An Antimesothelin-Monomethyl Auristatin E Conjugate with Potent Antitumor Activity in Ovarian, Pancreatic, and Mesothelioma Models

Suzie J. Scales(Gene Therapy Laboratory), Nidhi Gupta(Gene Therapy Laboratory), Glenn Pacheco(Translational Research in Oncology), Ron Firestein(Kaiser Permanente South San Francisco Medical Center), Dorothy French(Kaiser Permanente South San Francisco Medical Center), Hartmut Koeppen(Kaiser Permanente South San Francisco Medical Center), Linda Rangell(Kaiser Permanente South San Francisco Medical Center), Vivian Barry-Hamilton(Gene Therapy Laboratory), Elizabeth Luis(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Josefa Chuh(Biochemical Society), Yin Zhang(Research & Diagnostic Antibodies (United States)), Gladys S. Ingle(Gene Therapy Laboratory), Aimee Fourie-O’Donohue(Biochemical Society), Katherine R. Kozak(Biochemical Society), Sarajane Ross(Translational Research in Oncology), Mark S. Dennis(Research & Diagnostic Antibodies (United States)), Susan D. Spencer(Translational Research in Oncology)
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
September 24, 2014
Cited by 67

Abstract

Mesothelin (MSLN) is an attractive target for antibody-drug conjugate therapy because it is highly expressed in various epithelial cancers, with normal expression limited to nondividing mesothelia. We generated novel antimesothelin antibodies and conjugated an internalizing one (7D9) to the microtubule-disrupting drugs monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE) and MMAF, finding the most effective to be MMAE with a lysosomal protease-cleavable valine-citrulline linker. The humanized (h7D9.v3) version, αMSLN-MMAE, specifically targeted mesothelin-expressing cells and inhibited their proliferation with an IC50 of 0.3 nmol/L. Because the antitumor activity of an antimesothelin immunotoxin (SS1P) in transfected mesothelin models did not translate to the clinic, we carefully selected in vivo efficacy models endogenously expressing clinically relevant levels of mesothelin, after scoring mesothelin levels in ovarian, pancreatic, and mesothelioma tumors by immunohistochemistry. We found that endogenous mesothelin in cancer cells is upregulated in vivo and identified two suitable xenograft models for each of these three indications. A single dose of αMSLN-MMAE profoundly inhibited or regressed tumor growth in a dose-dependent manner in all six models, including two patient-derived tumor xenografts. The robust and durable efficacy of αMSLN-MMAE in preclinical models of ovarian, mesothelioma, and pancreatic cancers justifies the ongoing phase I clinical trial.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis