Potentiating cancer immunotherapies with modular albumin-hitchhiking nanobody–STING agonist conjugates

Blaise R. Kimmel(Vanderbilt University), Karan Arora(Vanderbilt University), Neil C. Chada(Vanderbilt University), Vijaya Bharti(Vanderbilt University), Alexander J. Kwiatkowski(Vanderbilt University), Jonah E. Finkelstein(Vanderbilt University), Ann Hanna(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Emily N. Arner(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Taylor L. Sheehy(Vanderbilt University), Lucinda E. Pastora(Vanderbilt University), Jinming Yang(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Hayden M. Pagendarm(Vanderbilt University), Payton T. Stone(Vanderbilt University), Ebony Hargrove-Wiley(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Brandie C. Taylor(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Lauren Hubert(Vanderbilt University), Barbara Fingleton(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Katherine N. Gibson‐Corley(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Jody C. May(Vanderbilt University), John A. McLean(Vanderbilt University), Jeffrey C. Rathmell(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Ann Richmond(VA Tennessee Valley Healthcare System), W. Kimryn Rathmell(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Justin M. Balko(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), John T. Wilson(Vanderbilt University)
Nature Biomedical Engineering
June 11, 2025
Cited by 44Open Access
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Abstract

The enhancement of antitumour immunity via agonists of the stimulator of interferon genes (STING) pathway is limited by pharmacological barriers. Here we show that the covalent conjugation of a STING agonist to anti-albumin nanobodies via site-selective bioconjugation chemistries prolongs the circulation of the agonist in the blood and increases its accumulation in tumour tissue, stimulating innate immune programmes that increased the infiltration of activated natural killer cells and T cells, which potently inhibited the growth of mouse tumours. The technology is modular, as demonstrated by the recombinant integration of a second nanobody domain targeting programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1), which further increased the accumulation of the agonist in tumours while blocking immunosuppressive PD-1/PD-L1 interactions. The bivalent nanobody-STING agonist conjugate stimulated robust antigen-specific T-cell responses and long-lasting immunological memory and conferred enhanced therapeutic efficacy. It was also effective as a neoadjuvant treatment to adoptive T-cell therapy. As a modular approach, hitchhiking STING agonists on serum albumin may serve as a broadly applicable strategy for augmenting the potency of systemically administered cancer immunotherapies.


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