Anti-CS1 humanized monoclonal antibody HuLuc63 inhibits myeloma cell adhesion and induces antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity in the bone marrow milieu

Yu‐Tzu Tai(Harvard University), Myles Dillon(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Weihua Song(Harvard University), Merav Leiba(Harvard University), Xian-Feng Li(Harvard University), Peter Burger(Harvard University), Alfred Ian Lee(Harvard University), Klaus Podar(Harvard University), Teru Hideshima(Harvard University), Audie Rice(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Anne van Abbema(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Lynne Jesaitis(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Ingrid W. Caras(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Debbie A. Law(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Edie Weller(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Wanling Xie(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Paul G. Richardson(Harvard University), Nikhil C. Munshi(Harvard University), Claire Mathiot(Institut Curie), Hervé Avet‐Loiseau, Daniel Afar(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Kenneth C. Anderson(Harvard University)
Blood
September 28, 2007
Cited by 473Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Currently, no approved monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapies exist for human multiple myeloma (MM). Here we characterized cell surface CS1 as a novel MM antigen and further investigated the potential therapeutic utility of HuLuc63, a humanized anti-CS1 mAb, for treating human MM. CS1 mRNA and protein was highly expressed in CD138-purified primary tumor cells from the majority of MM patients (more than 97%) with low levels of circulating CS1 detectable in MM patient sera, but not in healthy donors. CS1 was expressed at adhesion-promoting uropod membranes of polarized MM cells, and short interfering RNA (siRNA) targeted to CS1 inhibited MM cell adhesion to bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs). HuLuc63 inhibited MM cell binding to BMSCs and induced antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) against MM cells in dose-dependent and CS1-specific manners. HuLuc63 triggered autologous ADCC against primary MM cells resistant to conventional or novel therapies, including bortezomib and HSP90 inhibitor; and pretreatment with conventional or novel anti-MM drugs markedly enhanced HuLuc63-induced MM cell lysis. Administration of HuLuc63 significantly induces tumor regression in multiple xenograft models of human MM. These results thus define the functional significance of CS1 in MM and provide the preclinical rationale for testing HuLuc63 in clinical trials, either alone or in combination.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis