Purpose: The ubiquitously expressed transmembrane glycoprotein CD47 delivers an anti-phagocytic (do not eat) signal by binding signal-regulatory protein a (SIRPa) on macrophages. CD47 is overexpressed in cancer cells and its expression is associated with poor clinical outcomes. TTI-621 (SIRPaFc) is a fully human recombinant fusion protein that blocks the CD47-SIRPa axis by binding to human CD47 and enhancing phagocytosis of malignant cells. Blockade of this inhibitory axis using TTI-621 has emerged as a promising therapeutic strategy to promote tumor cell eradication.Experimental Design: The ability of TTI-621 to promote macrophage-mediated phagocytosis of human tumor cells was assessed using both confocal microscopy and flow cytometry. In vivo antitumor efficacy was evaluated in xenograft and syngeneic models and the role of the Fc region in antitumor activity was evaluated using SIRPaFc constructs with different Fc tails.Results: TTI-621 enhanced macrophage-mediated phagocytosis of both hematologic and solid tumor cells, while sparing normal cells. In vivo, TTI-621 effectively controlled the growth of aggressive AML and B lymphoma xenografts and was efficacious in a syngeneic B lymphoma model. The IgG1 Fc tail of TTI-621 plays a critical role in its antitumor activity, presumably by engaging activating Fcg receptors on macrophages. Finally, TTI-621 exhibits minimal binding to human erythrocytes, thereby differentiating it from CD47 blocking antibodies.Conclusions: These data indicate that TTI-621 is active across a broad range of human tumors. These results further establish CD47 as a critical regulator of innate immune surveillance and form the basis for clinical development of TTI-621 in multiple oncology indications.
Peroxynitrite (ONOO-) inhibits energy metabolism in isolated cells and mitochondria and may be involved in the depression of cardiac mechanical function during pathophysiological states. We determined the actions of ONOO- on cardiac function and energy metabolism in isolated working rat hearts and compared them with the NO donor S-nitroso-DL-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP). After a 15-min baseline aerobic perfusion, ONOO- (4 or 40 microM), SNAP (40 microM), or their vehicles were infused over a 60-min period. ONOO- or SNAP (40 microM each) caused a rapid and sustained rise in coronary flow. Infusion of 40 microM (but not 4 microM) ONOO- caused a marked depression in cardiac work with a delayed onset but no change in O2 consumption, resulting in a marked loss of cardiac efficiency. Cardiac work, O2 consumption, and cardiac efficiency remained constant in vehicle- and SNAP-treated hearts. ONOO- (40 microM) enhanced glycolysis and glucose oxidation but did not change pyruvate oxidation compared with its vehicle control, whereas SNAP was without effect. ONOO(-)-mediated depression in cardiac efficiency may be due to reduced coupling between ATP production and mechanical work.
Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) are heterogeneous and can adopt a spectrum of activation states between pro-inflammatory and pro-tumorigenic in response to the microenvironment. We have previously shown that TTI-621, a soluble SIRPαFc fusion protein that blocks the CD47 “do-not-eat” signal, promotes tumor cell phagocytosis by IFN-γ-primed macrophages. To assess the impact of CD47 blockade on diverse types of macrophages that are found within the tumor microenvironment, six different polarized human macrophage subsets (M(-), M(IFN-γ), M(IFN-γ+LPS), M(IL-4), M(HAGG+IL-1β), M(IL-10 + TGFβ)) with distinct cell surface markers and cytokine profiles were generated. Blockade of CD47 using TTI-621 significantly increased phagocytosis of lymphoma cells by all macrophage subsets, with M(IFN-γ), M(IFN-γ+LPS) and M(IL-10 + TGFβ) macrophages having the highest phagocytic response. TTI-621-mediated phagocytosis involves macrophage expression of both the low- and high-affinity Fcγ receptors II (CD32) and I (CD64), respectively. Moreover, macrophages with lower phagocytic capabilities (M(-), M(IL-4), M(HAGG+IL-1β)) could readily be re-polarized into highly phagocytic macrophages using various cytokines or TLR agonists. In line with the in vitro study, we further demonstrate that TTI-621 can trigger phagocytosis of tumor cells by diverse subsets of isolated mouse TAMs ex vivo. These data suggest that TTI-621 may be efficacious in triggering the destruction of cancer cells by a diverse population of TAMs found in vivo and support possible combination approaches to augment the activity of CD47 blockade.
Tumor cells frequently evade macrophage-mediated destruction by increasing cell surface expression of CD47, which delivers an anti-phagocytic (“do-not-eat”) signal by binding the inhibitory signal regulatory protein α (SIRPα) receptor on macrophages. Previous studies have shown that blockade of the CD47-SIRPα pathway using TTI-621, a soluble SIRPα-IgG1 Fc fusion protein, triggers macrophage phagocytosis of tumor cells in vitro, and potently inhibits tumor growth in vivo. In the current study, the in vitro and in vivo efficacy of TTI-622, a soluble SIRPα-Fc variant protein containing an IgG4 Fc tail, was evaluated in multiple model systems. Unlike CD47-blocking antibodies, TTI-622 binds minimally to human erythrocytes, and does not induce hemagglutination in vitro. Therefore, it avoids a large circulating antigen sink, and is less likely to cause anemia in patients. Additionally, TTI-622 potently induces phagocytosis of a broad panel of tumor cells derived from patients with both hematological and solid tumors. Although in vitro phagocytosis of human platelets is also observed, TTI-622 preferentially induces phagocytosis of tumor cells over platelets in a competitive phagocytosis assay. The in vivo efficacy of TTI-622 monotherapy and/or combination therapy was evaluated in different tumor models. In a DLBCL (Toledo) xenograft tumor model, both early and delayed treatments resulted in statistically significant decreases in tumor growth, and improved survival relative to treatment with control Fc. In the Burkitt lymphoma (Daudi) and multiple myeloma (MM.1S) xenograft tumor models, the potential of combining TTI-622 with daratumumab (anti-CD38 antibody) was also explored. In both models, TTI-622 monotherapy demonstrated partial tumor growth inhibition. However, the therapeutic efficacy was further enhanced when TTI-622 was combined with daratumumab. Intriguingly, a TTI-622 non-responsive head and neck cancer (FaDu) xenograft tumor model became responsive by combining TTI-622 with suboptimal doses of cetuximab (anti-EGFR antibody). The combination of TTI-622 with cetuximab resulted in a statistically significant decrease in tumor growth, and improved survival relative to monotherapy treatments. Collectively, these results demonstrate that TTI-622 induces potent, tumor-specific macrophage phagocytosis across a range of hematological and solid tumors, and is efficacious as a monotherapy agent in a DLBCL xenograft tumor model. Furthermore, TTI-622 potentiates the efficacy of daratumumab and cetuximab in hematological and solid xenograft tumor models, respectively. These data support the clinical evaluation of TTI-622 in combination with anti-tumor antibodies in cancer patients with both solid and hematological malignancies. Citation Format: Gloria H. Y. Lin, Natasja N. Viller, Marilyse Chabonneau, Laura Brinen, Tapfuma Mutukura, Karen Dodge, Simone Helke, Vien Chai, Violetta House, Vivian Lee, Hui Chen, Alison O'Connor, Debbie Jin, Rene Figueredo, Saman Maleki Vareki, Mark Wong, Emma Linderoth, Lisa D. Johnson, Xinli Pang, James Koropatnick, Jeff Winston, Penka S. Petrova, Robert A. Uger. TTI-622 (SIRPα-IgG4 Fc), a CD47-blocking innate immune checkpoint inhibitor, suppresses tumor growth and demonstrates enhanced efficacy in combination with antitumor antibodies in both hematologic and solid tumor models [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2018; 2018 Apr 14-18; Chicago, IL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2018;78(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 2709.
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