Cancer kills millions of people every year and is one of humanity’s greatest health challenges. By stimulating the inherent ability of our immune system to attack tumor cells 2018 Nobel Laureates James P. Allison and Tasuku Honjo have established an entirely new principle for cancer therapy.
James P. Allison studied a known protein that
functions as a brake on the immune system. He realized the potential of
releasing the brake and thereby unleashing our immune cells to attack tumors.
He then developed this concept into a brand new approach for treating patients.
In parallel, Tasuku Honjo discovered a
protein on immune cells and, after careful exploration of its function,
eventually revealed that it also operates as a brake, but with a different
mechanism of action. Therapies based on his discovery proved to be strikingly
effective in the fight against cancer.
Allison and Honjo showed how different
strategies for inhibiting the brakes on the immune system can be used in the
treatment of cancer. The seminal discoveries by the two Laureates constitute a
landmark in our fight against cancer.
Cancer
comprises many different diseases, all characterized by uncontrolled
proliferation of abnormal cells with capacity for spread to healthy organs and
tissues. A number of therapeutic approaches are available for cancer treatment,
including surgery, radiation, and other strategies, some of which have been
awarded previous Nobel Prizes. These include methods for hormone treatment for
prostate cancer (Huggins, 1966), chemotherapy (Elion and Hitchings, 1988), and
bone marrow transplantation for leukemia (Thomas 1990). However, advanced
cancer remains immensely difficult to treat, and novel therapeutic strategies
are desperately needed.
In the late 19th century and beginning of the
20th century the concept emerged that activation of the immune system might be
a strategy for attacking tumor cells. Attempts were made to infect patients
with bacteria to activate the defense. These efforts only had modest effects,
but a variant of this strategy is used today in the treatment of bladder
cancer. It was realized that more knowledge was needed. Many scientists engaged
in intense basic research and uncovered fundamental mechanisms regulating
immunity and also showed how the immune system can recognize cancer cells.
Despite remarkable scientific progress, attempts to develop generalizable new
strategies against cancer proved difficult.
Accelerators
and brakes in our immune system
The
fundamental property of our immune system is the ability to discriminate “self”
from “non-self” so that invading bacteria, viruses and other dangers can be
attacked and eliminated. T cells, a type of white blood cell, are key players
in this defense. T cells were shown to have receptors that bind to structures
recognized as non-self and such interactions trigger the immune system to
engage in defense. But additional proteins acting as T-cell accelerators are
also required to trigger a full-blown immune response. Many scientists
contributed to this important basic research and identified other proteins that
function as brakes on the T cells, inhibiting immune activation. This intricate
balance between accelerators and brakes is essential for tight control. It
ensures that the immune system is sufficiently engaged in attack against
foreign microorganisms while avoiding the excessive activation that can lead to
autoimmune destruction of healthy cells and tissues.
A
new principle for immune therapy
During
the 1990s, in his laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley, James
P. Allison studied the T-cell protein CTLA-4. He was one of several scientists
who had made the observation that CTLA-4 functions as a brake on T cells. Other
research teams exploited the mechanism as a target in the treatment of
autoimmune disease. Allison, however, had an entirely different idea. He had
already developed an antibody that could bind to CTLA-4 and block its function .
He now set out to investigate if CTLA-4 blockade could disengage the T-cell
brake and unleash the immune system to attack cancer cells.
The results were spectacular.
Mice with cancer had been cured by treatment with the antibodies that inhibit
the brake and unlock antitumor T-cell activity. Despite little interest from
the pharmaceutical industry, Allison continued his intense efforts to develop
the strategy into a therapy for humans. Promising results soon emerged from
several groups, and in 2010 an important clinical study showed striking effects
in patients with advanced melanoma, a type of skin cancer. In several patients
signs of remaining cancer disappeared. Such remarkable results had never been
seen before in this patient group.
Discovery
of PD-1 and its importance for cancer therapy
In
1992, a few years before Allison’s discovery, Tasuku Honjo discovered PD-1,
another protein expressed on the surface of T-cells. Determined to unravel its
role, he meticulously explored its function in a series of elegant experiments
performed over many years in his laboratory at Kyoto University. The results
showed that PD-1, similar to CTLA-4, functions as a T-cell brake, but operates
by a different mechanism. In animal experiments, PD-1 blockade was also shown
to be a promising strategy in the fight against cancer, as demonstrated by
Honjo and other groups. This paved the way for utilizing PD-1 as a target in
the treatment of patients. Clinical development ensued, and in 2012 a key study
demonstrated clear efficacy in the treatment of patients with different types
of cancer. Results were dramatic, leading to long-term remission and possible
cure in several patients with metastatic cancer, a condition that had
previously been considered essentially untreatable.
Immune
checkpoint therapy for cancer today and in the future
After
the initial studies showing the effects of CTLA-4 and PD-1 blockade, the
clinical development has been dramatic. We now know that the treatment, often
referred to as “immune checkpoint therapy”, has fundamentally changed the
outcome for certain groups of patients with advanced cancer. Similar to other
cancer therapies, adverse side effects are seen, which can be serious and even
life threatening. They are caused by an overactive immune response leading to
autoimmune reactions, but are usually manageable. Intense continuing research
is focused on elucidating mechanisms of action, with the aim of improving
therapies and reducing side effects.
Of
the two treatment strategies, checkpoint therapy against PD-1 has proven more
effective and positive results are being observed in several types of cancer,
including lung cancer, renal cancer, lymphoma and melanoma. New clinical
studies indicate that combination therapy, targeting both CTLA-4 and PD-1, can
be even more effective, as demonstrated in patients with melanoma. Thus,
Allison and Honjo have inspired efforts to combine different strategies to
release the brakes on the immune system with the aim of eliminating tumor cells
even more efficiently. A large number of checkpoint therapy trials are
currently underway against most types of cancer, and new checkpoint proteins
are being tested as targets.
Figure: Upper left: Activation of T cells
requires that the T-cell receptor binds to structures on other immune cells
recognized as ”non-self”. A protein functioning as a T-cell accelerator is also
required for T cell activation. CTLA- 4 functions as a brake on T cells that
inhibits the function of the accelerator. Lower left: Antibodies (green) against CTLA-4 block the function of the
brake leading to activation of T cells and attack on cancer cells.Upper
right: PD-1 is another T-cell brake that inhibits T-cell activation. Lower right: Antibodies against PD-1 inhibit the function of the brake
leading to activation of T cells and highly efficient attack on cancer cells.
James P. Allison was born
1948 in Alice, Texas, USA. He received his PhD in 1973 at the University of
Texas, Austin. From 1974-1977 he was a postdoctoral fellow at the Scripps
Clinic and Research Foundation, La Jolla, California. From 1977-1984 he was a
faculty member at University of Texas System Cancer Center, Smithville, Texas;
from 1985-2004 at University of California, Berkeley and from 2004-2012 at
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York. From 1997-2012 he was an
Investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Since 2012 he has been
Professor at University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas and
is affiliated with the Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy.
Tasuku Honjo was born in
1942 in Kyoto, Japan. In 1966 he became an MD, and from 1971-1974 he was a
research fellow in USA at Carnegie Institution of Washington, Baltimore and at
the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland. He received his PhD in
1975 at Kyoto University. From 1974-1979 he was a faculty member at Tokyo
University and from 1979-1984 at Osaka University. Since 1984 he has been
Professor at Kyoto University. He was a Faculty Dean from 1996-2000 and from
2002-2004 at Kyoto University.