Parthanatos-inducing zinc agent C010DS-Zn elicits anti-tumor immune responses involving T cells and macrophages in vivo

Abstract Immune checkpoint inhibitors opened a new horizon in cancer therapy by enabling durable and complete responses in patients, but their wider application against general solid cancers has been hampered by the lack of a broadly acting anti-cancer immune response initiating agents. Parthanatos...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inbioRxiv
Main Authors Jinhyuk Fred Chung, Her, Zhisheng, Kong, Wai Mun, Chen, Qingfeng
Format Paper
LanguageEnglish
Published Cold Spring Harbor Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 19.03.2021
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Edition1.1
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ISSN2692-8205
2692-8205
DOI10.1101/2021.03.18.433812

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Summary:Abstract Immune checkpoint inhibitors opened a new horizon in cancer therapy by enabling durable and complete responses in patients, but their wider application against general solid cancers has been hampered by the lack of a broadly acting anti-cancer immune response initiating agents. Parthanatos is a previously unexplored immunogenic programmed necrosis mechanism that is triggered by the hyperactivation of PARP DNA repair and executed by an efficient DNA-fragmentation mechanism. We developed a proprietary macromolecular zinc complex agent C010DS-Zn that efficiently induced parthanatos against 4T1 murine cancer cells in vitro, which was characterized as PARP-mediated necrotic death with massive DNA damages. Ex vivo screening of its cytotoxicity against a panel of 53 low-passage human solid cancer PDX tumor fragments demonstrated its consistent delivery of characteristically DNA-damaging cell death that was unseen in the corresponding apoptosis positive controls. Further characterization of its in vivo treatment effects versus the immunosuppressive 4T1-Balb/c and immunogenic CT26-Balb/c syngeneic cancer models showed that sufficiently high intravenous C010DS-Zn treatments led to robust initiation of the tumor-suppressed antitumor immune compartments such as T cells and macrophages. At lower non-anticancer doses, C010DS-Zn treatment still led to significantly reduced macrophage content and inflammation in the 4T1 tumor, suggesting its potential utility against macrophage-mediated inflammations such as those seen in MIS-C or COVID19. Given the observation of its low serum bioavailability in a rat pharmacokinetic study, these results suggest potential development opportunities for C010DS-Zn to become a widely applicable immune initiation agent with chemo-like broad applicability upon its pharmacokinetic improvements. Competing Interest Statement QC is a shareholder of Invivocue. JFC is an executive director of Xylonix and is a shareholder of the same. Xylonix claims multiple intellectual property rights and patents filed on subjects relating, and not limited to, C005D-Zn and C010DS-Zn.
Bibliography:SourceType-Working Papers-1
ObjectType-Working Paper/Pre-Print-1
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Competing Interest Statement: QC is a shareholder of Invivocue. JFC is an executive director of Xylonix and is a shareholder of the same. Xylonix claims multiple intellectual property rights and patents filed on subjects relating, and not limited to, C005D-Zn and C010DS-Zn.
ISSN:2692-8205
2692-8205
DOI:10.1101/2021.03.18.433812