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1.
Mol Cancer Ther ; 22(9): 1073-1086, 2023 09 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37365121

ABSTRACT

Targeted alpha therapies (TAT) are an innovative class of therapies for cancer treatment. The unique mode-of-action of TATs is the induction of deleterious DNA double-strand breaks. Difficult-to-treat cancers, such as gynecologic cancers upregulating the chemoresistance P-glycoprotein (p-gp) and overexpressing the membrane protein mesothelin (MSLN), are promising targets for TATs. Here, based on the previous encouraging findings with monotherapy, we investigated the efficacy of the mesothelin-targeted thorium-227 conjugate (MSLN-TTC) both as monotherapy and in combination with chemotherapies and antiangiogenic compounds in ovarian and cervical cancer models expressing p-gp. MSLN-TTC monotherapy showed equal cytotoxicity in vitro in p-gp-positive and -negative cancer cells, while chemotherapeutics dramatically lost activity on p-gp-positive cancer cells. In vivo, MSLN-TTC exhibited dose-dependent tumor growth inhibition with treatment/control ratios of 0.03-0.44 in various xenograft models irrespective of p-gp expression status. Furthermore, MSLN-TTC was more efficacious in p-gp-expressing tumors than chemotherapeutics. In the MSLN-expressing ST206B ovarian cancer patient-derived xenograft model, MSLN-TTC accumulated specifically in the tumor, which combined with pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (Doxil), docetaxel, bevacizumab, or regorafenib treatment induced additive-to-synergistic antitumor efficacy and substantially increased response rates compared with respective monotherapies. The combination treatments were well tolerated and only transient decreases in white and red blood cells were observed. In summary, we demonstrate that MSLN-TTC treatment shows efficacy in p-gp-expressing models of chemoresistance and has combination potential with chemo- and antiangiogenic therapies.


Subject(s)
Mesothelin , Humans , Female , GPI-Linked Proteins , Cell Line, Tumor , Drug Resistance
2.
J Immunother Cancer ; 9(10)2021 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34615703

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Targeted thorium-227 conjugates (TTCs) are an emerging class of targeted alpha therapies (TATs). Their unique mode of action (MoA) is the induction of difficult-to-repair clustered DNA double-strand breaks. However, thus far, their effects on the immune system are largely unknown. Here, we investigated the immunostimulatory effects of the mesothelin-targeted thorium-227 conjugate (MSLN-TTC) in vitro and in vivo in monotherapy and in combination with an inhibitor of the immune checkpoint programmed death receptor ligand 1 (PD-L1) in immunocompetent mice. METHODS: The murine cell line MC38 was transfected with the human gene encoding for MSLN (hMSLN) to enable binding of the non-cross-reactive MSLN-TTC. The immunostimulatory effects of MSLN-TTC were studied in vitro on human cancer cell lines and MC38-hMSLN cells. The efficacy and MoA of MSLN-TTC were studied in vivo as monotherapy or in combination with anti-PD-L1 in MC38-hMSLN tumor-bearing immunocompetent C57BL/6 mice. Experiments were supported by RNA sequencing, flow cytometry, immunohistochemistry, mesoscale, and TaqMan PCR analyses to study the underlying immunostimulatory effects. In vivo depletion of CD8+ T cells and studies with Rag2/Il2Rg double knockout C57BL/6 mice were conducted to investigate the importance of immune cells to the efficacy of MSLN-TTC. RESULTS: MSLN-TTC treatment induced upregulation of DNA sensing pathway transcripts (IL-6, CCL20, CXCL10, and stimulator of interferon genes (STING)-related genes) in vitro as determined by RNASeq analysis. The results, including phospho-STING activation, were confirmed on the protein level. Danger-associated molecular pattern molecules were upregulated in parallel, leading to dendritic cell (DC) activation in vitro. MSLN-TTC showed strong antitumor activity (T:C 0.38, p<0.05) as a single agent in human MSLN-expressing MC38 tumor-bearing immunocompetent mice. Combining MSLN-TTC with anti-PD-L1 further enhanced the efficacy (T:C 0.08, p<0.001) as evidenced by the increased number of tumor-free surviving animals. MSLN-TTC monotherapy caused migration of CD103+ cDC1 DCs and infiltration of CD8+ T cells into tumors, which was enhanced on combination with anti-PD-L1. Intriguingly, CD8+ T-cell depletion decreased antitumor efficacy. CONCLUSIONS: These in vitro and in vivo data on MSLN-TTC demonstrate that the MoA of TTCs involves activation of the immune system. The findings are of relevance for other targeted radiotherapies and may guide clinical combination strategies.


Subject(s)
B7-H1 Antigen/antagonists & inhibitors , Immunoconjugates/therapeutic use , Thorium/therapeutic use , Animals , Gene Expression Profiling , Immunoconjugates/pharmacology , Immunotherapy , Mice , Thorium/pharmacology , Transfection , Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
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