A trispecific antibody targeting HER2 and T cells inhibits breast cancer growth via CD4 cells.
Edward SeungZhen XingLan WuErcole RaoVirna Cortez-RetamozoBeatriz OspinaLiqing ChenChristian BeilZhili SongBailin ZhangMikhail LevitGejing DengAndrew HebertPatrick KirbyAiqun LiEmma-Jane PoultonRita VicenteAudrey GarrigouPeter PiepenhagenGreg UlinskiMichele Sanicola-NadelDinesh S BangariHuawei QiuLily I PaoDmitri WiederschainRonnie WeiZhi-Yong YangGary J NabelPublished in: Nature (2022)
Effective antitumour immunity depends on the orchestration of potent T cell responses against malignancies 1 . Regression of human cancers has been induced by immune checkpoint inhibitors, T cell engagers or chimeric antigen receptor T cell therapies 2-4 . Although CD8 T cells function as key effectors of these responses, the role of CD4 T cells beyond their helper function has not been defined. Here we demonstrate that a trispecific antibody to HER2, CD3 and CD28 stimulates regression of breast cancers in a humanized mouse model through a mechanism involving CD4-dependent inhibition of tumour cell cycle progression. Although CD8 T cells directly mediated tumour lysis in vitro, CD4 T cells exerted antiproliferative effects by blocking cancer cell cycle progression at G1/S. Furthermore, when T cell subsets were adoptively transferred into a humanized breast cancer tumour mouse model, CD4 T cells alone inhibited HER2 + breast cancer growth in vivo. RNA microarray analysis revealed that CD4 T cells markedly decreased tumour cell cycle progression and proliferation, and also increased pro-inflammatory signalling pathways. Collectively, the trispecific antibody to HER2 induced T cell-dependent tumour regression through direct antitumour and indirect pro-inflammatory/immune effects driven by CD4 T cells.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle
- cell proliferation
- mouse model
- nk cells
- endothelial cells
- childhood cancer
- signaling pathway
- squamous cell carcinoma
- high glucose
- regulatory t cells
- monoclonal antibody
- cancer therapy
- drug delivery
- cell cycle arrest
- diabetic rats
- pi k akt
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- drug induced
- type iii
- induced pluripotent stem cells