Antibody-mediated inhibition of MICA and MICB shedding promotes NK cell–driven tumor immunity

Lucas Ferrari de Andrade(Harvard University), Rong En Tay(Harvard University), Deng Pan(Harvard University), Adrienne Luoma(Harvard University), Yoshinaga Ito(Harvard University), S Badrinath(Harvard University), Daphne Tsoucas(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Bettina Franz(Harvard University), Kenneth F. May(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Christopher J. Harvey(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Sebastian Kobold(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Jason W. Pyrdol(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Charles H. Yoon(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Guo‐Cheng Yuan(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), F. Stephen Hodi(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Glenn Dranoff(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Kai W. Wucherpfennig(Harvard University)
Science
March 29, 2018
Cited by 448

Abstract

MICA and MICB are expressed by many human cancers as a result of cellular stress, and can tag cells for elimination by cytotoxic lymphocytes through natural killer group 2D (NKG2D) receptor activation. However, tumors evade this immune recognition pathway through proteolytic shedding of MICA and MICB proteins. We rationally designed antibodies targeting the MICA α3 domain, the site of proteolytic shedding, and found that these antibodies prevented loss of cell surface MICA and MICB by human cancer cells. These antibodies inhibited tumor growth in multiple fully immunocompetent mouse models and reduced human melanoma metastases in a humanized mouse model. Antitumor immunity was mediated mainly by natural killer (NK) cells through activation of NKG2D and CD16 Fc receptors. This approach prevents the loss of important immunostimulatory ligands by human cancers and reactivates antitumor immunity.


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