4.5 Article

Enhancement of epidermal growth factor receptor antibody tumor immunotherapy by glutaminyl cyclase inhibition to interfere with CD47/signal regulatory protein alpha interactions

Journal

CANCER SCIENCE
Volume 112, Issue 8, Pages 3029-3040

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cas.14999

Keywords

CD47; EGFR antibody; glutaminyl cyclase; immunotherapy; myeloid cell

Categories

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (DFG) [VA 124/9-1]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [VA 124/9-1]

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The study shows that inhibiting glutaminyl cyclase can enhance the immunotherapeutic effects on tumor cells. Inhibition of glutaminyl cyclase reduces the specific signal of CD47 at the SIRP alpha binding site, leading to increased efficiency of tumor cell phagocytosis and ADCC reactions mediated by antibodies.
Integrin associated protein (CD47) is an important target in immunotherapy, as it is expressed as a don't eat me signal on many tumor cells. Interference with its counter molecule signal regulatory protein alpha (SIRP alpha), expressed on myeloid cells, can be achieved with blocking Abs, but also by inhibiting the enzyme glutaminyl cyclase (QC) with small molecules. Glutaminyl cyclase inhibition reduces N-terminal pyro-glutamate formation of CD47 at the SIRP alpha binding site. Here, we investigated the impact of QC inhibition on myeloid effector cell-mediated tumor cell killing by epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) Abs and the influence of Ab isotypes. SEN177 is a QC inhibitor and did not interfere with EGFR Ab-mediated direct growth inhibition, complement-dependent cytotoxicity, or Ab-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) by mononuclear cells. However, binding of a human soluble SIRP alpha-Fc fusion protein to SEN177 treated cancer cells was significantly reduced in a dose-dependent manner, suggesting that pyro-glutamate formation of CD47 was affected. Glutaminyl cyclase inhibition in tumor cells translated into enhanced Ab-dependent cellular phagocytosis by macrophages and enhanced ADCC by polymorphonuclear neutrophilic granulocytes. Polymorphonuclear neutrophilic granulocyte-mediated ADCC was significantly more effective with EGFR Abs of human IgG2 or IgA2 isotypes than with IgG1 Abs, proposing that the selection of Ab isotypes could critically affect the efficacy of Ab therapy in the presence of QC inhibition. Importantly, QC inhibition also enhanced the therapeutic efficacy of EGFR Abs in vivo. Together, these results suggest a novel approach to specifically enhance myeloid effector cell-mediated efficacy of EGFR Abs by orally applicable small molecule QC inhibitors.

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