γ-secretase inhibitors augment efficacy of BCMA-targeting bispecific antibodies against multiple myeloma cells without impairing T-cell activation and differentiation

Author:

Chen HailinORCID,Yu Tengteng,Lin Liang,Xing Lijie,Cho Shih-Feng,Wen Kenneth,Aardalen Kimberly,Oka Adwait,Lam Joni,Daley MikeORCID,Lu Haihui,Munshi NikhilORCID,Anderson Kenneth C.,Tai Yu-TzuORCID

Abstract

AbstractWe here defined the impacts of γ-secretase inhibitors (GSIs) on T-cell-dependent BCMA-specific multiple myeloma (MM) cell lysis and immunomodulatory effects induced by bispecific antibodies (BisAbs). GSIs-induced membrane BCMA (mBCMA) accumulation reached near maximum within 4 h and sustained over 42h-study period on MM cell lines and patient MM cells. GSIs, i.e., 2 nM LY-411575 or 1 μM DAPT, robustly increased mBCMA densities on CD138+ but not CD3+ patient cells, concomitantly with minimum soluble/shed BCMA (sBCMA) in 1 day-culture supernatants. In ex vivo MM-T-cell co-cultures, GSIs overcame sBCMA-inhibited MM cell lysis and further enhanced autologous patient MM cell lysis induced by BCMAxCD3 BisAbs, accompanied by significantly enhanced cytolytic markers (CD107a, IFNγ, IL2, and TNFα) in patient T cells. In longer 7 day-co-cultures, LY-411575 minimally affected BCMAxCD3 BisAb (PL33)-induced transient expression of checkpoint (PD1, TIGIT, TIM3, LAG3) and co-stimulatory (41BB, CD28) proteins, as well as time-dependent increases in % effector memory/central memory subsets and CD8/CD4 ratios in patient T cells. Importantly, LY41157 rapidly cleared sBCMA from circulation of MM-bearing NSG mice reconstituted with human T cells and significantly enhanced anti-MM efficacy of PL33 with prolonged host survival. Taken together, these results further support ongoing combination BCMA-targeting immunotherapies with GSI clinical studies to improve patient outcome.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Cancer Institute

the Paula and Rodger Riney Foundation

the Adelson Medical Research Foundation and the Paula and Rodger Riney Foundation

This work was supported in part by the Adelson Medical Research Foundation and the Paula and Rodger Riney Foundation.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Oncology,Hematology

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