Article
Author: Yu, Shang-Fan  ; de la Cruz-Chuh, Josefa  ; Yeung, Stacey  ; Clark, Robyn  ; Walsh, Kevin B  ; Liang, Yuxin  ; Kozak, Katherine R  ; Spiess, Christoph  ; Wu, Jia  ; Gador, Mylène  ; Chiang, Eugene Y  ; Pichery, Melanie  ; Sudhamsu, Jawahar  ; Ellerman, Diego  ; Kemball, Christopher C  ; Seshasayee, Dhaya  ; Totpal, Klara  ; Dillon, Michael A  ; Gampa, Gautham  ; Carson, Emily  ; Go, MaryAnn  ; Cheung, Victoria  ; Herault, Aurelie  ; Nguyen, Thi Thu Thao  ; Cosino, Ely  ; Piskol, Robert  ; Mak, Judy  ; Lee, Genee  ; Modrusan, Zora 
BACKGROUND:Cancer immunotherapy approaches that elicit immune cell responses, including T and NK cells, have revolutionized the field of oncology. However, immunosuppressive mechanisms restrain immune cell activation within solid tumors so additional strategies to augment activity are required.
 METHODS:We identified the co-stimulatory receptor NKG2D as a target based on its expression on a large proportion of CD8+ tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) from breast cancer patient samples. Human and murine surrogate NKG2D co-stimulatory receptor-bispecifics (CRB) that bind NKG2D on NK and CD8+ T cells as well as HER2 on breast cancer cells (HER2-CRB) were developed as a proof of concept for targeting this signaling axis in vitro and in vivo.
 RESULTS:HER2-CRB enhanced NK cell activation and cytokine production when co-cultured with HER2 expressing breast cancer cell lines. HER2-CRB when combined with a T cell-dependent-bispecific (TDB) antibody that synthetically activates T cells by crosslinking CD3 to HER2 (HER2-TDB), enhanced T cell cytotoxicity, cytokine production and in vivo antitumor activity. A mouse surrogate HER2-CRB (mHER2-CRB) improved in vivo efficacy of HER2-TDB and augmented NK as well as T cell activation, cytokine production and effector CD8+ T cell differentiation.
 CONCLUSION:We demonstrate that targeting NKG2D with bispecific antibodies (BsAbs) is an effective approach to augment NK and CD8+ T cell antitumor immune responses. Given the large number of ongoing clinical trials leveraging NK and T cells for cancer immunotherapy, NKG2D-bispecifics have broad combinatorial potential.