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Phenotypic screening reveals TNFR2 as a promising target for cancer immunotherapy
Authors
Allison
Amstutz
+53 more
Becker
Bonnell
Brodt
Byrne
Davis
Edinger
Ettlin
Freeth
Fu
Fujiwara
Gandara
Goldstein
Goukassian
Haanen
Hollingsworth
Jiang
Jonuleit
Jure-Kunkel
Lazo
Lipsky
Lutzky
Maio
Minato
O'Day
O'sullivan
Ohashi
Oppenheim
Oppenheim
Oppenheim
Palladino
Pardoll
Plebanski
Pluckthun
Pluckthun
Pluckthun
Quezada
Ravetch
Sakaguchi
Sakaguchi
Scheurich
Schreiber
Semenzato
Smith
Teh
Thomas
Toda
Watts
Watts
Wilkinson
Wolchok
Wolf
Zhang
Zhou
Publication date
10 September 2016
Publisher
'Impact Journals, LLC'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
© 2015. Oncotarget. Antibodies that target cell-surface molecules on T cells can enhance anti-tumor immune responses, resulting in sustained immune-mediated control of cancer. We set out to find new cancer immunotherapy targets by phenotypic screening on human regulatory T (Treg) cells and report the discovery of novel activators of tumor necrosis factor receptor 2 (TNFR2) and a potential role for this target in immunotherapy. A diverse phage display library was screened to find antibody mimetics with preferential binding to Treg cells, the most Treg-selective of which were all, without exception, found to bind specifically to TNFR2. A subset of these TNFR2 binders were found to agonise the receptor, inducing iκ-B degradation and NF-κB pathway signalling in vitro. TNFR2 was found to be expressed by tumor-infiltrating Treg cells, and to a lesser extent Teffcells, from three lung cancer patients, and a similar pattern was also observed in mice implanted with CT26 syngeneic tumors. In such animals, TNFR2-specific agonists inhibited tumor growth, enhanced tumor infiltration by CD8+ T cells and increased CD8+ T cell IFN-γ synthesis. Together, these data indicate a novel mechanism for TNF-α-independent TNFR2 agonism in cancer immunotherapy, and demonstrate the utility of target-agnostic screening in highlighting important targets during drug discovery
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Apollo (Cambridge)
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info:doi/10.18632%2Foncotarget...
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Sheffield Hallam University Research Archive
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oai:shura.shu.ac.uk:23187
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