152) (InVivoMAb or InVivoPlus), andĀ anti-mouse PD-1 (CD279) (InVivoMAb or InVivoPlus) antibodies in this research study.