CS1, a Potential New Therapeutic Antibody Target for the Treatment of Multiple Myeloma

Eric D. Hsi(Cleveland Clinic), Roxanne Steinle(Cleveland Clinic), Balaji Balasa(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Susann Szmania(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Aparna Draksharapu(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Benny P. Shum(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Mahrukh Huseni(PDL BioPharma (United States)), David B. Powers(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Amulya Nanisetti(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Yin Zhang(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Audie Rice(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Anne van Abbema(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Melanie Wong(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Gao Liu(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Fenghuang Zhan(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Myles Dillon(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Shihao Chen(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Susan Rhodes(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Franklin Fuh(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Naoya Tsurushita(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Shankar Kumar(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Vladimir Vexler(PDL BioPharma (United States)), John D. Shaughnessy(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Bart Barlogie(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Frits van Rhee(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Mohamad A. Hussein(University of South Florida), Daniel Afar(PDL BioPharma (United States)), Marna Williams(PDL BioPharma (United States))
Clinical Cancer Research
May 1, 2008
Cited by 560Open Access
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Abstract

PURPOSE: We generated a humanized antibody, HuLuc63, which specifically targets CS1 (CCND3 subset 1, CRACC, and SLAMF7), a cell surface glycoprotein not previously associated with multiple myeloma. To explore the therapeutic potential of HuLuc63 in multiple myeloma, we examined in detail the expression profile of CS1, the binding properties of HuLuc63 to normal and malignant cells, and the antimyeloma activity of HuLuc63 in preclinical models. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: CS1 was analyzed by gene expression profiling and immunohistochemistry of multiple myeloma samples and numerous normal tissues. HuLuc63-mediated antimyeloma activity was tested in vitro in antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) assays and in vivo using the human OPM2 xenograft model in mice. RESULTS: CS1 mRNA was expressed in >90% of 532 multiple myeloma cases, regardless of cytogenetic abnormalities. Anti-CS1 antibody staining of tissues showed strong staining of myeloma cells in all plasmacytomas and bone marrow biopsies. Flow cytometric analysis of patient samples using HuLuc63 showed specific staining of CD138+ myeloma cells, natural killer (NK), NK-like T cells, and CD8+ T cells, with no binding detected on hematopoietic CD34+ stem cells. HuLuc63 exhibited significant in vitro ADCC using primary myeloma cells as targets and both allogeneic and autologous NK cells as effectors. HuLuc63 exerted significant in vivo antitumor activity, which depended on efficient Fc-CD16 interaction as well as the presence of NK cells in the mice. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that HuLuc63 eliminates myeloma cells, at least in part, via NK-mediated ADCC and shows the therapeutic potential of targeting CS1 with HuLuc63 for the treatment of multiple myeloma.


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