Structure-guided engineering of CD112 receptor variants for optimized immunotherapy

  • Srishti Singh
  • , Estefania Julia
  • , Parismita Kalita
  • , Charlotte Mason
  • , Qianqian Ming
  • , Ansar Lee-Sam
  • , Sumai Gordon
  • , Maria Emilia Buitrago
  • , Daisy W. Leung
  • , Patrick Hwu
  • , Vincent C. Luca

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The immune checkpoint protein, CD112 receptor (CD112R, also known as PVRIG), suppresses T and natural killer (NK) cell activation upon binding to tumor-expressed CD112 (Nectin-2) ligands. Here, we determine the structure of the CD112-CD112R complex and use it to guide the engineering of multiple CD112-targeting immunotherapy candidates. The 2.2 Å-resolution crystal structure reveals an antiparallel, lock-and-key binding mode in which CD112R disrupts CD112 homodimerization. Structural analysis informed directed evolution campaigns focused on remodeling the CD112-CD112R interface, resulting in the isolation of CD112R mutants with greatly increased expression and CD112-binding affinity. The highest-affinity variant, CD112RIVE, potently inhibits CD112-CD112R interactions when utilized as a soluble CD112 trap. Furthermore, incorporating CD112R variants into chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) and T cell engagers (TCEs) leads to more robust T cell activation and killing of CD112+ triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) cells compared with wild-type CD112R. This strategy demonstrates how structural insights can be leveraged to efficiently generate panels of “affinity-tuned” biologics for immunotherapy.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3590-3604
Number of pages15
JournalMolecular Therapy
Volume33
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 6 2025

Keywords

  • CAR T cells
  • CD112
  • CD112R
  • T cell engagers
  • checkpoint blockade
  • immunotherapy
  • protein engineering
  • structural biology

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