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[Cancer Research 65, 1514-1522, February 15, 2005]
© 2005 American Association for Cancer Research


Experimental Therapeutics, Molecular Targets and Chemical Biology

Inhibitory Anti-FLT3 Antibodies Are Capable of Mediating Antibody-Dependent Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity and Reducing Engraftment of Acute Myelogenous Leukemia Blasts in Nonobese Diabetic/Severe Combined Immunodeficient Mice

Obdulio Piloto1, Mark Levis1, David Huso2, Yiwen Li3, Hongli Li3, Mei-Nai Wang3, Rajiv Bassi3, Paul Balderes3, Dale L. Ludwig3, Larry Witte3, Zhenping Zhu3, Daniel J. Hicklin3 and Donald Small1

1 Department of Oncology and 2 Comparative Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland and 3 ImClone Systems Incorporated, New York, New York

Requests for reprints: Obdulio Piloto, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 1650 Orleans Street, CRB 276, Baltimore, MD 21231. Phone: 410-955-1554; Fax: 410-955-8897; E-mail: opiloto1{at}jhmi.edu.

Aberrant FLT3 expression and/or mutation plays a significant role in leukemogenesis. This has prompted the development of selective small molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors against FLT3. However, like most tyrosine kinase inhibitors, those against FLT3 are not completely specific and at the doses required to completely inhibit target, significant toxicities may occur. In addition, tyrosine kinase inhibitors for other kinases have been shown to select for cells that become resistant. To overcome some of these limitations we developed two fully human phage display monoclonal antibodies against FLT3 (IMC-EB10 and IMC-NC7). These antibodies inhibited ligand-mediated activation of wild-type FLT3 and constitutively activated mutant FLT3 and in most cell types affected downstream STAT5, AKT, and mitogen-activated protein kinase activation. In addition to interfering with FLT3 signaling, IMC-EB10 and, to a significantly lesser extent, IMC-NC7 initiated antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity on FLT3-expressing cells. When IMC-EB10 was used in vivo to treat nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficient mice given injections of primary FLT3/ITD acute myelogenous leukemia samples or myeloid cell lines with FLT3 expression, it significantly decreased engraftment of leukemic cells and increased survival, respectively. In contrast, IMC-EB10 treatment did not reduce engraftment of normal human CD34+ cord blood cells nor did it show any significant inhibition of normal murine hematopoiesis. Thus, these types of antibodies have the potential to be safe and effective new therapeutic agents for acute myelogenous leukemia and possibly other FLT3-expressing malignancies.

Key Words: FLT3 • AML • antibody • targeted therapy • signal transduction




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Copyright © 2005 by the American Association for Cancer Research.