scholarly journals Bevacizumab-mediated tumor vasculature remodelling improves tumor infiltration and antitumor efficacy of GD2-CAR T cells in a human neuroblastoma preclinical model

2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. e1378843 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paola Bocca ◽  
Emma Di Carlo ◽  
Ignazio Caruana ◽  
Laura Emionite ◽  
Michele Cilli ◽  
...  
Cancers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 567 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susana Pascoal ◽  
Benjamin Salzer ◽  
Eva Scheuringer ◽  
Andrea Wenninger-Weinzierl ◽  
Caterina Sturtzel ◽  
...  

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have proven to be a powerful cellular therapy for B cell malignancies. Massive efforts are now being undertaken to reproduce the high efficacy of CAR T cells in the treatment of other malignancies. Here, predictive preclinical model systems are important, and the current gold standard for preclinical evaluation of CAR T cells are mouse xenografts. However, mouse xenograft assays are expensive and slow. Therefore, an additional vertebrate in vivo assay would be beneficial to bridge the gap from in vitro to mouse xenografts. Here, we present a novel assay based on embryonic zebrafish xenografts to investigate CAR T cell-mediated killing of human cancer cells. Using a CD19-specific CAR and Nalm-6 leukemia cells, we show that live observation of killing of Nalm-6 cells by CAR T cells is possible in zebrafish embryos. Furthermore, we applied Fiji macros enabling automated quantification of Nalm-6 cells and CAR T cells over time. In conclusion, we provide a proof-of-principle study that embryonic zebrafish xenografts can be used to investigate CAR T cell-mediated killing of tumor cells. This assay is cost-effective, fast, and offers live imaging possibilities to directly investigate CAR T cell migration, engagement, and killing of effector cells.


2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (23) ◽  
pp. 1900192 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qian Chen ◽  
Quanyin Hu ◽  
Elena Dukhovlinova ◽  
Guojun Chen ◽  
Sarah Ahn ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (23) ◽  
pp. 1970166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qian Chen ◽  
Quanyin Hu ◽  
Elena Dukhovlinova ◽  
Guojun Chen ◽  
Sarah Ahn ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi122-vi122
Author(s):  
Linchun Jin ◽  
Alicia Hou ◽  
Haipeng Tao ◽  
Aida Karachi ◽  
Meng Na ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Glioblastoma (GBM) is a refractory brain tumor that desperately needs new therapeutic interventions. Our group identified CD70 as a novel target of CAR-T therapy for this malignancy. We demonstrate that CD70 is overexpressed by low-/high-grade gliomas and associated with poor survival for patients; CD70 promotes CD8 specific cell death and tumor-associated macrophage infiltration in gliomas. The CD70 CAR (using CD27, a natural costimulatory receptor of T cells as an antigen-binding region) T cells can efficiently eradicate CD70 positive tumors in syngeneic and xenograft mouse models. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the properties of CD70 CAR-transduced T cells in GBM treatment. METHODS CD70 CAR or IL13Rα2 CAR was linked with fluorescent reporter gene EGFP, and cloned into a retroviral vector (pMSGV8). In vitro T cell culture and flow cytometry were used to evaluate the self-enrichment property and susceptibility to TCR stimulation of the CAR T cells. KI67, Bcl-2, CD70 gene expression was tested by qPCR to measure the proliferation/apoptosis properties of the CAR T cells. Cytokine profile was analyzed by ELISA. The anti-tumor response was evaluated using Xenograft mouse models. RESULTS Compared with IL13Rα2 CAR T cells, the frequency of CD70 CAR T cells was significantly increased 3 weeks post transduction, and approximately 100 to 150-fold CD70 CAR T cell expansion without additional stimuli was achieved in vitro. The expanded CD70 CAR T cells were mostly (up to 85%) CD8+ T cells three weeks post CAR transduction. Enhanced proliferative capacity and production of IL-2, IFN-γ, and TNF-α of the CD70 CAR-transduced T cells upon anti-CD3/CD28 stimulation were also revealed. Results from animal models show that the CD70 CAR T cells present superior in vivo persistence and antitumor efficacy. CONCLUSION We show the auto-stimulative property, as well as superior T cell function and antitumor efficacy of CD70 CAR T cells in GBM models.


Angiogenesis ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 473-475 ◽  
Author(s):  
Parvin Akbari ◽  
Elisabeth J. M. Huijbers ◽  
Maria Themeli ◽  
Arjan W. Griffioen ◽  
Judy R. van Beijnum

Abstract T cells armed with a chimeric antigen receptor, CAR T cells, have shown extraordinary activity against certain B lymphocyte malignancies, when targeted towards the CD19 B cell surface marker. These results have led to the regulatory approval of two CAR T cell approaches. Translation of this result to the solid tumor setting has been problematic until now. A number of differences between liquid and solid tumors are likely to cause this discrepancy. The main ones of these are undoubtedly the uncomplicated availability of the target cell within the blood compartment and the abundant expression of the target molecule on the cancerous cells in the case of hematological malignancies. Targets expressed by solid tumor cells are hard to engage due to the non-adhesive and abnormal vasculature, while conditions in the tumor microenvironment can be extremely immunosuppressive. Targets in the tumor vasculature are readily reachable by CAR T cells and reside outside the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. It is therefore hypothesized that targeting CAR T cells towards the tumor vasculature of solid tumors may share the excellent effects of CAR T cell therapy with that against hematological malignancies. A few reports have shown promising results. Suggestions are provided for further improvement.


Author(s):  
Parvez Vora ◽  
Chirayu Chokshi ◽  
Maleeha Qazi ◽  
Chitra Venugopal ◽  
Sujeivan Mahendram ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 192-192
Author(s):  
Adrienne H. Long ◽  
Rimas J. Orentas ◽  
Crystal L. Mackall

Abstract Introduction Chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) provide a promising new approach for the adoptive immunotherapy of cancer. Though impressive antitumor activity has been observed with some CAR T cells, other CAR T cells demonstrate poor antitumor efficacy in vivo despite high cytolytic capacity in vitro due to poor expansion and persistence. Whether exhaustion of CAR T cells mirrors exhaustion that occurs naturally in chronically stimulated human T cells has not yet been studied. Here, we report that expression of select CD28 containing CARs in normal human T cells rapidly induces an exhausted state characterized by high PD-1 expression, poor persistence and poor antitumor efficacy, whereas other CARs do not induce this phenotype. Results Human T cells were expanded with anti-CD3/CD28 beads, and then transduced with a second-generation (CD28-CD3ζ) disialoganglioside 2 (GD2) specific CAR or a second-generation (CD28-CD3ζ) CD19 specific CAR. By day 7 of in vitro expansion, GD2 CAR T cells developed a metabolism more highly dependent on glycolysis compared to CD19 CAR T cells or untransduced controls. Neither CAR population was exposed to antigen during this expansion period. Using a Seahorse Extracellular Flux Analyzer, the ratio of glycolysis to oxidative phosphorylation rates (ECAR:OCR ratio) of GD2 CAR T cells was found to be double that of CD19 CAR T cells or controls on day 7. The highly glycolytic metabolism of GD2 CAR T cells was associated with an exhausted phenotype. GD2 CAR T cells expressed higher levels of PD-1, TIM-3 and LAG-3, and transcription repressor BLIMP-1, compared to CD19 CAR T cells or untransduced controls. Additionally, GD2 CAR T cells were poor cytokine producers, generating <10x lower levels of IL2, TNFα and IFNγ than CD19 CAR T cells upon in vitro co-incubation with a GD2+CD19+ osteosarcoma line (143B-CD19), despite maintaining comparable in vitro cytolytic ability. GD2 CAR T cells showed poor in vitro expansion and increased rates of apoptosis compared to controls. GD2 CAR T cells also did not persist and did not mediate antitumor effects against GD2+CD19+ tumors in a murine xenograft model in vivo, whereas CD19 CAR T cells completely eradicated CD19+ tumors and persisted in both the spleen and tumor compartments. To rule out the possibility that diminished cytokine production and in vivo efficacy was related to antigen specific effects, T cells were co-transduced with both the GD2 and CD19 CARs. Though single-transduced CD19 CAR T cells show no signs of an altered metabolism or exhaustion and have strong antitumor efficacy, CD19 CAR T cells co-transduced with the GD2 CAR demonstrate an exhausted phenotype and diminished antitumor efficacy similar to that of single-transduced GD2 CAR T cells. Thus, expression of the GD2 CAR confers a dominant exhausted phenotype in T cells, and prevents otherwise efficacious CARs from mediating strong antitumor effects. We hypothesized that chronic signaling of CD3ζ and CD28 via the GD2 CAR results in exhaustion. Interestingly, however, we did not identify GD2 expression in the culture system. Point mutations in the CAR antigen-binding site, though abrogating GD2 binding, did not prevent the development of exhaustion. Thus, we postulate that constitutive receptor signaling may occur via interactions between the framework regions of the CAR receptors. Importantly however, substitution of 4-1BB for the CD28 domain in the GD2 CAR substantially diminished PD-1 expression, one of the hallmark features of exhausted T cells. Conclusions We report that expression of a CD28 containing GD2 CAR induces both an altered metabolism and an exhausted state in human T cells, resulting in poor in vivo persistence and antitumor efficacy. We hypothesize that tonic signaling through the GD2 CAR induces this phenotype and have identified the CD28 domain as an important component contributing to this phenotype. Rapid induction of exhaustion mediated via a synthetic receptor provides a novel model system to identify mechanistic factors required for this phenotype in human T cells. Work is currently underway to molecularly define the basis for the exhaustion of GD2 CAR T cells and to probe a potential role for altered T cell metabolism as a contributor to T cell exhaustion in human T cells. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Oladapo O. Yeku ◽  
Terence J. Purdon ◽  
Mythili Koneru ◽  
David Spriggs ◽  
Renier J. Brentjens

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