Targeting CD205 with the antibody drug conjugate MEN1309/OBT076 is an active new therapeutic strategy in lymphoma models
HAEMATOLOGICA
Authors: Gaudio, Eugenio; Tarantelli, Chiara; Spriano, Filippo; Guidetti, Francesca; Sartori, Giulio; Bordone, Roberta; Arribas, Alberto J.; Cascione, Luciano; Bigioni, Mario; Merlino, Giuseppe; Fiascarelli, Alessio; Bressan, Alessandro; Mensah, Afua Adjeiwaa; Golino, Gaetanina; Lucchini, Renzo; Bernasconi, Elena; Rossi, Davide; Zucca, Emanuele; Stussi, Georg; Stathis, Anastasios; Boyd, Robert S.; Dusek, Rachel L.; Bisht, Arnima; Attanasio, Nickolas; Rohlff, Christian; Pellacani, Andrea; Binaschi, Monica; Bertoni, Francesco
Abstract
Antibody drug conjugates represent an important class of anti-cancer drugs in both solid tumors and hematologic cancers. Here, we report preclinical data on the anti-tumor activity of the first-in-class antibody drug conjugate MEN1309/OBT076 targeting CD205. The study included preclinical in vitro activity screening on a large panel of cell lines, both as single agent and in combination, and validation experiments on in vivomodels. CD205 was first shown frequently expressed in lymphomas, leukemias and multiple myeloma by immunohistochemistry on tissue microarrays. Anti-tumor activity of MEN1309/OBT076 as single agent was then shown across 42 B-cell lymphoma cell lines with a median IC50 of 200 pM and induction of apoptosis in 25 of 42 (59.5%) of the cases. The activity appeared highly correlated with its target expression. After in vivo validation as the single agent, the antibody drug conjugate synergized with the BCL2 inhibitor venetoclax and the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab. The first-in-class antibody drug targeting CD205, MEN1309/OBT076, demonstrated strong pre-clinical anti-tumor activity in lymphoma, warranting further investigations as a single agent and in combination.
Apoptosis in Cancer Cells Is Induced by Alternative Splicing of hnRNPA2/B1 Through Splicing of Bcl-x, a Mechanism that Can Be Stimulated by an Extract of the South African Medicinal Plant,Cotyledon orbiculata
FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY
Authors: Makhafola, Tshepiso Jan; Mbele, Mzwandile; Yacqub-Usman, Kiren; Hendren, Amy; Haigh, Daisy Belle; Blackley, Zoe; Meyer, Mervin; Mongan, Nigel Patrick; Bates, David Owen; Dlamini, Zodwa
Abstract
Alternative splicing is deregulated in cancer and alternatively spliced products can be linked to cancer hallmarks. Targeting alternative splicing could offer novel effective cancer treatments. We investigated the effects of the crude extract of a South African medicinal plant,Cotyledon orbiculata, on cell survival of colon (HCT116) and esophageal (OE33 and KYSE70) cancer cell lines. Using RNASeq, we discovered that the extract interfered with mRNA regulatory pathways. The extract caused hnRNPA2B1 to splice from the hnRNPB1 to the hnRNPA2 isoform, resulting in a switch in the BCL2L1 gene from Bcl-xL to Bcl-xS causing activation of caspase-3-cleavage and apoptosis. Similar splicing effects were induced by the known anti-cancer splicing modulator pladienolide B. Knockdown of hnRNPB1 using siRNA resulted in decreased cell viability and increased caspase-3-cleavage, and over-expression of hnRNPB1 prevented the effect ofC. orbiculataextract on apoptosis and cell survival. The effect of the hnRNPA2/B1 splicing switch by theC. orbiculataextract increased hnRNPA2B1 binding to Bcl-xl/s, BCL2, MDM2, cMYC, CD44, CDK6, and cJUN mRNA. These findings suggest that apoptosis in HCT116, OE33, and KYSE cancer cells is controlled by switched splicing of hnRNPA2B1 and BCL2L1, providing evidence that hnRNPB1 regulates apoptosis. Inhibiting this splicing could have therapeutic potential for colon and esophageal cancers. Targeting hnRNPA2B1 splicing in colon cancer regulates splicing of BCL2L1 to induce apoptosis. This approach could be a useful therapeutic strategy to induce apoptosis and restrain cancer cell proliferation and tumor progression. Here, we found that the extract ofCotyledon orbiculata, a South African medicinal plant, had an anti-proliferative effect in cancer cells, mediated by apoptosis induced by alternative splicing ofhnRNPA2B1andBCL2L1.