IGLV3-21-R110-directed bispecific antibodies activate T cells and promote killing in a high-risk subset of chronic lymphocytic leukemia
Fischer, C. S.; Stuecheli, S.; Chen, S.-S.; Nimmerfroh, J.; Schultheiss, C.; Widmer, C.; Heim, D.; Kasenda, B.; Passweg, J. R.; Kobold, S.; Egli, L.; Coianiz, N.; Chijioke, O.; Chiorazzi, N.; Follo, M.; Laubli, H.; Peipp, M.; Binder, M.
Show abstract
We previously used a disease-specific B cell receptor (BCR) point mutation (IGLV3-21R110) for selective targeting of a poor-risk subset of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) with chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells. Since CLL is a disease of the elderly and a significant fraction of patients is not able to physically tolerate CAR T cell treatment, we explored bispecific antibodies as an alternative for precision targeting of this tumor mutation. Heterodimeric IgG1-based antibodies consisting of a fragment crystallizable region (Fc) attached to either an anti-IGLV3-21R110 Fab or an anti-CD3 (UCHT1) single chain variable fragment (R110-bsAb) selectively killed cell lines engineered to express high levels of the neoepitope as well as primary CLL cells using healthy donor and CLL patient-derived T cells as effectors. R110-bsAb spared polyclonal human B cells (as opposed to CD19-targeting Blinatumomab) as well as CD34+ human stem cells. Yet, R110-bsAb induced lower T cell activation than Blinatumomab with primary CLL cells likely due to lower expression of target antigen. In vivo, R110-bsAb specifically killed IGLV3-21R110-expressing cell lines and CLL cells while sparing peripheral blood mononuclear cells. These findings highlight bispecific antibodies as a promising, off-the-shelf immunotherapy for high-risk CLL patients, offering selective targeting while preserving healthy B cells.
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