Realizing the potential of agonistic antibody immunotherapy
Summary
Agonistic antibodies mimic the activities of native ligands by initiating signalling by the receptors they target. As stimulators of immune-cell surface receptors, they offer the prospect of resetting immune responses in autoimmune conditions or initiating new or stronger reactions in contexts such as cancer immunotherapy. Despite these theoretical advantages and preclinical promise, the use of agonistic antibodies has so far delivered only limited benefit to patients. Recently, however, c
Content
# Realizing the potential of agonistic antibody immunotherapy
*Published: 2026 May 19*
Agonistic antibodies mimic the activities of native ligands by initiating
signalling by the receptors they target. As stimulators of immune-cell surface
receptors, they offer the prospect of resetting immune responses in autoimmune
conditions or initiating new or stronger reactions in contexts such as cancer
immunotherapy. Despite these theoretical advantages and preclinical promise, the
use of agonistic antibodies has so far delivered only limited benefit to
patients. Recently, however, considerable progress has been made in
understanding their mechanisms of action, which holds the key to engineering new
antibodies more likely to realize the clinical potential of this class of
biologics. Agonistic antibodies that target tumour necrosis factor receptor
(TNFR) superfamily proteins in the context of anti-cancer therapy have been a
major focus of these studies, but substantial progress has also been made in
understanding how antibodies and antibody-like molecules trigger signalling by
immune receptors and cytokine receptors, creating opportunities to treat
autoimmune disorders. Here, we summarize recent progress in understanding how
antibodies initiate receptor signalling. We also review the clinical landscape
for agonistic antibody-based immunotherapy and discuss how newly gained
mechanistic insights should broaden the clinical scope and improve the safety
and efficacy of the approach.
DOI: 10.1038/s41573-026-01442-2