Potent Cytolytic Activity and Specific IL15 Delivery in a Second-Generation Trispecific Killer Engager

Abstract

Natural killer (NK) cells are potent immune modulators that can quickly lyse tumor cells and elicit inflammatory responses. These characteristics make them ideal candidates for immunotherapy. However, unlike T cells, NK cells do not possess clonotypic receptors capable of specific antigen recognition and cannot expand via activating receptor signals alone. To enable NK cells with these capabilities, we created and have previously described a tri-specific killer engager (TriKE) platform capable of inducing antigen specificity and cytokine-mediated NK-cell expansion. TriKE molecules have three arms: (i) a single-chain variable fragment (scFv) against the activating receptor CD16 on NK cells to trigger NK-cell activation, (ii) an scFv against a tumor-associated antigen (CD33 here) to induce specific tumor target recognition, and (iii) an IL15 moiety to trigger NK-cell expansion and priming. Here, we demonstrate that by modifying the anti-CD16 scFv with a humanized single-domain antibody against CD16, we improved TriKE functionality. A CD33-targeting second-generation TriKE induced stronger and more specific NK-cell proliferation without T-cell stimulation, enhanced in vitro NK-cell activation and killing of CD33-expressing targets, and improved tumor control in preclinical mouse models. Given these improved functional characteristics, we propose rapid translation of second-generation TriKEs into the clinic.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Sep 01, 2020
Source ID
10.1158/2326-6066.cir-19-0837

Entities

People

  • Alexander J Lenvik
  • Behiye Kodal
  • Craig E. Eckfeldt
  • Daniel A. Vallera
  • Dawn K. Schirm
  • Jeffrey S. Miller
  • Laura E. Bendzick
  • Martin Felices
  • Melissa A. Geller
  • Michael F. Kaminski
  • Peter Hinderlie
  • Ron T. Mcelmurry

Organizations

  • National Cancer Institute
  • National Institutes of Health
  • United States Department of Defense
  • University of Minnesota

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Biology
  • Medicine

Readers

  • Child and Adolescent Substance Abuse Science in Autism Spectrum Disorders.
  • Oncology (Cancer Research).
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Technology Areas

  • Biotechnology
  • Biotechnology - Cancer Biotech