Chemical generation of checkpoint inhibitory T cell engagers (CiTEs) for the treatment of cancer

24 May 2023, Version 3
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Bispecific antibodies (bsAbs) provide enticing therapeutic opportunities in the area of immunotherapy, especially in the field of immuno-oncology. These constructs can bind two separate antigenic epitopes and thus provide access to unique mechanisms of action (MoAs). A key MoA is unlocked by bispecific T cell engagers (BiTEs), which cause T cells to be cross-linked with a targeted cancer cell, ultimately leading to death of the targeted cell. It has been shown that the combination of a BiTE with checkpoint inhibition, such as blockade of the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway, can lead to a synergistic effect and greater efficacy. Constructs built from a BiTE core (anti-CD3/anti-cancer antigen) with an immunomodulatory protein added, have been dubbed checkpoint-inhibitory T cell-engagers (CiTEs). Both bsAbs and CiTEs have traditionally been generated via protein engineering. However, recently, improved chemical methods for the construction of bsAbs have been reported. This includes a strategy developed by the Chudasama and Baker groups to synthesize homogenous fragment-based bsAbs from antibodies’ fragments antigen binding (Fabs), utilising click-enabled pyridazinediones (PDs) for functional disulfide re-bridging, followed by strain-promoted inverse electron-demand Diels-Alder cycloaddition (SPIEDAC) click chemistry to attach the two Fabs to each other. In this paper, we describe a first-in-class chemical method to generate biotin-functionalized three-protein conjugates, building significantly on the previously described PD-method. The three-protein constructs generated here include two such CiTE molecules, one containing an anti-PD-1 Fab, the other containing an immunomodulatory enzyme Salmonella typhimurium sialidase; FabCD3-FabHER2-FabPD-1-Biotin and FabHER2-FabCD3-Sia-Biotin. These constructs (along with suitable controls) were tested for their biological activity, and each of their protein components were shown to retain their function. Their efficacy was also compared to a simpler BiTE scaffold and was shown to be superior, with the sialidase-containing CiTE especially showing significantly enhanced potency in vitro. The chemical method described here has the potential to enable the rapid generation of a plethora of multi-protein constructs, which we envisage would be especially useful in hit-identification screening but could also potentially be scaled up for drug-development after further optimization.

Keywords

Bioorthogonal Chemistry
Click chemistry
Antibodies
Bispecific T cell engagers
Bispecific antibodies
Checkpoint inhibition
Bioconjugation
Disulfide re-bridging
Sialic acid
Sialoglycans

Supplementary materials

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Title
ESI: Chemical generation of checkpoint inhibitory T cell engagers (CiTEs) for the treatment of cancer
Description
Electronic supplementary information with detailed methods and spectral data. Also included are manuscript-style descriptions of alternative methods for three-protein conjugate generation that were explored.
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