Hexavalent TRAIL Fusion Protein Eftozanermin Alfa Optimally Clusters Apoptosis-Inducing TRAIL Receptors to Induce On-Target Antitumor Activity in Solid Tumors.
Darren C PhillipsFritz G BuchananDong ChengLarry R SolomonYu XiaoJohn XueStephen K TahirMorey L SmithHaichao ZhangDeborah WidomskiVivek C AbrahamNan XuZhihong LiuLi ZhouEnrico DiGiammarinoXin LuNandini Rudra-GangulyBruce TrelaSusan E Morgan-LappePublished in: Cancer research (2021)
TRAIL can activate cell surface death receptors, resulting in potent tumor cell death via induction of the extrinsic apoptosis pathway. Eftozanermin alfa (ABBV-621) is a second generation TRAIL receptor agonist engineered as an IgG1-Fc mutant backbone linked to two sets of trimeric native single-chain TRAIL receptor binding domain monomers. This hexavalent agonistic fusion protein binds to the death-inducing DR4 and DR5 receptors with nanomolar affinity to drive on-target biological activity with enhanced caspase-8 aggregation and death-inducing signaling complex formation independent of FcγR-mediated cross-linking, and without clinical signs or pathologic evidence of toxicity in nonrodent species. ABBV-621 induced cell death in approximately 36% (45/126) of solid cancer cell lines in vitro at subnanomolar concentrations. An in vivo patient-derived xenograft (PDX) screen of ABBV-621 activity across 15 different tumor indications resulted in an overall response (OR) of 29% (47/162). Although DR4 (TNFSFR10A) and/or DR5 (TNFSFR10B) expression levels did not predict the level of response to ABBV-621 activity in vivo, KRAS mutations were associated with elevated TNFSFR10A and TNFSFR10B and were enriched in ABBV-621-responsive colorectal carcinoma PDX models. To build upon the OR of ABBV-621 monotherapy in colorectal cancer (45%; 10/22) and pancreatic cancer (35%; 7/20), we subsequently demonstrated that inherent resistance to ABBV-621 treatment could be overcome in combination with chemotherapeutics or with selective inhibitors of BCL-XL. In summary, these data provide a preclinical rationale for the ongoing phase 1 clinical trial (NCT03082209) evaluating the activity of ABBV-621 in patients with cancer. SIGNIFICANCE: This study describes the activity of a hexavalent TRAIL-receptor agonistic fusion protein in preclinical models of solid tumors that mechanistically distinguishes this molecular entity from other TRAIL-based therapeutics.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- cell cycle arrest
- clinical trial
- oxidative stress
- editorial comment
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell surface
- poor prognosis
- papillary thyroid
- stem cells
- combination therapy
- machine learning
- open label
- squamous cell carcinoma
- randomized controlled trial
- radiation therapy
- replacement therapy
- mass spectrometry
- rectal cancer
- high throughput
- binding protein
- lymph node
- mesenchymal stem cells
- diabetic rats
- single molecule
- smoking cessation
- big data
- high glucose
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- phase iii
- pi k akt
- artificial intelligence