scholarly journals Adjuvant IL-7 potentiates adoptive T cell therapy by amplifying and sustaining polyfunctional antitumor CD4+ T cells

2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhi-Chun Ding ◽  
Tsadik Habtetsion ◽  
Yang Cao ◽  
Tao Li ◽  
Chufeng Liu ◽  
...  
Leukemia ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed-Reda Benmebarek ◽  
Bruno L. Cadilha ◽  
Monika Herrmann ◽  
Stefanie Lesch ◽  
Saskia Schmitt ◽  
...  

AbstractTargeted T cell therapy is highly effective in disease settings where tumor antigens are uniformly expressed on malignant cells and where off-tumor on-target-associated toxicity is manageable. Although acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has in principle been shown to be a T cell-sensitive disease by the graft-versus-leukemia activity of allogeneic stem cell transplantation, T cell therapy has so far failed in this setting. This is largely due to the lack of target structures both sufficiently selective and uniformly expressed on AML, causing unacceptable myeloid cell toxicity. To address this, we developed a modular and controllable MHC-unrestricted adoptive T cell therapy platform tailored to AML. This platform combines synthetic agonistic receptor (SAR) -transduced T cells with AML-targeting tandem single chain variable fragment (scFv) constructs. Construct exchange allows SAR T cells to be redirected toward alternative targets, a process enabled by the short half-life and controllability of these antibody fragments. Combining SAR-transduced T cells with the scFv constructs resulted in selective killing of CD33+ and CD123+ AML cell lines, as well as of patient-derived AML blasts. Durable responses and persistence of SAR-transduced T cells could also be demonstrated in AML xenograft models. Together these results warrant further translation of this novel platform for AML treatment.


Author(s):  
Johan Verhagen ◽  
Edith Van der Meijden ◽  
Vanessa Lang ◽  
Andreas Kremer ◽  
Simon Völkl ◽  
...  

Since December 2019, Coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) has spread rapidly across the world, leading to a global effort to develop vaccines and treatments. Despite extensive progress, there remains a need for treatments to bolster the immune responses in infected immunocompromised individuals, such as cancer patients who recently underwent a haematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Immunological protection against COVID-19 is mediated by both short-lived neutralising antibodies and long-lasting virus-reactive T cells. Therefore, we propose that T cell therapy may augment efficacy of current treatments. For the greatest efficacy with minimal adverse effects, it is important that any cellular therapy is designed to be as specific and directed as possible. Here, we identify T cells from COVID-19 patients with a potentially protective response to two major antigens of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, Spike and Nucleocapsid protein. By generating clones of highly virus-reactive CD4+ T cells, we were able to confirm a set of 9 immunodominant epitopes and characterise T cell responses against these. Accordingly, the sensitivity of T cell clones for their specific epitope, as well as the extent and focus of their cytokine response was examined. Moreover, by using an advanced T cell receptor (TCR) sequencing approach, we determined the paired TCR sequences of clones of interest. While these data on a limited population require further expansion for universal application, the results presented here form a crucial first step towards TCR-transgenic CD4+ T cell therapy of COVID-19.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristin G. Anderson ◽  
Shannon K. Oda ◽  
Breanna M. Bates ◽  
Madison G. Burnett ◽  
Magdalia Rodgers Suarez ◽  
...  

Background: In the U.S., more than 50% of ovarian cancer patients die within 5 years of diagnosis, highlighting the need for innovations such as engineered T cell therapies. Mesothelin (Msln) is an attractive immunotherapy target for this cancer, as it is overexpressed by the tumor and contributes to malignant and invasive phenotypes, making antigen loss disadvantageous to the tumor. We previously showed that adoptively transferred T cells engineered to be Msln-specific (TCR1045) preferentially accumulate within established ovarian tumors, delay tumor growth and significantly prolong survival in the ID8VEGF mouse model. However, T cell persistence and anti-tumor activity were not sustained, and we and others have previously detected FasL in the tumor vasculature and the tumor microenvironment (TME) of human and murine ovarian cancers, which can induce apoptosis in infiltrating lymphocytes expressing Fas receptor (Fas). Methods: To concurrently overcome this mechanism for potential immune evasion and enhance T cell responses, we generated an immunomodulatory fusion protein (IFP) containing the Fas extracellular binding domain fused to a 4-1BB co-stimulatory domain, rather than the natural death domain. T cells engineered to express TCR1045 alone or in combination with the IFP were transferred into ID8VEGF-tumor bearing mice and evaluated for persistence, proliferation, anti-tumor cytokine production, and therapeutic efficacy. Results: Relative to T cells modified only to express TCR1045, T cells engineered to express both TCR1045 and a Fas IFP preferentially persisted in the TME of tumor-bearing mice due to improved T cell proliferation and survival. Moreover, adoptive immunotherapy with IFP+ T cells significantly prolonged survival in tumor-bearing mice, relative to TCR1045 T cells lacking the IFP. Conclusions: Fas/FasL signaling can mediate T cell death in the ovarian cancer microenvironment, as well as induce activation-induced cell death, an apoptotic mechanism responsible for regulating T cell expansion. Upregulation of FasL by tumor cells and tumor vasculature represents a mechanism for protecting growing tumors from attack by tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes. As many solid tumors overexpress FasL, an IFP that converts the Fas-mediated death signal into pro-survival and proliferative signals may provide an opportunity to enhance engineered adoptive T cell therapy against many malignancies.


2019 ◽  
Vol 70 (1) ◽  
pp. e456
Author(s):  
Sophia Schreiber ◽  
Melanie Honz ◽  
Matthias Schiemann ◽  
Christina Zielinski ◽  
Ulrike Protzer ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Patrick A. Ott ◽  
Gianpietro Dotti ◽  
Cassian Yee ◽  
Stephanie L. Goff

Adoptive T-cell therapy using tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) has demonstrated long-lasting antitumor activity in select patients with advanced melanoma. Cancer vaccines have been used for many decades and have shown some promise but overall relatively modest clinical activity across cancers. Technological advances in genome sequencing capabilities and T-cell engineering have had substantial impact on both adoptive cell therapy and the cancer vaccine field. The ability to identify neoantigens—a class of tumor antigens that is truly tumor specific and encoded by tumor mutations through rapid and relatively inexpensive next-generation sequencing—has already demonstrated the critical importance of these antigens as targets of antitumor-specific T-cell responses in the context of immune checkpoint blockade and other immunotherapies. Therapeutically targeting these antigens with either adoptive T-cell therapy or vaccine approaches has demonstrated early promise in the clinic in patients with advanced solid tumors. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells, which are engineered by fusing an antigen-specific, single-chain antibody (scFv) with signaling molecules of the T-cell receptor (TCR)/CD3 complex creating an antibody-like structure on T cells that recognizes antigens independently of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules, have demonstrated remarkable clinical activity in patients with advanced B-cell malignancies, leading to several approvals by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 206-206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonja Schmucker ◽  
Mario Assenmacher ◽  
Jurgen Schmitz ◽  
Anne Richter

Abstract Adoptive transfer of virus-specific T cells is a promising therapy for the treatment of infections in immunocompromised patients. Virus-specific T cells can readily be obtained from antigen-experienced, but not naïve donors. In this study we describe a cell culture system for the in vitro generation of CMV-specific T cells from naive T cells derived from CMV-seronegative donors. We isolated naïve T cells by magnetic depletion of non-T cells, CD25+ regulatory T cells, and CD45RO+ effector and memory T cells from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of CMV-seronegative donors. These naïve T cells were co-cultured with autologous mature monocyte-derived DC (MoDC) loaded with a pool of overlapping peptides from the CMV protein pp65. CD3-depleted autologous PBMC were used as feeder cells and CD28 antibody, IL-2, IL-7, and IL-15 were added to the culture. Already only 9–13 days after starting the priming culture, frequencies of 0.0024% and 0.009% pp65495–503/A2-tetramer+ cells among CD8+ T cells were found for 2 HLA-A2+ blood donors. In contrast pp65495–503/A2-tetramer+ T cells were not detectable when naive T cells were cultured with unpulsed MoDC. Tetramers are suitable tools for the identification of antigen-specific T cells but are restricted to single epitopes of mainly CD8+ T cells. To analyze primed CD4+ T cells as well as CD8+ T cells having specificities other than for the peptide pp65495–503, we looked for upregulation of the activation marker CD137 after a second stimulation and found increased frequencies of CD137+ CD4+ T cells as well as CD137+ CD8+ T cells in the pp65-primed cell cultures only when restimulated with the peptide pool of pp65. Because IFN-γ is important for the control of CMV infection, we studied the capability of the in vitro primed pp65-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells to produce this cytokine. Restimulation of the T cells with pp65 peptide pool induced IFN-γ secretion in up to 3.9% of the CD8+ T cells and up to 3.8% of the CD4+ T cells in each of six donors tested. No specific IFN-γ production was detected after restimulation with an irrelevant IE-1 peptide pool. As expected the frequency of pp65-specific T cells in the priming cultures is low. For generation of T cell lines, we magnetically enrich pp65- specific T cells according to their IFN-γ secretion using the cytokine secretion assay technology. After further cultivation for 2 weeks the antigen-specificity of the expanded T cells was again evaluated. Only if restimulated with the pp65 peptide pool 56.6% of the CD4+ T cells showed upregulated expression of the activation marker CD154 (CD40L). Cytokine analysis of the cells revealed IFN-γ production in 40.2% of the CD4+ T cells, of which 36% co-expressed IL-2, indicating the functionality of the in vitro primed and expanded T cells. In conclusion, we established a cell culture system for in vitro priming of CMV-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells derived from peripheral blood of donors not infected by CMV. This should extend the application of adoptive T cell therapy to patients for whom immune donors are not available.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. SCI-39-SCI-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanley Riddell ◽  
Cameron Turtle ◽  
Michael Hudecek ◽  
Daniel Sommermeyer ◽  
Michael C. Jensen

Abstract Adoptive T-cell therapy with tumor-reactive T cells is emerging as a highly effective strategy for eliminating even the most advanced chemotherapy refractory malignancies. Endogenous T cells specific for tumor-associated antigens can sometimes be isolated and expanded from the patient’s blood or tumor infiltrate, or more expeditiously can be engineered by gene transfer to express a T-cell receptor specific for a tumor associated MHC/peptide complex or a synthetic chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) specific for a tumor associated cell surface molecule. The remarkable regression of advanced acute lymphocytic leukemia and lymphoma in patients treated with T cells engineered to express CD19-specific CARs illustrates the potential for this approach to transform clinical care. Therapeutic activity is variable in individual patients, however, and this appears to correlate with the ability of transferred, tumor-reactive T cells to persist and proliferate in vivo, and to retain effector function. These attributes may reflect both the qualities of the T cells that are isolated or engineered for therapy, and the local tumor microenvironment that may contain regulatory T cells; cells that express ligands that engage inhibitor receptors on effector T cells or cytokines that inhibit effector T-cell proliferation. The CD4+ and CD8+ T cell pools in normal individuals contain a variety of naïve, memory, and regulatory T-cell subsets that differ in epigenetic, transcriptional, and functional properties. Because most clinical protocols have used polyclonal peripheral blood mononuclear cells as recipients for CAR gene transfer, the composition of T-cell products that are being administered is highly variable, particularly when the T cells are obtained from cancer patients that have received prior cytotoxic chemotherapy that can skew the phenotypic composition of the peripheral T-cell pool. As a consequence, transferring tumor-targeting receptors into polyclonal unselected cell populations provides poor control over the cellular composition of the final T-cell product, which may in part explain the marked differences in efficacy and toxicity that have been observed in the clinic, and may complicate regulatory approval of these novel therapies. Methods to derive T cells from distinct naïve and memory T-cell subsets have been developed, enabling the rapid production of therapeutic T cells of uniform composition. The results of preclinical studies that illustrate the improved potency of defined T-cell products that are engineered with tumor-specific CARs, and the clinical implementation of this approach in B-cell malignancies will be presented. Disclosures: Riddell: Cell Medica: Consultancy, Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; ZetaRx: Consultancy.


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