[HTML][HTML] Antibody-induced erythrophagocyte reprogramming of Kupffer cells prevents anti-CD40 cancer immunotherapy-associated liver toxicity

M Pfefferlé, IL Dubach, RM Buzzi, E Dürst… - … for Immunotherapy of …, 2023 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
M Pfefferlé, IL Dubach, RM Buzzi, E Dürst, N Schulthess-Lutz, L Baselgia, K Hansen, L Imhof…
Journal for Immunotherapy of Cancer, 2023ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Background Agonistic anti-CD40 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have emerged as
promising immunotherapeutic compounds with impressive antitumor effects in mouse
models. However, preclinical and clinical studies faced dose-limiting toxicities mediated by
necroinflammatory liver disease. An effective prophylactic treatment for liver immune-related
adverse events that does not suppress specific antitumor immunity remains to be found.
Methods We used different mouse models and time-resolved single-cell RNA-sequencing to …
Abstract
Background
Agonistic anti-CD40 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have emerged as promising immunotherapeutic compounds with impressive antitumor effects in mouse models. However, preclinical and clinical studies faced dose-limiting toxicities mediated by necroinflammatory liver disease. An effective prophylactic treatment for liver immune-related adverse events that does not suppress specific antitumor immunity remains to be found.
Methods
We used different mouse models and time-resolved single-cell RNA-sequencing to characterize the pathogenesis of anti-CD40 mAb induced liver toxicity. Subsequently, we developed an antibody-based treatment protocol to selectively target red blood cells (RBCs) for erythrophagocytosis in the liver, inducing an anti-inflammatory liver macrophage reprogramming.
Results
We discovered that CD40 signaling in Clec4f+ Kupffer cells is the non-redundant trigger of anti-CD40 mAb-induced liver toxicity. Taking advantage of the highly specific functionality of liver macrophages to clear antibody-tagged RBCs from the blood, we hypothesized that controlled erythrophagocytosis and the linked anti-inflammatory signaling by the endogenous metabolite heme could be exploited to reprogram liver macrophages selectively. Repeated low-dose administration of a recombinant murine Ter119 antibody directed RBCs for selective phagocytosis in the liver and skewed the phenotype of liver macrophages into a Hmox high/Marco high/MHCII low anti-inflammatory phenotype. This unique mode of action prevented necroinflammatory liver disease following high-dose administration of anti-CD40 mAbs. In contrast, extrahepatic inflammation, antigen-specific immunity, and antitumor activity remained unaffected in Ter119 treated animals.
Conclusions
Our study offers a targeted approach to uncouple CD40-augmented antitumor immunity in peripheral tissues from harmful inflammatoxicity in the liver.
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