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Published in: Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy 6/2020

01-06-2020 | Original Article

Development and characterization of a novel anti-OX40 antibody for potent immune activation

Authors: Zhihui Kuang, Hua Jing, Zhihai Wu, Jie Wang, Yiming Li, Haiqing Ni, Pan Zhang, Weiwei Wu, Min Wu, Shuaixiang Zhou, Xuan Qiu, Dongdong Wu, Bianka Prinz, Hemanta Baruah, Bingliang Chen, Michael Yu, Junjian Liu

Published in: Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | Issue 6/2020

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Abstract

With the great success of anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 therapeutics in cancer immunotherapy, tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily members have been recognized as ideal targets to provide co-stimulatory signals in combination with immune checkpoint blocking antibodies. Among these is OX40 (CD134), a co-stimulatory molecule expressed by activated immune cells. Recently, several anti-OX40 agonistic monoclonal antibodies, pogalizumab as the most advanced, have entered early phase clinical trials. Using a yeast platform and multiple screening methods, we identified a fully human anti-OX40 antibody (IBI101) with distinct modes of action. Unlike pogalizumab, IBI101 partially blocks the binding of OX40 to its ligand OX40L and exhibits both FcγR-dependent and independent agonistic activities in NF-κB luciferase reporter assays. IBI101 also promotes T cell activation and proliferation in vitro. These unique properties partially explain the more potent anti-tumor activity of IBI101 than that of pogalizumab in humanized NOG mice bearing LoVo tumors. In addition, IBI101 shows efficacious anti-tumor activity in mice when administrated alone or in combination with anti-PD-1 antibodies. In human OX40 knock-in mice bearing MC38 colon carcinoma, IBI101 treatment induces tumor antigen-specific CD8+ T-cell responses, decreases immunosuppressive regulatory T cells in tumor, and enhances the immune response to PD-1 inhibition. Preclinical studies of IBI101 in non-human primates demonstrate typical pharmacokinetic characteristics of an IgG antibody and no drug-related toxicity. Collectively, IBI101 has desirable preclinical attributes which support its clinical development for cancer treatment.
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Literature
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go back to reference Xiao X, Kroemer A, Gao W, Ishii N, Demirci G, Li XC (2008) OX40/OX40L costimulation affects induction of Foxp3+ regulatory T cells in part by expanding memory T cells in vivo. J Immunol 181:3193–3201CrossRef Xiao X, Kroemer A, Gao W, Ishii N, Demirci G, Li XC (2008) OX40/OX40L costimulation affects induction of Foxp3+ regulatory T cells in part by expanding memory T cells in vivo. J Immunol 181:3193–3201CrossRef
Metadata
Title
Development and characterization of a novel anti-OX40 antibody for potent immune activation
Authors
Zhihui Kuang
Hua Jing
Zhihai Wu
Jie Wang
Yiming Li
Haiqing Ni
Pan Zhang
Weiwei Wu
Min Wu
Shuaixiang Zhou
Xuan Qiu
Dongdong Wu
Bianka Prinz
Hemanta Baruah
Bingliang Chen
Michael Yu
Junjian Liu
Publication date
01-06-2020
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy / Issue 6/2020
Print ISSN: 0340-7004
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0851
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00262-020-02501-2

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