Local delivery of cell surface-targeted immunocytokines programs systemic antitumor immunity.
Luciano SantollaniLaura MaiorinoYiming J ZhangJoseph R PalmeriJordan A StinsonLauren R DuhamelKashif QureshiJack R SuggsOwen T PorthWilliam PinneyRiyam Al MsariAgnes A WalshK Dane WittrupDarrell J IrvinePublished in: Nature immunology (2024)
Systemically administered cytokines are potent immunotherapeutics but can cause severe dose-limiting toxicities. To overcome this challenge, cytokines have been engineered for intratumoral retention after local delivery. However, despite inducing regression of treated lesions, tumor-localized cytokines often elicit only modest responses at distal untreated tumors. In the present study, we report a localized cytokine therapy that safely elicits systemic antitumor immunity by targeting the ubiquitous leukocyte receptor CD45. CD45-targeted immunocytokines have lower internalization rates relative to wild-type counterparts, leading to sustained downstream cis and trans signaling between lymphocytes. A single intratumoral dose of αCD45-interleukin (IL)-12 followed by a single dose of αCD45-IL-15 eradicated treated tumors and untreated distal lesions in multiple syngeneic mouse tumor models without toxicity. Mechanistically, CD45-targeted cytokines reprogrammed tumor-specific CD8 + T cells in the tumor-draining lymph nodes to have an antiviral transcriptional signature. CD45 anchoring represents a broad platform for protein retention by host immune cells for use in immunotherapy.