scholarly journals Providing a Homing Receptor for CAR Engineered NK Cells - Improving Cellular Immunotherapy for B-Cell Lymphoma

Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 4547-4547
Author(s):  
Nathan Thomas Schomer ◽  
Laurent Boissel ◽  
Karen Jiang ◽  
Hans Klingemann ◽  
John H. Lee ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Despite some robust initial responses, anti-CD19 Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy can be associated with significant short-term (cytokine release syndrome) and long-term (B-cell deficiency) toxicities. CAR-engineered natural killer (NK) cells potentially provide a safer alternative while maintaining efficacy. Activated Natural Killer (aNKTM) cells are a clinical grade cell line derived from the NK-92R cell line that has demonstrated potent cytotoxicity towards a broad spectrum of malignant cell lines as well as safety and efficacy in phase I trials. Variants of the aNKcell line are currently in Phase I/II clinical trials: a CAR-expressing aNK cell line and the haNKTM cell line, which have been engineered to carry a high-affinity version of the CD16/FcγRIII receptor to allow for combination therapy with monoclonal antibodies. haNK cells have also been genetically modified to express an endoplasmic reticulum-retained version of IL-2 (ERIL-2), which provides IL-2 independence and limits IL-2 secretion to sub-physiological, safe levels. A key factor for the efficacy of cellular immunotherapies against a given target is biodistribution, which affects the local effector to target ratio. Inability to reach the tumor cells, either by lack of homing or by the accumulation of extracellular matrix (ECM) surrounding a tumor, can be responsible for the clinical failure of even the most effective CAR. The chemokines CCL19 and CCL21 drive recruitment of CCR7-expressing immune cells to secondary lymphoid organs. Engineering aNK cells to express the CCR7 receptor is likely to improve their efficacy by increasing their targeted migration to lymphoma tumor sites. Methods and Results Clinical grade aNK cells were electroporated with a non-viral vector containing the CCR7 receptor, an anti-CD19 CAR, and a high affinity CD16 receptor. To assay the migration of these engineered cell lines, a modified Boyden Chamber assay was performed using Matrigel coated Transwells. K562 cells or modified K562 cells engineered to express CCL19 (K-19) were placed in the destination chamber and CFSE-stained effector cells were placed in the top well. After 24 hours, cells in the bottom well were analyzed by flow cytometry to measure the number of effectors which had migrated through the Matrigel (Fig 1a). The excellent activity of the CAR in stably transfected cells was confirmed against SUP-B15 cells (aNK-resistant), while the ADCC activity was tested against a SUP-B15 variant expressing CD20, but engineered to lack the CD19 antigen (Sup-B15 CD19-, CD20+). Migration towards human lymph node chemokine CCL19 was also tested in vivo in NSG mice with bilateral subcutaneous tumors - with parental K562 in one flank and K-19 tumors on the contralateral flank. CFSE-stained effector cells were delivered via tail vein injection once average tumor size reached 100mm3 and following randomization. Tumors were then harvested at multiple time points, dissociated, and the number of infiltrating effectors in each tumor compared by flow cytometric analysis. (Fig 1b). In testing, monoclonal cell lines expressing all components of the polycistronic system displayed preferential migration towards CCR7 chemokines both in vitro and in vivo, as well as robust cytotoxicity vs. K562 (92.4% +/- 2.4% at 5:1 E:T), Sup-B15(97% +/- 0.6% at 5:1 E:T), and Sup-B15(CD19-, CD20+) when pre-incubated with Rituximab(83.2% +/- 2.8% at 5:1 E:T) but not with control antibody Trastuzumab (22.3% +/- 1.1% at 5:1 E:T) in standard cytotoxicity and ADCC assays. Conclusion We show here that the incorporation of a CCR7 receptor into an off the shelf CAR engineered NK cell line improves their homing towards lymph node chemokines both in vitro and in vivo. This improved homing should result in a greater ratio of effector to target in lymphoid tissue, and maximize the immunogenic cell death. Disclosures Schomer: NantKwest, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Boissel:NantKwest, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Jiang:NantKwest, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Klingemann:NantKwest, INc.: Employment, Equity Ownership, Patents & Royalties. Lee:NantKwest, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Soon-Shiong:NantKwest, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Patents & Royalties.

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 2744-2744
Author(s):  
Xiaochuan Chen ◽  
Rhona Stein ◽  
Chien-Hsing Chang ◽  
David M. Goldenberg

Abstract Abstract 2744 Poster Board II-720 Introduction: The humanized anti-CD74 monoclonal antibody (mAb), milatuzumab, is in clinical evaluation as a therapeutic mAb for non-Hodgkin lymphoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), and multiple myeloma after preclinical evidence of activity in these tumor types. In addition to its expression in malignant cells, CD74 is also expressed in normal B cells, monocytes, macrophages, Langerhans cells, follicular and blood dendritic cells. A question therefore arises whether milatuzumab is toxic to or affects the function of these immune cells. This has important implications, not only for safe therapeutic use of this mAb, but also for its potential application as a novel delivery modality for in-vivo targeted vaccination. Methods: We assessed the binding profiles and functional effects of milatuzumab on human antigen-presenting cell (APC) subsets. Studies on the effect of milatuzumab on antigen presentation and cross-presentation are included. In addition, binding and cytotoxicity on a panel of leukemia/lymphoma cell lines and CLL patient cells were tested to demonstrate the range of malignancies that can be treated with this mAb. Results: Milatuzumab bound efficiently to different subsets of blood dendritic cells, including BDCA-1+ myeloid DCs (MDC1), BDCA-2+ plasmacytoid DCs (PDC), BDCA-3+ myeloid DCs (MDC2), B lymphocytes, monocytes, and immature DCs derived from human monocytes in vitro, but not LPS-matured DCs, which correlated well with their CD74 expression levels. In the malignant B-cells tested, milatuzumab bound to the surface of 2/3 AML, 2/2 mantle cell (MCL), 4/4 ALL, 1/1 hairy cell leukemia, 2/2 CLL, 7/7 NHL, and 5/6 multiple myeloma cell lines, and cells of 4/6 CLL patient specimens. Significant cytotoxicity (P<0.05) was observed in 2/2 MCL, 2/2 CLL, 3/4 ALL, 1/1 hairy cell, 2/2 NHL, and 2/2 MM cell lines, and 3/4 CD74-positive CLL patient cells, but not in the AML cell lines following incubation with milatuzumab. In contrast, milatuzumab had minimal effects on the viability of DCs or B cells that normally express CD74. The DC maturation and DC-mediated T-cell functions were not altered by milatuzumab treatment, which include DC-induced T-cell proliferation, CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ Treg expansion, and CD4+ naïve T-cell polarization. Moreover, milatuzumab had little effect on CMV-specific CD8- and CD8+ T cell interferon-g responses of peripheral blood mononuclear cells stimulated in vitro with CMV pp65 peptides or protein, suggesting that milatuzumab does not influence antigen presentation or cross-presentation. Conclusion: These results demonstrate that milatuzumab is a highly specific therapeutic mAb against B-cell malignancies with potentially minimal side effects. It also suggests that milatuzumab may be a promising novel delivery mAb for in vivo targeted vaccinations, given its efficient binding, but lack of cytotoxicity and functional disruption on CD74-expressing normal APCs. (Supported in part by NIH grant PO1-CA103985.) Disclosures: Chang: Immunomedics Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership, Patents & Royalties. Goldenberg:Immunomedics, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Patents & Royalties.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 191-191
Author(s):  
Richard W. Scott ◽  
Michael J. Costanzo ◽  
Katie B. Freeman ◽  
Robert W. Kavash ◽  
Trevor M. Young ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 191 A series of salicylamides, fully synthetic cationic foldamers designed to disrupt the binding of the pentasaccharide unit of heparin to antithrombin III, were found to be potent neutralizers of the activity of unfractionated heparin (UFH) and low molecular weight heparins (LMWHs). A compound from this series, PMX-60056, is currently in human clinical trials for neutralization of UFH and LMWHs. PMX-60056 potently neutralizes UFH and LMWHs but is not as efficacious versus fondaparinux (FPX). The goal of the present research was to 1) identify back-up compounds to optimize activity against the LMWHs and FPX and 2) mitigate the hemodynamic effects commonly associated with protamine and observed clinically with PMX-60056 in the absence of heparin. Compounds were first tested for their ability to neutralize the anticoagulant activity of enoxaparin (ENX), tinzaparin or FPX in an in vitro amidolytic assay for factor Xa activity. While only minor improvements were observed in the neutralization of ENX and tinzaparin, compounds were identified which had 6 to 40 fold increase in activity against FPX (EC50s of 0.09 – 0.58 uM) in comparison to PMX-60056 (EC50 3.64 uM). Activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) assays demonstrated that these compounds maintained activity against heparin in a plasma based clotting assay. Rotation thromboelastometry (ROTEM) was used to show that these compounds are able to neutralize heparin and ENX in human whole blood, restoring normal coagulation profiles. As an initial test for safety, compounds were tested in hemolysis and cytotoxicity assays using isolated human erythrocytes, a transformed human liver cell line (HepG2 cells) and a mouse fibroblast cell line (NIH3T3). Lead back-up compounds were not cytotoxic (or hemolytic) at >100 fold concentrations over their EC50 concentrations in the anti-coagulation assays, indicating a high selectivity index between toxicity and efficacy. Five compounds were selected for further studies based on their in vitro profiles. The in vivo efficacy of these compounds was evaluated in a rat coagulation model for neutralization of ENX (2 mg/kg). Three minutes following IV dosing with ENX, either saline, protamine or one of the five salicylamide test compounds was administered. Blood was collected before dosing with ENX, and at 1, 3, 10, and 60 min after dosing, for aPTT and factor Xa analysis. Three of the five salicylamides (PMX640, PMX686 and PMX747) were more efficacious than protamine; with PMX640 and PMX686 neutralizing 91 – 100% and PMX747 neutralizing 78–100% of the ENX anti-factor Xa activity over the entire 60 minute time course. In a second in vivo model, PMX747 and PMX686 (2 mg/kg) completely neutralized the prolonged bleeding times in a rat tail bleeding model caused by treatment with 2 mg/kg ENX. Significantly, with protamine at a 5 mg/kg dosage, only partial restoration was obtained. Protamine routinely causes a transient decrease in blood pressure upon dosing, and hemodynamic effects have also been observed with PMX-60056 in human subjects in the absence of heparin. To address this issue, structural features that have successfully reduced hemodynamic liabilities in other cationic compounds were incorporated into the design of the back-up salicylamides. The effect of compounds on blood pressure and heart rate was measured via arterial catheters in rats following IV administration of protamine, PMX-60056, or test agents. As expected, in rats treated with a low dose of UFH (50 u/kg) and high dosages of antagonist, both protamine and PMX-60056 displayed transient or prolonged blood pressure reductions at 8 and 16 mg/kg, respectively. However, the lead back-up salicylamides, PMX640, PMX686 and PMX747 had little to no effect on blood pressure at these same dosages. In conclusion, we have discovered compounds in the salicylamide series that have greater efficacy versus LMWHs and that have significantly reduced hemodynamic liabilities in rats as compared to protamine. Furthermore, these compounds potently neutralize FPX activity in vitro; exceeding the activity of protamine and our clinical lead salicylamide, PMX-60056, by up to 40 fold. Thus we have been able to optimize the salicylamide series, identifying compounds that offer the potential to greatly improve upon the current clinical heparin antagonist, protamine, in respect to both activity against LMWHs and side effect profile. Disclosures: Scott: PolyMedix Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Costanzo:PolyMedix Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Freeman:PolyMedix Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Kavash:PolyMedix Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Young:PolyMedix, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. DeGrado:PolyMedix, Inc.: Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Jeske:PolyMedix, Inc.: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 5125-5125
Author(s):  
Callum M Sloss ◽  
Katie O'Callaghan ◽  
Jutta Deckert ◽  
Jenny Tsui ◽  
Leanne Lanieri ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction: Relapsed/refractory B-cell NHL remains an area of significant medical need. CD19 is broadly expressed on B-cell malignancies making it an ideal target for antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) based therapy. Coltuximab ravtansine is a CD19-targeting ADC consisting of a CD19-targeting antibody conjugated to the maytansinoid anti-mitotic DM4. In preclinical studies, coltuximab ravtansine has shown potent, targeted activity against NHL cell lines and xenograft models. In early clinical trials, it has been well tolerated and has shown promising signs of efficacy as both a single agent and in combination with rituximab. In the STARLYTE Phase 2 trial coltuximab ravtansine monotherapy resulted in an ORR of 44% in R/R-DLBCL that included an ORR of 21% in hard-to-treat primary refractory patients (NCT01472887). Here we describe studies aimed at the identification of combination partners for coltuximab ravtansine to further optimize clinical benefit to R/R-NHL patients. We are employing a dual approach where we investigate combination of coltuximab ravtansine with multiple, novel targeted therapy partners whilst in parallel also investigating the combination of coltuximab ravtansine with chemotherapies commonly used in the late stage R/R-NHL setting. Methods: Coltuximab ravtansine and the DM4 payload were evaluated in a high throughput screen both as single agents and in combination with a selection of novel, emerging targeted agents across a panel of twenty NHL cell lines. The combinations were evaluated in a dose-response matrix and a statistical method was used to identify combination synergies significantly superseding baseline additivity values. The in vivo efficacy of coltuximab ravtansine was additionally assessed in combination with various clinically relevant chemotherapy agents in subcutaneous xenograft models of NHL. Results: Coltuximab ravtansine and DM4 both showed potent single agent activity against the entire panel of NHL cell lines with median GI50's of 770pM and 100pM, respectively. We observed a significant correlation in the cell line sensitivity of the two compounds suggesting that sensitivity to coltuximab ravtansine is driven, at least in part, by inherent sensitivity of cells to the cytotoxic effects of the DM4 payload. In vitro combination studies for coltuximab ravtansine were performed to identify targets or pathways that result in the most prominent combination effects across the cell line panel. Analysis of the in vitro combination dose-matrix revealed particularly strong synergy between coltuximab ravtansine and various inhibitors of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR axis. Studies to examine the synergism between coltuximab ravtansine and PI3K inhibitors in in vivo models of NHL are ongoing. In order to further determine the utility of coltuximab ravtansine as part of a potential combination regimen for the treatment of R/R-NHL, we assessed the combination of coltuximab ravtansine with the chemotherapy agents bendamustine and gemcitabine in vivo. As gemcitabine is typically used in combination we assessed the efficacy of a coltuximab ravtansine with rituximab and gemcitabine in vivo. In both cases the combination with coltuximab ravtansine was significantly more efficacious than the standard-of-care alone arms. Conclusions: Coltuximab ravtansine demonstrates synergistic activity in combination with multiple PI3K pathway inhibitors across a large panel of NHL cell lines. Additionally, we have shown that combination of coltuximab ravtansine with clinically relevant late stage treatments such as bendamustine and rituximab + gemcitabine is more efficacious than the chemotherapy regimens alone. These results support the continued development of coltuximab ravtansine in R/R-NHL in combination with chemotherapy regimens and suggest that a combination of coltuximab ravtansine with PI3K inhibitors may also be of interest in the clinical setting. Disclosures Sloss: ImmunoGen, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. O'Callaghan:ImmunoGen, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Deckert:ImmunoGen, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Tsui:ImmunoGen, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Lanieri:ImmunoGen, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership. Romanelli:ImmunoGen, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 5234-5234
Author(s):  
Enguerran Mouly ◽  
Emilie Rousseau ◽  
Cecile Planquette ◽  
Remi Delansorne

Abstract Decitabine (DAC) is a hypomethylating agent indicated as front-line therapy for de novo or secondary acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in newly diagnosed patients aged 65 years or older unfit for standard induction chemotherapy (Kantarjian et al., 2012, Malik & Cashen, 2014, Nieto et al., 2016, He et al., 2017). Its mechanism of action at the DNA level mostly results in inhibition of cell proliferation. Cellular differentiation can also be involved in some extent in a fraction of the leukemic cell population, as reported in initial pharmacological studies (Creusot et al., 1982; Pinto et al., 1984). Overall survival advantage is nevertheless limited to several more months and the next challenge is to combine DAC with other drugs to improve it further (Kubasch & Platzbecker, 2018). Inecalcitol (INE: 14epi-,19nor-,23yne-,1,25dihydroxy-cholecalciferol) is a vitamin D receptor agonist characterized by potent anti-proliferative and pro-differentiating general properties on cancer cells and by a low calcemic potential (Okamoto et al., 2012; Ma et al., 2013; Medioni et al. 2014), and especially on AML cell lines (AACR 2017, 2018). INE is currently being tested in combination with DAC in this category of elderly AML patients unfit for standard chemotherapy. The aim of the present report was to look for synergies in vitro between DAC and INE on four non-APL human AML cell lines (MOLM-13, U-937, THP-1, OCI-AML2) both on inhibition of proliferation and induction of differentiation. After 72 hours of incubation, cells were counted and labeled for CD11b and CD14 at the cell surface as biomarkers of monocytic/macrophagic differentiation. The range of DAC concentrations had to adapted to each cell line to avoid maximal cytotoxicity: 1.2 nM to 100 nM on MOLM-13, 3 nM to 250 nM on U-937 and THP-1, and 31 nM to 500 nM on OCI-AML2. The same range of 0.12 to 10 nM INE concentrations was tested on each cell line. Each concentration of INE was tested in combination with each concentration of DAC. Synergy was calculated as the excess over the highest single agent (HSA) using the open source Combenefit software (Di Veroli et al., 2016). The highest concentration of DAC alone (MOLM-13: 100 nM, U-937 and THP-1: 250 nM; OCI-AML2: 500 nM) induced a decrease in cell count of 30% of THP-1 cells, 50% of OCI-AML2 cells, 65% of U-937 cells and 80% of MOLM-13 cells. The highest concentration of INE alone (10 nM) induced a decrease in cell count of 20% of U-937 and THP-1 cells, 60% of OCI-AML2 cells and 70% of MOLM-13 cells. The antiproliferative effects of DAC and INE were at least additive in all combinations tested. Significant HSA synergy indexes were found for the decrease in cell number in all four cell lines, ranging from 12% to 23% depending on cell lines and combinations of concentrations. The highest concentration of DAC alone had no (U-937, THP-1) or limited activity (<+12% of labeled MOLM-13 or OCI-AML2 cells) to induce either CD11b or CD14 on the cell surface. By contrast, the highest concentration of INE alone (10 nM) stimulated the expression of CD11b and CD14 in up to 70% to 95% of the cells depending on the cell line (except the CD14 labeling of U-937 cells which remained < 8%). The respective EC50 of INE for CD11b and CD14 induction was 1 and 3 nM on THP-1 cells, 4 and 3 nM on MOLM-13 cells, 3 and 3 nM on OCI-AML2 cells and 1 nM on U-937 cells (50% not reached for CD14). There was no antagonistic effect of DAC towards the pro-differentiating properties of INE. A significant HSA synergy index in the 16% to 26% range was observed for both CD11b and CD14 in MOLM-13 cells and for CD14 in OCI-AML2 cells. A very high HSA synergy index of 75% was observed for the stimulation of CD14 in U-937 cells. In summary, DAC exerted more antiproliferative activity than INE which was more potent to induce monocytic/macrophagic differentiation of four non-APL human AML cell lines. The combination of DAC and INE systematically resulted in a synergy to inhibit cell proliferation, and the strong stimulation of cell differentiation induced by INE alone was in some cases boosted by DAC. These in vitro results provide the mechanistic basis for the potential interest of treating elderly AML patients with INE in addition to DAC in the ongoing double-blind placebo-controlled Phase II clinical trial (NCT02802267). Disclosures Mouly: Hybrigenics: Employment. Rousseau:Hybrigenics: Employment. Planquette:Hybrigenics: Employment, Equity Ownership, Patents & Royalties: inventor, but no royalties. Delansorne:Hybrigenics: Employment, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Patents & Royalties: inventor, but no royalties.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 5028-5028 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deepak Sampath ◽  
Elizabeth Punnoose ◽  
Erwin R. Boghaert ◽  
Lisa Belmont ◽  
Jun Chen ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 5028 Multiple myeloma (MM) is a hematological malignancy of the bone marrow caused by the dysregulated proliferation of monoclonal antibody producing plasma cells. A hallmark feature of cancer is the ability to evade cell death signals induced by stress response cues. The Bcl-2 family of proteins regulates the intrinsic apoptosis pathways and consists of pro-apoptotic (Bax, Bak, Bad, Bim, Noxa, Puma) and pro-survival (Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, Mcl-1); the balance of which dictates the life or death status of MM tumor cells. Thus, there is a strong rationale to target members of the Bcl-2 proteins for the treatment of MM. ABT-199 is a potent BH3-only mimetic that selectively antagonizes Bcl-2 and is currently in phase I clinical trials for the treatment of hematological malignancies. Therefore, we evaluated the efficacy of ABT-199 as a single agent and in combination with standard of care drugs such as Velcade (bortezomib) in preclinical models of MM. A panel of 21 human MM cell lines was evaluated in vitro for to sensitivity to ABT-199. ABT-199 potently inhibited cell viability in a sub-set of MM cell lines (7/21) with EC50 values less than 1 μM. Expression of Bcl-2, Bcl-xL, Mcl-1, Bim and other Bcl-2 family proteins were evaluated by protein and mRNA. Cell line modeling identified thresholds for expression of Bcl-2, Bcl-xL and Mcl-1 that best predicted sensitivity and resistance to ABT-199 and the dual Bcl-2/Bcl-xL antagonist, navitoclax. Consistent with the target inhibition profile of these drugs, we found that MM lines that were Bcl-2high/Bcl-xLlow/Mcl-1low are the most sensitive to ABT-199 treatment. Whereas cell lines that are Bcl-xLhigh remain sensitive to navitoclax but not ABT-199. MM cell lines that are Mcl-1high are less sensitive to both ABT-199 and navitoclax, suggesting that Mcl-1 is a resistance factor to both drugs. Utilizing a novel Mesoscale Discovery based immunoassay we determined that levels of Bcl-2/Bim complexes also correlated with sensitivity of ABT-199 in the MM cell lines tested. In addition, the t(11;14) status in these cell lines associated with sensitivity to ABT-199. The clinical relevance of the Bcl-2 pro-survival expression pattern in MM cell lines, was determined by a collection of bone marrow biopsies and aspirates (n=27) from MM patients by immunohistochemistry for prevalence of Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL. Similar to our in vitro observations, the majority (75%) of the MM bone marrow biopsies and aspirates had high Bcl-2 levels whereas 50% had high Bcl-xL expression. Therefore, a subset of patient samples (33%) were identified with a favorable biomarker profile (Bcl-2high/Bcl-xLlow) that may predict ABT-199 single agent activity. ABT-199 synergized with bortezomib in decreasing cell viability in the majority of MM cell lines tested in vitro based on the Bliss model of independence analyses (Bliss score range = 10 to 40). However the window of combination activity was reduced due to high degree of sensitivity to bortezomib alone. Therefore, the combination efficacy of ABT-199 and bortezomib was further evaluated in vivo in MM xenograft models that expressed high levels of Bcl-2 protein (OPM-2, KMS-11, RPMI-8226, H929 and MM. 1s). Bortezomib treatment alone at a maximum tolerated dose resulted in tumor regressions or stasis in all xenograft models tested. ABT-199 at a maximum tolerated dose was moderately efficacious (defined by tumor growth delay) as a single agent in xenograft models that expressed high protein levels of Bcl-2 but relatively lower levels of Bcl-xL. However, the combination of ABT-199 with bortezomib significantly increased the overall response rate and durability of anti-tumor activity when compared to bortezomib, resulting in increased cell death in vivo. Treatment with bortezomib increased levels of the pro-apoptotic BH3-only protein, Noxa, in MM xenograft models that expressed high levels of Mcl-1. Given that the induction of Noxa by bortezomib results in neutralization of Mcl-1 pro-survival activity in MM models [Gomez-Bougie et al; Cancer Res. 67:5418–24 (2007)], greater efficacy may be achieved when Bcl-2 is antagonized by ABT-199 thereby inhibiting pro-survival activity occurring through either Bcl-2 or Mcl-1 and increasing cell death. Thus, our preclinical data support the clinical evaluation of ABT-199 in combination with bortezomib in MM patients in which relative expression of the Bcl-2 pro-survival proteins may serve as predictive biomarkers of drug activity. Disclosures: Sampath: Genentech: Employment, Equity Ownership. Punnoose:Genentech: Employment, Equity Ownership. Boghaert:Abbott Pharmaceuticals: Employment, Equity Ownership. Belmont:Genentech: Employment, Equity Ownership. Chen:Abbott Pharmaceuticals: Employment, Equity Ownership. Peale:Genentech: Employment, Equity Ownership. Tan:Genentech: Employment, Equity Ownership. Darbonne:Genentech: Employment, Equity Ownership. Yue:Genentech: Employment, Equity Ownership. Oeh:Genentech: Employment, Equity Ownership. Lee:Genentech: Employment, Equity Ownership. Fairbrother:Genentech: Employment, Equity Ownership. Souers:Abbott Pharmaceuticals: Employment, Equity Ownership. Elmore:Abbott Pharmaceuticals: Employment, Equity Ownership. Leverson:Abbott Pharmaceuticals: Employment, Equity Ownership.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 237-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael P. Rettig ◽  
Matthew Holt ◽  
Julie Prior ◽  
Sharon Shacham ◽  
Michael Kauffman ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Exportin 1 (XPO1) also called CRM1, is a widely expressed nuclear export protein, transporting a variety of molecules including tumor suppressor proteins and cell cycle regulators. Targeted inhibition of XPO1 is a new strategy to restore multiple cell death pathways in various malignant diseases. SINEs are novel, orally available, small molecule Selective Inhibitors of Nuclear Export (SINE) that specifically bind to XPO1 and inhibit its function. Methods We used WST-1 cell proliferation assays, flow cytometry, and bioluminescence imaging to evaluate the efficacy of multiple SINEs to induce apoptosis alone and in combination with cytarabine (AraC) or doxorubicin in vitro in chemotherapy sensitive and resistant murine acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) cells. This murine model of APL was previously generated by knocking in the human PML-RARa cDNA into the 5’ regulatory sequence of the cathepsin G locus (Westervelt et al. Blood, 2003). The abnormal co-expression of the myeloid surface antigen Gr1 and the early hematopoietic markers CD34 and CD117 identify leukemic blasts. These Gr1+CD34+CD117+ APL cells partially retain the ability to terminally differentiate toward mature granulocytes (mimicking more traditional AML models) and can be adoptively transferred to secondary recipients, which develop a rapidly fatal leukemia within 3 weeks after tumor inoculation. To assess the safety and efficacy of SINEs in vivo, we injected cryopreserved APL cells intravenously via the tail vein into unconditioned genetically compatible C57BL/6 recipients and treated leukemic and non-leukemic mice (n=15/cohort) with 15 mg/kg of the oral clinical staged SINE KPT-330 (currently in Phase 1 studies in patients with solid tumors and hematological malignancies) alone or in combination with 200 mg/kg cytarabine every other day for a total of 2 weeks. Peripheral blood was obtained weekly from mice for complete blood counts and flow cytometry to screen for development of APL. Results The first generation SINE, KPT214, inhibited the proliferation of murine APL cell lines in a dose and time dependent manner with IC50 values ranging from of 95 nM to 750 nM. IC50 values decreased 2.4-fold (KPT-185) and 3.5-fold (KPT-249) with subsequent generations of the SINEs. Consistent with the WST-1 results, Annexin V/7-aminoactinomycin D flow cytometry showed a significant increase of APL apoptosis within 6 hours of KPT-249 application. Minimal toxicity against normal murine lymphocytes was observed with SINEs even up to doses of 500 nM. Additional WST-1 assays using AraC-resistant and doxorubicin-resistant APL cell lines demonstrated cell death of both chemotherapy-resistant cell lines at levels comparable to the parental chemosensitive APL cell lines. Combination therapy with low dose KPT-330 and AraC showed additive effects on inhibition of cell proliferation in vitro. This additive effect of KPT-330 and chemotherapy on APL killing was maintained in vivo. As shown in Figure 1, treatment with AraC or KPT-330 alone significantly prolonged the survival of leukemic mice from a median survival of 24 days (APL + vehicle) to 33 days or 39 days, respectively (P < 0.0001). Encouragingly, combination therapy with AraC + KPT-330 further prolonged survival compared to monotherapy (P < 0.0001), with some mice being cured of the disease. Similar in vivo studies with the AraC-resistant and doxorubicin-resistant APL cells are just being initiated. Conclusions Our data suggests that the addition of a CRM1 inhibitor to a chemotherapy regimen offers a promising avenue for treatment of AML. Disclosures: Shacham: Karyopharm Therapeutics Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees, Patents & Royalties. Kauffman:Karyopharm Therapeutics Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees, Patents & Royalties. McCauley:Karyopharm Therapeutics, Inc: Employment, Equity Ownership.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 1815-1815
Author(s):  
Lilly Wong ◽  
Rama Krishna Narla ◽  
Jim Leisten ◽  
Daniel Bauer ◽  
Matthew Groza ◽  
...  

Introduction: CC-92480 is a novel cereblon E3 ligase modulator (CELMoD) with enhanced autonomous cell-killing and immunomodulatory activity against multiple myeloma (MM) cells. CC-92480 is currently in phase 1 development in a late-line myeloma patient population (NCT03374085). Here, we sought to characterize the antitumor activity of CC-92480 in combination with dexamethasone (DEX), bortezomib (BORT), or daratumumab (DARA) in MM cell lines in vitro and xenograft mouse models in vivo. Methods: CC-92480 activity in combination with DEX was evaluated in MM cell lines. Apoptosis was measured by quantification of caspase-3 activation. The effect of BORT on CC-92480-induced Ikaros and Aiolos degradation was determined by concurrent treatment of MM cells with BORT and CC-92480. β5-site proteasome activity was also determined in the same experiment. The in vitro activity of CC-92480 in combination with BORT was characterized using washout experiments to more faithfully model the short in vivo exposure but more prolonged, gradually diminishing proteasome inhibitory activity of BORT. Apoptosis and cell viability of CC-92480 with BORT were analyzed by flow cytometry. The effect of CC-92480 on CD38 expression was also evaluated across a panel of MM cell lines. The effect of CC-92480 in combination with DARA was characterized with antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) and antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis (ADCP) assays. CC-92480 in combination with DEX or BORT was tested in a lenalidomide-resistant (H929-1051) xenograft mouse model. Female SCID mice were inoculated with H929-1051 cells in the right hind leg. For the DEX combination, groups of tumor-bearing mice (n = 9-10) were dosed with vehicle, DEX, or CC-92480 once daily (QD), or CC-92480 in combination with DEX throughout the study, starting when the tumor volumes reached approximately 115 mm3. For combination with BORT, mice (n = 9-10/group) were dosed with vehicle, CC-92480, or BORT, or the CC-92480 and BORT combination starting when the tumor volumes reached approximately 500 mm3. CC-92480 was administered orally QD for 3 days and BORT as a single intravenous dose. Tumor volumes were measured twice a week for the duration of the studies. Results: CC-92480 synergized with DEX in reducing cell viability and potentiated DEX-induced apoptosis in a concentration-dependent manner in MM cell lines. Of note, the combination showed activity at concentrations of both DEX and CC-92480 that had minimal activity as single agents. In the xenograft model with H929-1051 cells, the combination of CC-92480 and DEX significantly inhibited tumor growth (−84%) when compared with either agent alone (−34% and −20% for CC-92480 and DEX, respectively) and was classified as a synergistic effect using the fractional product method. Although proteasome activity is required for CC-92480-induced degradation of Ikaros and Aiolos, CC-92480 nevertheless maintained its ability to efficiently degrade Ikaros and Aiolos in the presence of doses of BORT that cause clinically relevant levels of proteasome inhibition. The in vitro combination of CC-92480 with BORT resulted in greater cytotoxic activity on MM cells than either single agent alone. The in vivo efficacy of CC-92480 and BORT, administered concurrently, showed a strongly synergistic effect with a near complete or complete tumor regression in every animal, and 6 of 9 animals remained tumor-free through an observation period extending 157 days after the control group was terminated. Anti-CD38 therapies, including DARA and isatuxumab, target CD38-expressing MM cells for killing by immune cells through cytotoxic and phagocytic mechanisms. In a panel of MM cell lines, CC-92480 treatment caused increased cell surface expression of CD38 (2-3 times that of control). Pretreatment of MM cells with CC-92480 resulted in increased DARA-mediated ADCC and ADCP compared with DMSO-treated controls. Conclusions: The strong preclinical synergy in MM cell killing exhibited by CC-92480 in combination with DEX, BORT, and with an anti-CD38 antibody (DARA), highlights its potential to bring clinical benefit to patients with MM in combination with these agents and supports the rationale for testing these combinations in clinical studies. Disclosures Wong: Celgene Corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership. Narla:Celgene Corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership. Leisten:Celgene Corporation: Employment. Bauer:Celgene Corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership. Groza:Celgene Corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership. Gaffney:Celgene: Employment. Havens:Celgene: Equity Ownership; Pfizer: Employment, Equity Ownership. Choi:AnaptysBio Inc: Employment, Equity Ownership; Celgene Corporation: Equity Ownership, Other: Formerly Employed. Lopez-Girona:Celgene Corporation: Employment. Hansen:Celgene Corporation: Employment. Cathers:Celgene Corporation: Equity Ownership; Global Blood Therapeutics (GBT): Employment. Carmichael:Celgene plc: Employment, Equity Ownership. Pierce:Celgene Corporation: Employment, Equity Ownership.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 612-612
Author(s):  
Ajita V. Singh ◽  
Madhavi Bandi ◽  
Monette Aujay ◽  
Susan Demo ◽  
Teru Hideshima ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 612 Background: Therapeutic targeting of Ubiquitin-Proteasome pathway is exemplified by the recent FDA approval of dipeptidyl boronic acid bortezomib first-in-class proteasome inhibitor for the treatment of multiple myeloma (MM). As with other agents, dose-limiting toxicities and the development of drug resistance limit its long-term utility. The β5, β1 and β2 catalytic subunits within the 26S proteasome mediate chymotrypsin-like, caspase-like, and trypsin-like activities, respectively. Importantly, these catalytic subunits have corresponding immunoproteasome components LMP-7, LMP-2 and multicatalytic endopeptidase complex subunit-1 (MECL-1), which regulate immune cell function and cytokine production; however, the role of the immunoproteasome in MM cells is still unclear. Recent studies have therefore focused on the discovery and development of small molecule inhibitors of the immunoproteasomes, which will both delineate the function of immunproteasomes and allow for specific therapeutic targeting of the UPS in order to reduce off-target activities and associated toxicities. Here, we examined PR-924, an LMP-7-selective peptide-ketoepoxide proteasome inhibitor related to carfilzomib. PR-924, like carfilzomib, contains a ketopoxide pharmacophore that covalently modifies proteasomal N-terminal threonine active sites. We examined the effects of PR-924 in MM cell lines and primary patient cells in vitro. To determine the in vivo efficacy of PR-924, we utilized two xenograft models of human MM in SCID mice, a subcutaneous tumor plasmacytoma model and the SCID-hu model, which best reflects the human MM-BM microenvironment in vivo. Methods and Model: We utilized MM.1S, MM.1R, RPMI-8226, U266, DOX40, KMS12, LR-5, OPM1, OPM2 and INA-6 (an IL-6 dependent) human MM cell lines, as well as purified tumor cells from patients with MM relapsing after prior therapies including lenalidomide or bortezomib. Cell viability and apoptosis assays were performed using Trypan blue, MTT and Annexin V staining. Immunoblot analysis was performed using antibodies to caspase-8, caspase-9, caspase-3, caspase-7, PARP, Bcl-2, BID, or GAPDH. For tumor xenograft studies, CB-17 SCID male mice (n = 10; 5 mice/each group) were subcutaneously inoculated with 5.0 × 106 MM.1S cells in 100 microliters of serum-free RPMI-1640 medium. When tumors were measurable (∼150 mm3) 2-3 weeks after MM cell injection, mice were injected IV with either PR-924 (6 mg/kg BW) or vehicle twice weekly. Mice were sacrificed when their tumors reached >2 cm3. In the SCID-hu model, 2 × 106 INA-6 cells were injected directly into human bone chips implanted subcutaneously in SCID mice (n=10: 5 mice/EA group), and MM cell growth was assessed by serial measurements of circulating levels of soluble human interleukin-6 receptor (shulIL6R) in mouse serum. Statistical significance of differences observed in PR-924 vs. vehicle treated mice was determined using a Student t test. Results: PR-924 significantly inhibits growth of all the MM cell lines in a time- and dose-dependent manner (IC50 range: 3-5 μM; P <0.005 for all cell lineIt alsos. reduced the viability of primary patient cells (P < 0.05; n=5), without significant effects on normal peripheral mononuclear cells. The PR-924-triggered decrease in MM cell viability is due to apoptosis, as evidenced by Annexin V/PI staining. Moreover, PR-924-induced apoptosis in MM.1S and MM.1R MM cells is associated with activation of caspase-3, caspase-8, caspase-9, caspase-7, BID and PARP. In vivo PR-924 triggered significant tumor growth inhibition in tumor plasmacytoma xenografts (2.3 fold decrease in tumor volume in mice receiving PR-924 versus mice injected with vehicle alone; P value = 0.01). Similarly, a significant reduction in the shuIL6R levels (3.4 fold decrease; P value = 0.02) was observed in mice treated with PR-924 versus vehicle-control. PR-924 treatment was well tolerated, as evidenced by the lack of weight loss even after three weeks of treatment. Importantly, treatment of tumor bearing mice with PR-924, but not vehicle alone, significantly prolonged survival (P < 0.005). Conclusion: Our preclinical findings establish immunoproteasome LMP-7 as a novel therapeutic target in MM. Disclosures: Aujay: Proteolix: Employment, Equity Ownership. Demo:Proteolix: Employment, Equity Ownership.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 5123-5123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Joseph Axelrod ◽  
Peter Fowles ◽  
Jeff Silverman ◽  
Astrid Clarke ◽  
Jennifer Tang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Entospletinib (GS-9973) selectively inhibits spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK), a critical signaling component of the BCR pathway that is expressed primarily in cells of hematopoietic lineage including normal and malignant B-lymphocytes. Entospletinib is currently in phase II clinical trials, where it has demonstrated both a high degree of safety as well as efficacy against chronic lymphocytic leukemia (Sharman, J., et al. Blood, 2015) and other B cell malignancies. Despite these successes, new therapeutic options, including combinations with standard of care agents, are needed in order to achieve the goal of curing disease through finite treatment. We show here that the combination of entospletinib and vincristine causes synergistic apoptosis in vitro in a broad panel of cell lines derived from hematological cancers including diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL), acute lymphocytic leukemia, follicular lymphom), multiple myeloma, and acute myelogenous leukemia. We also evaluated and compared the in vivo efficacy of entospletinib and vincristine as singe agents and in combination in a DLBCL tumor xenograft model using the SU-DHL-10 cell line. Methods In vitro growth inhibition of a panel of malignant hematological cell lines was assessed using CellTiter-Glo™ Assay (Promega) after 72h incubation with entospletinib or vincristine alone or in combination. Synergy was evaluated using the Bliss model of independence (Meletiadis, J., et al., Med Mycol, 2005). In vivo, SU-DHL-10 cells (5 x 106 cells) were implanted subcutaneously in the axilla in male SCID beige mice. All mice were sorted into study groups on Day 16 such that each group's mean tumor volume fell within 10% of the overall mean (197mm3). Dosing was initiated on Day 16 and animals were dosed for 17 days. Plasma concentrations of entospletinib and vincristine were assessed on Day 19, and the entospletinib 75 mg/kg dose was lowered on Day 22 to 50 mg/kg to approximate the human achievable SYK target coverage of EC80. Efficacy and tolerability were evaluated by tumor measurements and body weight monitored three times weekly. Tumor burden data were analyzed by the application of a two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA), with post-hoc analysis. Results In vitro combinations of entospletinib with low concentrations of vincristine resulted in marked inhibition of cell proliferation and induction of apoptosis in a broad panel of 19 tumor cell lines representing major B cell malignancies including DLBCL. The combination of entospletinib with vincristine had a profound inhibitory effect on proliferation in all subtypes of DLBCL. Entospletinib was evaluated at a concentration equivalent to the Cminof the clinical dose and vincristine was used at concentrations (≤ 10 nM) that had little to no significant single agent effect in these cell lines. In vivo in a SU-DHL-10 xenograft model, entospletinib dosed alone at 25 or 75/50 mg/kg significantly inhibited tumor growth, causing 39% and 20% tumor growth inhibition (TGI), respectively, compared to the vehicle-treated control group. Vincristine administered at either 0.15 and 0.5 mg/kg Q7D x 3 also resulted in significant TGI (42% and 85% TGI, respectively). The addition of entospletinib (75/50 mg/kg) to 0.5 mg/kg or 0.15 mg/kg vincristine resulted in a significant increase in TGI from 85% to 96% (p= 0.001) and 42% to 71% (p< 0.0001), respectively. The addition of entospletinib (25 mg/kg) to vincristine did not significantly increase the tumor growth inhibition. While the groups receiving either entospletinib or vincristine as single agents had no complete or partial tumor regression, 50% of the mice receiving the combination of 75/50 mg/kg entospletinib with 0.5 mg/kg vincristine had partial responses, 8% had complete regression and 8% were tumor free at the end of study (Figure 1). Conclusion Entospletinib and vincristine demonstrated efficacy and tolerability both alone and in combination in the SU-DHL-10 DLBCL cell line xenograft model in SCID beige mice. Vincristine combinations with entospletinib showed significantly greater efficacy than vincristine alone. These data support the further clinical development of entospletinib in combination with vincristine for the treatment of DLBCL. a ENTO: PO: Q12H x 2 (Day 16-32) b VCR: IV: Q7D x 3 (Days 18, 25, 32) Figure 1. Tumor Regressions in an Entospletinib/ Vincristine Treated Murine DLBCL Xenograft Figure 1. Tumor Regressions in an Entospletinib/ Vincristine Treated Murine DLBCL Xenograft Disclosures Axelrod: Gilead Sciences: Employment, Equity Ownership. Fowles:Gilead Sciences: Employment, Equity Ownership. Silverman:Gilead Sciences: Employment, Equity Ownership. Clarke:Gilead Sciences: Employment, Equity Ownership. Tang:Gilead Sciences: Employment, Equity Ownership. Rousseau:Gilead Sciences: Employment, Equity Ownership. Webb:Gilead Sciences: Employment, Equity Ownership. Di Paolo:Gilead Sciences: Employment, Equity Ownership.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 3182-3182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Watkins-Yoon ◽  
Wilson Guzman ◽  
Amanda Oliphant ◽  
Sara Haserlat ◽  
Alan Leung ◽  
...  

Introduction: Current therapies for multiple myeloma (MM), such as immunomodulatory agents, proteasome inhibitors, stem-cell transplantation, and monoclonal antibodies against tumor-associated antigens have greatly improved patient survival. However, MM remains an incurable disease as most patients will eventually relapse. Recent advances in targeted T-cell therapies have shown promise in clinical trials but the adaptive immune system may be insufficient to eradicate all MM clones. In contrast, treatments harnessing the innate immune system have been relatively underdeveloped in MM despite evidence suggesting a role of innate immunity in the efficacy of existing therapies. Innate or innate-like cells, such as NK and γδ T cells, have the potential to display strong anti-tumor activity, and strategies aimed to improve or re-direct their cytotoxicity represent a new opportunity for cancer immunotherapies and a complementary approach to existing therapies. Here we describe the preclinical characterization of CTX-8573, a novel multispecific antibody that targets B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA) on tumor cells and promotes potent cytotoxicity by NK and γδ T cells through engagement of the activating receptors NKp30 and CD16a. Method: Bispecific constructs were generated by appending two common-light chain compatible anti-NKp30 Fab fragments to the C-terminus of an anti-BCMA IgG1 antibody containing an afucosylated Fc for enhanced CD16a engagement. To test the effects of targeting NKp30 alone, variants were expressed with an aglycosylated Fc to eliminate CD16a binding. In-vitro assays were performed with primary NK or γδ T cells to determine innate-cell activation, cytokine production, proliferation, and target-cell cytotoxicity against tumor cell lines with a range of BCMA expression levels. In-vivo efficacy studies were performed in multiple humanized mouse models and pharmacokinetics and safety were evaluated in Cynomolgus monkeys. Results: CTX-8573 is highly expressed in CHO cells with minimal aggregation and displays stability, solubility, and binding to BCMA and NKp30 equivalent to the parental monoclonal antibodies. By engaging NKp30 and CD16a, CTX-8573 promotes potent cytotoxicity of BCMA expressing target cells by NK and γδ T cells with >100 fold reduced EC50 compared to the corresponding BCMA monoclonal antibody control. CTX-8573 also demonstrates robust killing of low BCMA expressing cell lines including RPMI-8226 where monoclonal BCMA antibodies lack activity. An aglycosylated variant of CTX-8573 lacking CD16a binding maintains cell killing activity, demonstrating that engagement of NKp30 alone is sufficient to promote innate cell activation and cytotoxicity, although activity is enhanced by CD16A engagement. Furthermore, CTX-8573 maintains its cytotoxic activity in presence of soluble BCMA or BCMA ligands APRIL and BAFF. CTX-8573 does not induce innate cell activation, cytokine production, or killing in the absence of BCMA expressing target cells, supporting a wide therapeutic window. Additionally, unlike daratumumab, CTX-8573 does not induce NK-cell fratricide. In-vivo, CTX-8573 demonstrates anti-tumor efficacy in multiple humanized mouse models including killing of low BCMA expressing cell lines. In Cynomolgus monkeys, CTX-8573 displays standard biphasic pharmacokinetics with a 16 day β-phase half-life and has no evidence of systemic immune activation as measured by C-reactive protein levels. Lastly, NKp30 expression is maintained on bone marrow NK cells from MM patients including the presence of a significant NKp30+CD16a- subpopulation. Conclusion: CTX-8573 represents a novel class of bispecific antibodies that promote potent tumor cell killing by NK and γδ T-cells through engagement of the activating receptors NKp30 and CD16a. CTX-8573 demonstrates strong anti-tumor efficacy in vitro and in vivo, a wide therapeutic window with no evidence of systemic toxicity, and monoclonal-like pharmacokinetics and manufacturability. Together, these data highlight the potential of CTX-8573 as a novel treatment for MM either alone or as a complement to existing therapies. Disclosures Watkins-Yoon: Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Guzman:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Oliphant:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Haserlat:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Leung:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Chottin:University of Louisiana at Lafayette: Employment. Ophir:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Vekeria:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Nanjappa:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Markrush:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. McConaughy:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Wang:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Schilling:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Kim:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Wu:Compass Therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Liu:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Rogers:University of Louisiana at Lafayette: Employment. Villinger:University of Louisiana at Lafayette: Employment. Gong:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Hamilton:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Bobrowicz:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Schuetz:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Schmidt:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership. Draghi:Compass therapeutics LLC: Employment, Equity Ownership.


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