Four individually druggable MET hotspots mediate HGF-driven tumor progression

Cristina Basilico, Anna Hultberg(Ablynx (Belgium)), Christophe Blanchetot(Ablynx (Belgium)), Natalie De Jonge(Ablynx (Belgium)), Els Festjens(Ablynx (Belgium)), Valérie Hanssens(Ablynx (Belgium)), Sjudry-Ilona Osepa(Ablynx (Belgium)), Gitte De Boeck(Ablynx (Belgium)), Alessia Mira, Manuela Cazzanti, Virginia Morello, Torsten Dreier(Ablynx (Belgium)), Michael Saunders(Ablynx (Belgium)), Hans de Haard(Ablynx (Belgium)), Paolo Michieli
Journal of Clinical Investigation
May 26, 2014
Cited by 53Open Access
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Abstract

Activation of MET by HGF plays a key role in tumor progression. Using a recently developed llama platform that generates human-like immunoglobulins, we selected 68 different antibodies that compete with HGF for binding to MET. HGF-competing antibodies recognized 4 distinct hotspots localized in different MET domains. We identified 1 hotspot that coincides with the known HGF β chain binding site on blades 2-3 of the SEMA domain β-propeller. We determined that a second and a third hotspot lie within blade 5 of the SEMA domain and IPT domains 2-3, both of which are thought to bind to HGF α chain. Characterization of the fourth hotspot revealed a region across the PSI-IPT 1 domains not previously associated with HGF binding. Individual or combined targeting of these hotspots effectively interrupted HGF/MET signaling in multiple cell-based biochemical and biological assays. Selected antibodies directed against SEMA blades 2-3 and the PSI-IPT 1 region inhibited brain invasion and prolonged survival in a glioblastoma multiforme model, prevented metastatic disease following neoadjuvant therapy in a triple-negative mammary carcinoma model, and suppressed cancer cell dissemination to the liver in a KRAS-mutant metastatic colorectal cancer model. These results identify multiple regions of MET responsible for HGF-mediated tumor progression, unraveling the complexity of HGF-MET interaction, and provide selective molecular tools for targeting MET activity in cancer.


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