PRL3-zumab as an immunotherapy to inhibit tumors expressing PRL3 oncoprotein.
Min ThuraAbdul Qader Al-AidaroosAbhishek GuptaCheng Ean CheeSoo Chin LeeKam Man HuiJie LiYeoh Khay GuanWei Peng YongJimmy SoWee Joo ChngChin Hin NgJianbiao ZhouLing Zhi WangJohn Shyi Peng YuenHenry Sun Sien HoSim Mei YiEdmund ChiongSu Pin ChooJoanne NgeowMatthew Chau Hsien NgClarinda ChuaEugene Shen Ann YeoIain Bee Huat TanJoel Xuan En SngNicholas Yan Zhi TanJean Paul ThieryBoon Cher GohQi ZengPublished in: Nature communications (2019)
Tumor-specific antibody drugs can serve as cancer therapy with minimal side effects. A humanized antibody, PRL3-zumab, specifically binds to an intracellular oncogenic phosphatase PRL3, which is frequently expressed in several cancers. Here we show that PRL3-zumab specifically inhibits PRL3+ cancer cells in vivo, but not in vitro. PRL3 antigens are detected on the cell surface and outer exosomal membranes, implying an 'inside-out' externalization of PRL3. PRL3-zumab binds to surface PRL3 in a manner consistent with that in classical antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity or antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis tumor elimination pathways, as PRL3-zumab requires an intact Fc region and host FcγII/III receptor engagement to recruit B cells, NK cells and macrophages to PRL3+ tumor microenvironments. PRL3 is overexpressed in 80.6% of 151 fresh-frozen tumor samples across 11 common cancers examined, but not in patient-matched normal tissues, thereby implicating PRL3 as a tumor-associated antigen. Targeting externalized PRL3 antigens with PRL3-zumab may represent a feasible approach for anti-tumor immunotherapy.