1. Introduction
Immune surveillance is a biological process in which the host identifies and targets cells presenting foreign antigens for destruction whilst restricting reactivity against self-antigens to avoid potentially destructive autoimmunity [
1]. In the context of malignant diseases, chronic antigen stimulation in the absence of T-cell co-stimulation may lead to a state of T-cell exhaustion, allowing unchecked tumor progression. In this sense, the complex communication established between cancer and immune cells, which are part of the tumor microenvironment (TME), is highly relevant for tumor cell expansion. The dual opposing role of the immune system, that is, host protection versus tumor promotion, may lead to the inhibition or promotion of tumor growth by shaping tumor immunogenicity or by the inhibition of the protective antitumor responses, respectively [
2]. These apparent paradoxical functions of the immune system reveal that cancer immune surveillance is only a part of the function of immunity, known as cancer immunoediting, which is described as a dynamic process whereby the immune system not only protects the host against cancer development but also defines the character of emerging tumors [
3]. Cancer immunoediting comprises three steps: elimination of altered cells, also known as protection or cancer immunosurveillance; equilibrium of regulatory and effector immune cells; and escape that leads to tumor growth. Equilibrium phase results in the immune system’s elimination of the transformed cells as fast as they grow. On the contrary, the evasion phase induces the evasion of cancer cells to control by the immune system due to the ability of TME to hijack these effector cells [
3]. Consequently, escape from immune control is now recognized to be one of the ‘Hallmarks of Cancer’ [
4,
5].
In this context, it is clear that communication networks between immune and cancer cells, sculpted by the immunoediting tumor microenvironment, contribute to malignant progression. Immune regulatory checkpoints, such as PD-1/PD-L1 or OX-40/OX-40L, and soluble leverage factors, such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), IL-6, TGF-β, or TNF-a perform crucial roles in these immunosuppressive networks thus causing unsatisfactory clinical responses in immunotherapy of advanced cancer. It is, therefore, imperative to not only search for new agents that can help to overcome the interaction between tumors and the immune system but also determine their impact on the immune cells within the TME [
6].
Over the last decade, there has been remarkable progress in developing more effective therapies targeting tumor cells and the tumor microenvironment (TME). Among the most successful of these innovative immunotherapies are inhibitors of immune regulatory checkpoints, such as those that target the PD-1/PD-L1 axis. Pembrolizumab (Keytruda
®), an anti-PD-1 antibody, is a clinically used antibody designed to reinvigorate cytotoxic CD8+ T-cell responses by blocking the interaction between PD-L1/2 and PD-1, enabling CD8+ T-cells cells to recognize and kill cancer cells. The concentration of PD-L1 ligand in cancer cells can be higher than 90% than in healthy ones, making it a highly targetable protein. Immunologic drugs, such as pembrolizumab, have been used to treat many types of cancer, driving, in some cases, advanced diseases into remission, although, unfortunately, they are only effective in a low proportion of treated patients. For example, success rates in the treatment of renal cell carcinoma are between 20% and 30% [
7]. Therefore, challenges remain.
The overexpression of the soluble pro-angiogenic vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF-A) and vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2 (VEGFR-2) activation drive abnormal angiogenesis. Anti-angiogenic therapies, based on the administration of small non-peptidyl molecules, such as sorafenib or sunitinib, have been used in clinics for two decades. Tumor angiogenesis leads to abnormal vessel formation that promotes immune evasion, and it has been recently demonstrated that the combination of anti-PD-1/PD-L1 based immunotherapy and antiangiogenic treatment by using (VEGFR-2) inhibitors results in intra-tumor immune modulation and enhances the anti-tumor efficacy of PD-1/PD-L1 blockade [
6].
Next-generation cancer immunotherapies are designed to broaden the therapeutic repertoire by targeting alternative immune inhibitory checkpoint receptors such as lymphocyte-activation gene-3 (LAG-3) [
8] and T cell immunoglobulin and mucin-domain containing-3 (TIM-3) [
9] to reinvigorate T-cell responses. Contrary to immune inhibitory checkpoints, T cell co-stimulatory molecules, such as CD69 [
10] or OX-40 [
11], have also attracted broad interest because they are induced following TCR engagement, and they are involved in T-cell activation and inhibition of tumor progression [
12].
Despite this progress, many questions about the immuno-modulatory roles of TCRs in T cell function remain unanswered and little is known about the mechanisms by which these receptors mediate their inhibitory or stimulatory actions. What is clear is that signaling pathways initiated by these are necessary for effective responses to any kind of pathogen or tumor cell. The interaction between the T-cell receptor (TCR) and major histocompatibility complex proteins (MHC) dictates these responses. Since the TCR has no enzymatic profile, a pool of tyrosine kinases is required to initiate the downstream signaling cascade leading to cytokine production and differentiation in T cells. For example, LCK and Fyn are the most proximal cytoplasmic signaling molecules to be recruited by the T-cell receptor [
13]. In the case of LCK, its activation downstream of the TCR leads to phosphorylation cascades, including other tyrosine kinases, such as ZAP70 and LAT [
14]. Loss or inhibition of one of these disrupts TCR signaling and blocks the T cell response. These tyrosine kinases are also promising therapeutic targets [
10] and have been just considered for the development of new cancer immunotherapies. For example, Dasatinib, an oral small molecule inhibitor of Abl and Src family tyrosine kinases (SFK), with a potent ability to inhibit LCK activity, inhibits TCR-mediated signal transduction, cellular proliferation, cytokine production, and in vivo T-cell responses and, so, is considered a potential immunomodulator agent [
15].
The main goal of the research we present here is the development of molecules capable of simultaneously inhibiting PD-L1 and VEGFR-2 and their effect on immune cells by assessing the expression of co-inhibitory and co-stimulatory T-cell receptors (PD-1, TIM-3, LAG-3, CD69, and Ox-40).
Over the last five years, our research has focused on the screening of compounds capable of simultaneously blocking biological targets of special relevance, not only in the cancerous process but also in the maintenance of the tumor microenvironment (TME) [
16].
By means of targeting studies on VEGF/VEGFR-2 and PD-L1, we are widening the range of new scaffolds available for drug discovery in the context of anticancer immunotherapies. The halophenyl urea unit is one of these scaffolds leading to promising small molecule immunomodulator agents due to their multitarget action [
17,
18,
19]. For the designing of the structures, we took into account both the results obtained in our previous studies, describing the action of several sets of aryl urea derivatives U-1 and U-2 bearing a styryl moiety (see
Figure 1), and the structures of small molecule PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors, described in the literature, ones bearing a urea unit, which were developed by Aurigene, [
20], and others bearing a biphenyl unit linked to a further aromatic ring through a benzyl ether bond, developed by Bristol-Meyers-Squibbs (see as an example structure of BMS-8 in
Figure 1) [
21]. Based on this information, we developed new derivatives, generically labeled as U-3 in
Figure 1, bearing an aryl urea moiety connected to another aromatic group by a flexible chain through the intermediacy of an ether functionality.
Previous docking studies [
17] allowed us to determine that the binding sites between these proposed substrates bearing a pseudo-styryl aryl urea unit are the same as those found for the developed by Bristol-Meyers-Squibb. Thus, these compounds are introduced into a hydrophobic groove formed by the amino acids Tyr56, Met115, Ile116, Ala121, and Tyr123 and promote the dimerization of the PD-L1 protein so that the formation of the PD-1/PD-L1 complex is inhibited by a dual pathway: the inhibitors occupy part of the area involved in the PD-1/PD-L1 interaction and, at the same time, when the dimer is formed between two PD-L1 molecules, one of them has the opposite orientation to that required to interact with PD-1. Consequently, the interaction between PD-1 and PD-L1 is not possible. On the other side, the binding site in the kinase domain of VEGFR-2 also possesses a hydrophobic groove in which aromatic rings can be accommodated, and we determined that the proposed ureas mimicked the hydrogen bonds network shown by sorafenib [
18,
19]. Here, we present the synthesis and the biological validation of these new U-3 derivatives (see
Scheme 1 for specific structures), including their effect on immune cells.
3. Discussion
We have synthesized thirteen benzylethoxyaryl ureas and one benzylethoxyaryl carbamate to determine their capability as potential multitarget inhibitors of VEGFR-2 and PD-L1 proteins to overcome resistance phenomena offered by cancer.
In terms of their antiproliferative activity, the majority of the compounds were found to be selective towards cancer cells as their IC50 values and, what it is the same, their inhibitory effect on cell proliferation was significantly higher on the tested cancer cell lines HT-29, A-549, and MCF-7 than on non-tumor ones HEK-293 and endothelial and immune cells.
From the observations provided, it can be concluded that there is a relationship between the structure of the synthetic compounds and their antiproliferative activity because the carbamate and the p-substituted phenyl ureas are more active against cancer cells and exhibited the lowest IC50 values for cancer cell lines and the highest selectivity indexes. Indeed, based on these indexes, we selected four compounds for further biological studies: p-aryl urea-type compounds 2 (p-fluorophenyl urea), 8 (p-bromophenyl urea), 11 (p-methoxyphenyl urea), and carbamate 14.
From these further studies, we found that some of the selected compounds exhibited significant inhibitory effects on both PD-L1 and VEGFR-2 in cancer cell lines. In general, the compounds exhibited a more effective action in HT-29 than in A-549 or MCF-7, and compound 8 (p-bromophenyl urea) and carbamate 14 were the most active in HT-29 with almost 40% of inhibition on both targets. Moreover, both 8 and 14 exhibited good antiangiogenic properties as they both inhibited the formation of new microvessels on matrigel HMEC-1 cell cultures.
The selected compounds were also tested for their effect on cancer cell proliferation and immune cell viability in co-culture experiments using HT-29 and THP-1 cells. Ureas 2 and 11 were found to be the most active ones in inhibiting cancer cell viability with a very mild effect on immune cell viability. Furthermore, the compounds were tested for their effect on CD11b and CD80 expression in THP-1 cells co-cultured with HT-29. While none of the compounds affected CD80 expression, several of them, including ureas 2 and 11 and carbamate 14, were found to significantly reduce CD11b expression, which is a promising target for immune modulation in anti-cancer therapies.
Finally, the compounds were studied ex vivo to assess effects on the expression of T-cell co-inhibitory and co-stimulatory receptors, including LAG-3, TIM-3, PD-1, CD69, and OX-40, in cytotoxic CD8+ T cells (OT-1). Interestingly, most of the compounds promoted upregulation of both activation-induced inhibitory and stimulatory checkpoints, perhaps implying a state of enhanced activation. Indeed, upregulation of CD69 and OX-40 may enhance T cell activation and proliferation, both of which can be beneficial in cancer immunotherapy. Therefore, the synthetic compounds’ ability to upregulate CD69 and OX-40 in OT-1 cells is another promising finding. Moreover, although an elevated TIM-3 production could be associated with an exhausted immune system, an upregulation of TIM-3 in the absence of the inhibitory ligand may also be indicative of enhanced activation. Looking in further detail at the signaling cascade downstream of the TCR, we identified modulation of total and phosphorylated LCK, ZAP70, and LAT, further suggesting that these compounds are likely to impact signaling pathways critical for T-cell activation and function.
Collectively, these data suggest that the designed compounds have very good tumor selectivity indexes, and antiangiogenic properties, exhibit good inhibition of CD11b expression, and regulate pathways involved in CD8+ T-cell activity. These properties suggest that these compounds could be potentially useful in the development of new cancer immune treatments.