Tumor-Specific Activation of an EGFR-Targeting Probody Enhances Therapeutic Index

Luc Desnoyers(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Olga Vasiljeva(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Jennifer Richardson(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Annie Yang(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Elizabeth Menendez(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Tony W. Liang(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Chihunt Wong(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Paul Bessette(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Kathy Kamath(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Stephen J. Moore(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Jason Sagert(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Daniel R. Hostetter(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Fei Han(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Jason Gee(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Jeanne Flandez(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Kate Markham(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Margaret Nguyen(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Michael Krimm(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Kenneth Wong(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Shouchun Liu(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Patrick S. Daugherty(University of California, Santa Barbara), James W. West(CytomX Therapeutics (United States)), Henry B. Lowman(CytomX Therapeutics (United States))
Science Translational Medicine
October 16, 2013
Cited by 269

Abstract

Target-mediated toxicity constitutes a major limitation for the development of therapeutic antibodies. To redirect the activity of antibodies recognizing widely distributed targets to the site of disease, we have applied a prodrug strategy to create an epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-directed Probody therapeutic-an antibody that remains masked against antigen binding until activated locally by proteases commonly active in the tumor microenvironment. In vitro, the masked Probody showed diminished antigen binding and cell-based activities, but when activated by appropriate proteases, it regained full activity compared to the parental anti-EGFR antibody cetuximab. In vivo, the Probody was largely inert in the systemic circulation of mice, but was activated within tumor tissue and showed antitumor efficacy that was similar to that of cetuximab. The Probody demonstrated markedly improved safety and increased half-life in nonhuman primates, enabling it to be dosed safely at much higher levels than cetuximab. In addition, we found that both Probody-responsive xenograft tumors and primary tumor samples from patients were capable of activating the Probody ex vivo. Probodies may therefore improve the safety profile of therapeutic antibodies without compromising efficacy of the parental antibody and may enable the wider use of empowered antibody formats such as antibody-drug conjugates and bispecifics.


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