Heat Shock Proteins Vaccine Potential: From Basic Science Breakthroughs to Feasible Personalized Medicine
July 2002
by Bruce Goldman
One night in the early 1960s, somebody in a
Drosophila lab in Italy inadvertently
cranked up the incubator thermostat a bit too
high. The next day, the fruit flies salivary
gland chromosomes exhibited odd puffing patterns
under microscopic examination, indicating an
unusual pattern of gene expression. Thus began
the exploration of a group of related molecules
bearing the name heat shock proteins
(HSPs, for short). That name vastly understates
the HSP familys astounding versatility.
Whenever a cell — any cell, in any organism
— is stressed by heat, cold, or glucose
or oxygen deprivation, to name but a few examples,
HSPs are induced. In fact, the members of this
family of dozens of related proteins account
for an astounding 20 percent of a stressed cells
soluble protein contents.
HSPs abound even under perfectly tranquil conditions, when they comprise on the order of 2 percent of the cells contents. For, its now known, HSPs are involved not only in nursing proteins back to conformational health when they droop, but in other chaperone functions as well: midwifing newborn proteins into the proper conformation to begin with; hustling them around among the cytosolic compartments; and, when theyre irredeemably bent out of shape, carting them off to intracellular garbage disposals to be degraded into the short chains of amino acids called peptides.
Yet another key role suspected of HSPs is loading
peptide detritus onto another important class
of proteins called major histocompatibility
complex, or MHC, molecules. A loaded MHC molecule
heads for the cell surface, where it can be
monitored by roving sentry cells of the immune
system that react vigorously if they sense any
peptides that shouldnt be there —
for instance, fragments of viral proteins or
of altered constituents of a cancerous cell.
With so many important functions, its little wonder that HSPs are phenomenally well conserved across and within species. The similarity between a humans HSPs and those of a mouse is greater than 95 percent. Even bacterial HSPs bear something like a 50 percent homology to ours.
All the roles just described for HSPs have been intracellular. They are essentially confined to a healthy cells cytosol and other intracellular compartments. But nature, ever the economizer, would be remiss if it were to let this kind of talent go to waste.
Library Science
In 1980 — back before HSPs intracellular
functions, outlined above, had been fully delineated
— a biochemistry graduate student in Hyderabad,
India, named Pramod Srivastava was musing upon
the well established observation that rats injected
with attenuated cells from a tumor to which
they are susceptible will reject a new graft
of that very tumor, whereas rats not thus inoculated
will prove lethally hospitable to it. Srivastava
began fractionating tumor lysates and injecting
these fractions into rodents. He then fractionated
the fractions and so forth, until he had isolated
the apparent immunizing agents: heat shock proteins.
Although Srivastava published his results in 1984, they received scant academic attention until a decade later, when they were reproduced by an independent group in Heidelberg, Germany. By that time, Srivastava had co-founded a company, New York-based Antigenics, on the principle that HSPs could be used as immunotherapeutic vaccines. One of the things Srivastava had learned was that the immune response HSPs induced was highly specific: HSPs isolated from Tumor X could immunize against Tumor X, but not against Tumor Y, and vice versa.
HSPs exquisite specificity in priming
animals immune systems was odd in light
of the fact that HSPs were apparently without
allelic variation. That mystery was resolved
when Srivastava showed that it was not HSPs
per se but the peptides cradled noncovalently
in their binding sites that were somehow conveying
antigenic intelligence to the immune system.
If you dissociate the peptide from the HSP —
even if you leave the peptide in the mix —
immunogenicity is lost.
Given HSPs role as all-purpose cellular chaperones, its not surprising that they would excel at grabbing onto peptides, nor that they would do so rather promiscuously. Between them all, HSPs are believed to bind about every conceivable peptide, regardless of size, composition or water- vs. fat-solubility.
The result is that a cells entire inventory of HSPs is a library containing copies of every peptide book the cell has produced lately. Most of those books are ones the immune system read long ago, during its early development, and no longer finds of interest because they are peptides a healthy cell should have. (During their training, immune cells responding too vigorously to self antigens are downregulated or dispatched, resulting in a state called immunotolerance to these antigens.) But HSPs inside a virally infected or cancerous cell are also holding onto peptides that are foreign, inappropriately expressed, or altered: In other words, peptides that a healthy cell ought not to have, and that might serve as red flags for the immune system — if only there were a way for the immune system to determine the contents of these rather private libraries.
Fortunately, there is.
Two Kinds of Cell Death
Under anything resembling normal circumstances,
HSPs simply dont show up in extracellular
fluids. But cells do die, in one of two ways.
Sometimes a cell dies in response to an externally
or internally issued suicide command. Such programmed
cell death — such as that of a skin cell
in the web between an embryonic humans
fingers as the web shrivels away — is called
apoptosis, which is orchestrated and tidy. The
cells contents (including its entire HSP-peptide
library) are sequestered in so-called apoptotic
bodies, later to be cleaned up through ingestion
by antigen-presenting cells (APCs) such as macrophages
and dendritic cells. Recent evidence, from Srivastavas
lab as well from molecular biologist Richard
Vile at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.,
and others, shows that apoptotic bodies ingested
by APCs cause changes on APC surfaces that actually
downregulate the immune system, inducing tolerance
instead of activation.
For an antigen to stimulate T-cell activation
it must be presented on a cells surface
accompanied not only by an appropriate MHC molecule
but also by a 'costimulator' molecule called
B-7. Apoptotic bodies, the HSPs of which are
opaque to APC inspection, appear to downregulate
the expression of B-7 on APC surfaces, leading
to T-cell apathy rather than activation.
But cells can also meet an untimely demise.
A tumor is a collection of abnormally growing
cells. When — due, for example, to the
overpowering burden of mutagenesis — a
cell undergoes the messy, unplanned death called
necrosis, it bursts like a water balloon, spilling
its internal contents into the surrounding medium.
Among the jettisoned debris bob the HSPs, carrying
among them all the peptide suspects an immune
surveillance cell could possibly want to see.
Cancer cells, in the course of their rapid division, may evolve ways of suppressing immune activity in their immediate neighborhood (for example, by secreting immunosuppressive chemicals) or of hiding their identifying surface antigens (for example, behind a veil of attached sugar groups). But in their ferment, most tumors toss off a constant effluvium of necrotic cells, exposing their HSPs to the immune system. And when a dendritic cell or macrophage takes up and re-presents HSP-associated peptides, B-7 expression is upregulated, creating the optimal environment for T-cell activation.
Srivastavas group recently identified a receptor (called CD91) on the
surface of dendritic cells for members of the
HSP family, further nailing down his once-heretical
case for HSP involvement in the immune cascade.
HSP receptors have also turned up on macrophages
and platelets. Scientists are still arguing
over the details of precise molecular mechanisms
but data emanating from high-powered labs around
the world have fostered a consensus around these
major points: HSPs released in necrotic conditions
actively draw phagocytic APCs (particularly
dendritic cells) into the area, hand over peptides
to the incoming APCs, and secrete chemicals,
predisposing them to re-present the HSP-delivered
antigens in ways that encourage active response
by the immune systems cellular branch.
Compared with the B cell-driven humoral, or
antibody, response, this cellular process is
far better suited to attacking tumors and virally
infected cells.
Each of the key elements of the above hypothesis,
first advanced in the early 1990s by Srivastava,
has since been confirmed by independent labs
at Harvard, Rockefeller and Tubingen universities;
the Mayo Clinic; Karolinska and Max Planck institutes;
and elsewhere. Theres no ambiguity
about it, says Nobelist and Rockefeller
University Professor Emeritus Joshua Lederberg,
who met Srivastava several years ago and is
now honorary chairman of Antigenics scientific
advisory board. Pramod proceeded very
methodically and with great insight, and with
no preconceptions.
Yet classical immunology would not have predicted
this because cellular immune responses are generally
triggered only by antigens an APC finds within
the context of a troubled cell, whereas those
merely escorted by soluble proteins typically
produce an antibody response from the immune
systems B cells. However, the HSP-peptide
complex anomalously stimulates not only precisely
targeted cytotoxic T cells, but also the immune
systems nonspecific natural killer (NK)
cells. The latter are particularly adept
at whirling into action on short notice and
attacking foreign invaders as well as tumors,
says Srivastava, who is now director of the
University of Connecticut-based Center for Immunotherapy
of Cancer and Infectious Diseases as well as
Antigenics chief scientific officer.
(Therapeutic monoclonal antibodies such as Genentechs Herceptin or IDECs Rituxan are acting as drugs, not as immunostimulants: they bind to important disease-associated cell surface receptors, altering their behavior. HSPs, on the other hand, directly sensitize the immune response to specific antigens.)
All this has just recently penetrated the textbooks.
Top tier, peer reviewed journals are bulging
with papers on HSPs immunological prowess.
John Sogn, deputy director of Division of Cancer
Biology at the National Cancer Institute of
the National Institutes of Health, described
Antigenics research as the nicest,
best integrated, basic science, and clinical
story there is in vaccine research, calling
it an incredible science story that beautifully
integrates the developments in tumor immunology.
Says the Mayo Clinics Richard Vile: From our own experiments and data, its obvious HSPs are big time. The only thing is how theyre working. My personal feeling is that HSPs will turn out to be a major mediator of immune recognition of tumors and perhaps other diseases as well.
Antigenics is working hard to prove researchers like Vile right.
A Fairly Simple Complex Concept
Antigenics is a company with more than 200 employees that, with its acquisitions of Aquila Biopharmaceuticals and Aronex Pharmaceuticals, has significantly enhanced the depth and reach of its product portfolio. The company is tackling cancer on the premise that HSPs indiscriminate peptide binding lets you direct the immune system against a tumor, without ever needing to identify a single tumor-relevant antigen.
Heres how its done, according to Neal Gordon, Antigenics senior vice president of manufacturing operations. A tumor, after surgical removal and biopsy, is packed in dry ice and shipped off via overnight express (à la FedEx or Airborne) to the companys 30,000-square-foot processing facility in Woburn, Massachusetts. There, the tumor cells are broken open. Their HSPs (complexed with tumor-specific peptides as well as a plethora of irrelevant antigens) are extracted, put into vials, frozen and shipped back when the patient has recovered from surgery.
One great virtue of Antigenics
personalized approach, says Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer Garo Armen, is
that you dont have to know which is the
relevant antigenic peptide — it will be
in there somewhere along with all the irrelevant
ones. A corollary implication is that
the methodology potentially could work for all
cancer types.
Theres no question that heat shock
protein immunotherapy is one of the most promising
areas right now, says Daniel Von Hoff,
professor of medicine, molecular biology, and
pathology at The University of Arizona and Director
of the Arizona Cancer Center. Von Hoff, a past
president of the American Association of Cancer
Research and a founder of Ilex Oncology, a biotechnology
company, says, Many, many people in the
field — including a lot of experts here
at the Arizona Cancer Center — believe
that with their HSPs, Antigenics has a unique
approach to every tumor.
Typically, patients receive 25 to 50 micrograms of HSP-peptide complex in an intradermal injection. This is done once a week for four weeks, then every other week as long as the supply lasts. Each tumors size places a limit on how much HSP can be extracted from it, but there is usually enough for treatment. Antigenics is also working on ways of expressing a tumors antigenic repertoire in a laboratory cell line, thus providing amplified amounts of tumor-specific HSP-peptide complex when needed.
Personalized immunotherapy isnt cheap.
Armen projects the cost for a course of treatment
at somewhere between $10,000 and $20,000, but
that is no more than the cost of current biologicals
such as Herceptin and interleukins. Moreover,
the low incidence of side effects make HSPs
a bargain from both price and quality of life
standpoints. Armen, who estimates the size of
the US cancer market at $30 billion annually,
says the Woburn facility can now process 10,000
patients a year, yielding $150 million in annual
revenues.
In the Clinic
A successful IPO in February 2000 left Antigenics holding more than $90 million in cash at years end, thereby allowing the company to self-finance several trials of its HSP-based immunotherapy for a broad range of indications, including kidney cancer, melanoma and pancreatic cancer.
Kidney cancer
Farthest along are trials for renal cell carcinoma,
the most common type of kidney cancer. With
more than 30,000 new cases a year in the United
States, renal cell carcinoma accounts for about
85 percent of all kidney tumors. The Phase III
renal cell carcinoma trial of Antigenics
HSP immunotherapy is ongoing at 150 centers
worldwide, with more than 360 patients currently
enrolled. In the trial, patients are randomized
to either just surgery (the standard treatment)
or surgery plus HSP treatment. The company expects
to see interim results in late-2003.
The way you treat patients with kidney cancer is to take the tumor out, says Von Hoff, who helped design Antigenics Phase III kidney cancer trial. But in a large percentage of those patients, the tumors come back. Right now there are no other therapies for early stage cancer. You do the surgery, and just watch them afterwards. Theres nothing else we have to offer in this situation.
The disease typically spreads to a lung
or lymph node, notes Robert Amato, an
oncologist in the urology department at Baylor
College of Medicine. But its metastases
can appear anywhere. And it doesnt respond
well to chemotherapy, he says. Once
a tumor metastasizes, life expectancy averages
less than one year. Conventional therapy —
interleukin 2, the only drug ever approved for
advanced kidney cancer, or interferon, which
is used off-label — helps only about 12
percent of the time at best and causes troublesome
side effects.
Antigenics uses its Woburn facility to turn the tumor against itself. Feasibility is not an issue, says Amato, who oversaw Antigenics 42-patient Phase I and 78-patient Phase II trials in renal cell carcinoma. Fewer than 10 percent of the patients were unable to have vaccine prepared for them, and the reason, almost always, was that we couldnt get the tumor out. There was no major adversity, and the treatments activity was equal to that of any other single agent thats been tried. Nearly half of the Phase I patients were still alive two years after receiving the HSP-based vaccine. With conventional treatment such as it is, the standard two-year survival rate is 15 percent.
Melanoma
According to the American Cancer Society, melanoma
only accounts for about 4 percent of skin cancer
cases, yet it causes about 79 percent of skin
cancer deaths. It is estimated that in 2002,
there will be almost 54,000 new cases of melanoma
in the United States, and about 7,400 people
will die of the disease. Current treatment options
are limited to surgical removal, radiation,
chemotherapy, immune therapy or a combination
of these treatments — all of which are
associated with significant adverse effects.
Phase III research of Antigenics HSP vaccine
in advanced melanoma began in 2002.
Antigenics vaccines have also elicited
positive outcomes with advanced melanoma,
says tumor immunologist Giorgio Parmiani, deputy
scientific director of the Instituto Nazionale
Tumori (National Cancer Institute) in Milan,
who was lead investigator of a four-center Phase
II melanoma study evaluating 28 patients with
advanced cancer incurable with surgery. Five
patients responded favorably to HSP treatment,
including two in whom all evidence of melanoma
disappeared for almost two years, and one who
is still free of disease.
Safety problems once again were minimal, says Parmiani, who presented details of the trial during annual meetings of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO).
Pancreatic cancer
Pancreatic cancer is the fourth leading cause of cancer death in men and women in the United States. The American Cancer Society estimates that 30,300 Americans will be diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2002, and that 29,700 will die of the disease.
The great majority of patients have advanced
disease by the time theyre diagnosed.
Once a tumor has spread beyond its original
site, the prognosis is bleak. Typical median
survival is on the order of four or five months
in untreated patients; the average advanced
pancreatic cancer patient receiving chemotherapy
survives only an additional month or two. At
best, one in five patients survives the first
year. In a large study carried out by the National
Cancer Institute, none of the 126 participants
— all with late-stage pancreatic cancer
treated by conventional chemotherapy —
lived longer than 19 months.
In 1997, Antigenics initiated a 15-patient,
Phase I pancreatic cancer trial at Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, but could get
material for the vaccines for only five of the
subjects, said Jonathan Lewis, the former Sloan-Kettering
surgeon who ran the study. Pancreatic enzymes,
activated by surgery, were degrading the HSPs
and the trial was suspended.
However, Antigenics researchers were excited
to learn that more than three years after the
trial suspension, two of the five subjects of
the original trial were still alive, given that
the historical median survival of pancreatic
surgery patients is 16 months. One patient treated
with Oncophage is alive and disease-free 33
months post-surgery; the remaining four died
at 8, 17, 30 and 36 months after surgery. Antigenics
scientists have now found a way to prevent enzymatic
destruction of HSPs. Lewis, who left Sloan-Kettering
to become Antigenics chief medical officer,
said that the company has resumed the trial
as a Phase II study after recruiting five new
subjects.
Other cancers
Clinical results in other indications have also been encouraging. In a Phase II trial, results of which were presented at ASCO in 2001 and 2002, 29 patients with advanced colon cancer that had spread to the liver received Oncophage after liver surgery. Although the study was not designed to evaluate clinical effectiveness, a small group of patients with favorable prognostic factors who received Oncophage were cancer-free longer than expected.
Antigenics is also evaluating its treatment in a Phase I trial in gastric cancer. Sixteen metastatic gastric cancer patients, with life expectancies of approximately four to seven months, were treated in the study. After an initial evaluation, approximately half of the patients appear to be benefiting.
Research with the companys HSP treatment also includes studies in non-Hodgkins
lymphoma and soft tissue sarcoma. Although
none of these trials have used controls, survival
rates are up significantly compared with historical
rates for patients in similar condition at baseline,
said Lewis. Importantly, he adds,
in clinical trials, the treatment appears
to be well tolerated in the 300-plus patients
who have received Antigenics HSP immunotherapy.
Antigenics clinical trials were preceded, Lewis says, by what may be the most extensive preclinical studies performed in the anticancer area. These studies involved greater numbers of animals within a wider assortment of species for more indications than have ever been reported with respect to any other cancer therapeutic, he says, and never with a negative result. Lewis adds that the strong degree of homology between mouse and human HSPs, HSP receptors, and immune systems in general bode well for clinical trials.
Competition
Antigenics intellectual property portfolio,
with its acquisitions of Aquila Biopharmaceuticals
and Aronex Pharmaceuticals, contains more than
80 issued and 150 pending patents, including
36 carefully-focused, issued US patents, giving
the company a lock on all immunotherapeutic
use of noncovalently bound complexes of mammalian
HSPs and antigens.
Antigenics clinical trials currently
use the human HSPs called gp96 and HSP70, the
moieties for which a specific receptor on dendritic
cells has already been identified definitively.
But its patents cover all the other members
of the mammalian HSP family as well. Other cancer-vaccine
contenders fall broadly into two groups. The
first uses wide-band antigenic approaches, as
Antigenics does. But instead of carefully extracting
an active principle such as HSPs, competing
variations on this approach by and large use
whole cells (for instance, dendritic cells fused
with tumor cells, altered to produce stimulatory
cytokines, or infected with virus carrying genes
for antigens). Intact cells require very careful
handling. Their sterility is difficult to ensure,
which poses a regulatory concern.
The second group consists of those inoculating
with specific antigens believed to be widely
shared among tumors of a particular type. A
problem with single antigens is that they tend
to differ from one tumor type to the next and
often researchers are learning to their chagrin,
that they also tend to differ within a given
'type.' Therefore, each indication requires
the identification of an effective new antigen.
Moreover, observes Parmiani, tumor
cells are constantly dividing and, therefore,
constantly mutating. Antigens may be eliminated
as the tumor grows, so an initially effective
vaccine wont work.
Attempts to find truly tumor-specific single antigens common to large numbers of patients have generally come to naught, says Srivastava. Those so occupied have usually had to content themselves with antigens that were not unique to, but merely overrepresented on, tumor cell surfaces. These antigens are more likely to be tissue- rather than strictly tumor-specific. Researchers thus have had to steer a middle course between the Scylla of side effects inherent in attacking innocent cells displaying diminutive quantities of these antigens and the Charybdis of immunotolerance.
Indeed, Srivastava believes that each tumors
in vivo immunogenicity may be inherently individualized.
This immunogenicity, he suspects, is attributable
to the idiosyncratic peptide products of random
mutations that inevitably arise in undisciplined
tumor cell populations. Of the myriad of other
antigenic components present on a cells
surface, even those drastically overrepresented
in cancer cells are likely to have been rendered
tolerogenic in early development. They may be
found at lower levels on healthy cells as well,
raising the possibility of side effects even
if an approach succeeds in overcoming that immunotolerance.
There exists a class of exceptions to the rule
that no single antigen a) is found on all tumors
of a given type, b) never appears on healthy
cells, and c) is nontolerogenic: antigens produced
by pathogens oncogenes. Because theyre
of foreign origin, they are capable of producing
a strong immune response. One of Antigenics
competitors has adopted a vaccination technique
that employs a bacterial HSP covalently linked
to a single antigen from a viral oncogene implicated
in cervical cancer. Early clinical trials indicate
some measure of success, although some researchers,
such as the Mayo Clinics Vile, wonder
whether serial injections of bacterial HSPs
— the amino acid sequences of which bear
similarities to those of mammals, but nonetheless
differ significantly — might themselves
trigger the formation of neutralizing antibodies
at levels that could interfere with the vaccine.
From Gene to Vaccine?
Not only viral oncogene products, but also viral antigens in general, have the potential to trigger an immune response when properly presented to APCs. This means HSPs ability to deliver antigens to APCs is not limited to tumor antigens, but applies to a wide assortment of infectious diseases. Intracellular pathogens in Antigenics sights include herpes simplex virus 2 (HSV-2), HIV and tuberculosis, all of which successfully evade immune detection once they secure an intracellular beachhead. Immunologists are increasingly convinced that immunotherapeutic jump-starting of the cell-mediated response is key to combating such chronic infections.
The US Food and Drug Administration has approved
clinical trials of an HSP complexed with a single,
defined HSV-2 antigen (or a select few of them),
and a Phase I trial is underway at the University
of Washington in Seattle. Some 45 million Americans
— a full 22 percent of the adult population
— are infected with HSV-2, says Larry Corey,
head of the University of Washingtons
virology division and director of the schools
herpes clinic, where the trial is taking place.
In this pilot study, investigators will be looking
to see if vaccination enhances the cellular
immune response that, Corey says may be
the most important element in controlling the
disease.
Most pathogens exhibit much less variation
than tumors and so dont need to be tailored
to individuals, notes Armen. That suggests
Antigenics could realize dramatic cost reductions
by brewing up large batches of virus —
for example, in an immortalized laboratory cell
line or in intact organs — and harvesting
the infected cells HSPs along with their
assemblages of bound pathogenic antigens.
Armen sketches an alternative scenario: In
the wake of the Human Genome Project there lies
a reserve army of surplus DNA sequencers. Some
of that apparatus, left idle by the winding
down of the program, could be easily diverted
to the full tilt sequencing of numerous pathogen
genomes. These could then be filtered
through computer algorithms predicting various
amino acid sequences ability to bind both
HSPs and common human MHC alleles. A manageable
number of such peptides, Armen suggests,
could be synthesized and bound in vitro
to HSPs, creating a multivalent vaccine that
was certifiably pure and quantitatively standardized.
This would alleviate potential regulatory worries,
if there were any, regarding the safety of extracts
from lab cell lines. Such a vaccines multivalent
character would nevertheless provide insurance
against a pathogens mutating into an escape
variant, says Armen, and should
one arise, youd just have to isolate the
HSP-peptide complexes, not characterize the
antigens.
To the extent that Antigenics is successful in teaming HSPs with single antigens (or small numbers of them) against invading pathogens to boost infected individuals immunity, Armen says, continuing advances in genomic sequencing that yield a better understanding of MHC variations among humans will increase that success rate by allowing for fine-tuning of antigen choices.
New Frontiers
Two separate developments have turned Antigenics
scientists attention toward yet another
disease category: autoimmunity. First is the
observation that big doses of HSP-peptide complexes
— five to 10 times the therapeutic amount
— downregulate the immune response to those
peptides. Srivastavas University of Connecticut
lab has had good results with this treatment
in animal models of diabetes and multiple sclerosis.
The second noteworthy development is the identification
and ongoing characterization of CD91, the HSP
receptor on antigen-presenting cells. Antigenics
has begun a screening program to systematically
search for small molecules that can modulate
the receptors responsiveness to HSP-induced
stimulation.
When Antigenics bought Aquila Biopharmaceuticals in 2000, it took ownership of seven corporate partnerships, a commercial feline leukemia vaccine and a general-purpose immunostimulatory compound, or adjuvant, that is far along in development. The adjuvant, QS-21, has been tested in more than 3,500 patients in over 50 clinical trials, and has shown to be more effective than alum (the only currently approved adjuvant) not only in inciting a cellular immune reaction but also in arousing the humoral branch of the immune system.
With the purchase of Aquila Biopharmaceuticals,
Antigenics also inherited a highly significant
additional piece of intellectual real estate
to which Aquila holds title: an APC surface-based
receptor called CD1. This receptor — actually
a family of proteins related to MHC molecules
— recognizes antigens that have lipid (fat-like),
as opposed to peptide, components. CD1 then
reacts by turning up the cellular response (on
the part of both classic T cells and a specialized,
immunoregulatory class of NK cell) to those
antigens. Research strongly suggests that theres
a place for CD1 modulation — and for a
major thrust in discovering whole new classes
of suitable lipid-containing antigens —
in fighting cancer, infectious disease and autoimmunity.
Antigenics acquisition of Aronex Pharmaceuticals in 2001 brought into the company two advanced, liposomal chemotherapeutics. The liposomal delivery system entraps drugs within shells of fat molecules, which could potentially increase distribution and duration of a medication within the body. The first liposomal product acquired in the merger is Aroplatin, a third-generation platinum agent that will enter Phase II research in 2002 in pancreatic and colorectal cancers. The second, ATRA-IV, is an intravenous formulation of an existing oral chemotherapy. Antigenics plans to test its liposomal formulation of ATRA, which is a form of vitamin A, in hematological malignancies in 2002.
While conventional drug discovery companies
try to make heads or tails out of the vast torrent
of new genomic information that has begun to
rain down upon them, Antigenics finds itself
in the enviable position of being able to skip
lightly around functional genomics, a discipline
of enormous potential that, however, promises
to be expensive, time-consuming and, at least
for a while, prone to missteps. In the short
run, Antigenics can bypass the characterization
of individual, relevant antigens and proceed
full speed ahead with its wholesale attack on
tumors. And in the long run, the company can
take on not only cancer but also infectious
disease and autoimmunity, using a variety of
disparate but complementary approaches that
will increasingly draw on the burgeoning of
detailed information about individual antigens
that genomic research will bring about. The
steady advance of its HSP-based vaccine through
clinical trials in a broad range of indications,
along with the synergies wrought by its acquisitions
of Aquila Biopharmaceuticals and Aronex Pharmaceuticals,
suggests that Antigenics will be launching a
sustained volley of products in high stakes
arenas in the years ahead.
Bruce Goldman is a freelance scientific writer who lives in San Francisco.
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