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Antengene Presents Four Posters at AACR 2025 Highlighting Focuses on AnTenGagerTM TCEs and Synthetic Lethality

In This Article:

SHANGHAI and HONG KONG, April 25, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Antengene Corporation Limited ("Antengene", SEHK: 6996.HK), a leading innovative, commercial-stage global biopharmaceutical company dedicated to discovering, developing and commercializing first-in-class and/or best-in-class medicines for hematologic malignancies and solid tumors, today announced that it has released results from four preclinical studies in poster presentations at the 2025 American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting (AACR 2025). These four posters feature Antengene's four highly differentiated and high-potential programs, including ATG-201 (CD19 x CD3 TCE) and ATG-042 (MTAPnull-selective PRMT5 Inhibitor), which are poised to enter clinical development in the second half of 2025; ATG-110 (LY6G6D x CD3 TCE), which was developed on the AnTenGagerTM TCE 2.0 platform for the treatment of microsatellite stable colorectal cancer; and a companion diagnostic antibody developed to assess CD24 expression and guide clinical studies of CD24-targeted therapies.

Logo (PRNewsfoto/Antengene Corporation Limited)
Logo (PRNewsfoto/Antengene Corporation Limited)

Details of the Poster Presentations:
ATG-201 (CD19 x CD3 T cell engager)
Title: ATG-201, a novel T-cell engager (TCE) effectively depletes B cells with reduced risk of CRS for the treatment of B cell malignancies and B cell related autoimmune diseases
Abstract Number: 7326
Session Category: Immunology
Session Title: T Cell Engagers and Novel Antibody-Based Therapies
Date: April 30, 2025
Time: 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM (Central Time)
          10:00 PM, April 30, 2025 - 1:00 AM, May 1, 2025 (Beijing Time)
Location: Poster Section 40
•   Introduction: By depleting autoreactive B cells, CD19-targeted CAR-T have shown early yet promising efficacy in treating patients with B cell-driven autoimmune diseases. However, the clinical application of TCE continues to be greatly hindered by the unfavorable pharmacokinetics and toxicity associated with cytokine release syndrome. To overcome these limitations, Antengene developed ATG-201, a "2+1" CD19 x CD3 TCE, which was evaluated in a series of in vitro studies for binding affinity, T cell dependent cytotoxicity (TDCC) cytokine release, and drug developability. The in vivo anti-lymphoma efficacy and pharmacodynamic effect were evaluated in Raji xenograft model. The tissue resident B cell depletion was assessed in CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells humanized mice. Pharmacokinetic parameters of ATG-201 were evaluated in normal Balb/c mice.
•   Results: ATG-201 demonstrated high affinity binding to CD19, limited T cell binding before CD19 crosslinking, highly potent CD19-dependent T cell cytotoxicity against CD19+ B cells, as well as enhanced naïve B cell depletion with reduced cytokine release compared to clinical benchmarks. In lymphoma models, the study observed potent in vivo efficacy with reduced cytokine release. In CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells humanized mice, ATG-201 was able to induce complete B cell depletion with reduced cytokine release. ATG-201 has a mAb-like pharmacokinetic profile in wild type mice and good drug developability. Moreover, surrogate CD19 x CD3 AnTenGager TCE displayed potent efficacy in MRL/lpr spontaneous systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) mouse models and MOG-Induced EAE models.
•   Conclusions: ATG-201 demonstrated CD19-dependent CD3 binding and activation, inducing effective B cell depletion in vitro and in vivo with low cytokine release, which provides potential for the treatment of B cell malignancies and B cell related autoimmune diseases. ATG-201 is poised to enter clinical development in the second half of 2025.