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Two-component T-cell immunotherapy enables antigen pre-targeting to reduce cytokine release without forfeiting efficacy

Authors: 
Gambles MT, Kendell I, Li J, Spainhower K, Sborov D, Owen S, Stark A, Bearss D, Yang J, Kopeček J
Citation: 
Nanomedicine. 2025 Apr 30;67:102825. doi: 10.1016/j.nano.2025.102825. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 40316226
Abstract: 
Contemporary T-cell immunotherapies, despite impressive targeting precision, are hindered by aberrant cytokine release and restrictive targeting stoichiometry. We introduce a two-component T-cell immunotherapy targeting B-cell malignancies: Multi-Antigen T-Cell Hybridizers (MATCH). This split antibody technology differs from current therapies by separating cancer cell-targeting components from T cell-engaging components. We demonstrate that this two-component structure facilitates tunable T-cell activation. αCD19 and αCD20 MATCH, administered in two steps, are both compared to the clinical standard bispecific antibody, blinatumomab. In vitro two-dimensional dose analysis and cytokine release data indicate MATCH improves cancer clearance with reduced cytokine release. Cytolytic mechanisms of action are evaluated. αCD20 MATCH anti-cancer efficacy is assayed using a human lymphoma murine model. Decreasing T-cell engager dose 10-fold yields comparable efficacy to non-reduced doses. Ultimately, this split-antibody paradigm may enhance antigen targeting while reducing cytokine release, with such safety and efficacy advantages augmented by the future possibility of multi-antigen targeting with MATCH.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
cell culture: Raji B-cells; mice: SCID C·B-17
Delivery Method: 
Fab-linked; mice: intravenous (i.v.) injection