scholarly journals Engineering T cells with hypoxia-inducible chimeric antigen receptor (HiCAR) for selective tumor killing

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Qibin Liao ◽  
Huan He ◽  
Yunyu Mao ◽  
Xiangqing Ding ◽  
Xiaoyan Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract Chimeric antigen receptor-modified T cells (CAR-T cells) have shown good effects in the treatment of hematologic cancers; however, they may cause on-target off-tumor toxicity because of minimal expression of tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) on normal tissues, particularly in the context of treating solid tumors. Hypoxia is a common hallmark of solid tumors because of the Warburg effect. To minimize side effects, we designed a hypoxia-inducible CAR (HiCAR), which is driven by a hypoxia response element (HRE), and consists of a conventional CAR and an oxygen-dependent degradation domain (ODD) that is actively degraded under normoxia but stabilized under hypoxia. HiCAR-T cells showed enhanced cytotoxicity against tumor cells under hypoxia compared to normoxia in vitro and antitumor efficacy comparable to that of conventional CAR-T cells in vivo. Overall, our study demonstrates the potential of the HiCAR for improving the safety of CAR-T cells to promote the clinical application of CAR-T immunotherapy.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine Mueller ◽  
Nicole Piscopo ◽  
Matthew Forsberg ◽  
Louise Saraspe ◽  
Amritava Das ◽  
...  

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells traditionally harbor viral vectors that encode the CAR transgene in the genome. However, viral vector manufacturing typically is resource intensive, suffers from batch-to-batch variability, and includes several animal components, adding regulatory and supply chain pressures. Here, CAR T cells were generated within nine days using recombinant SpCas9 protein and nucleic acids, without any viral vectors or animal components. In comparison to traditional retroviral CAR T cells, nonviral CRISPR CAR T cells exhibit TRAC-targeted genomic integration of the CAR transgene, higher frequency of gene expression signatures associated with a memory phenotype, low receptor signaling prior to infusion, and potent cytotoxicity against GD2+ neuroblastoma in vitro and in vivo. This proof-of-principle study eliminating viral vectors and animal components during CAR gene transfer could enable more flexible and scalable manufacturing of clinically-relevant, high-quality CAR T cells to treat cancers, including solid tumors.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liqing Kang ◽  
Jian Zhang ◽  
Minghao Li ◽  
Nan Xu ◽  
Wei Qi ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Treatment with chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-engineered T cells directed against the B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA) promoted transient recovery from multiple myeloma (MM). However, the absence of this antigen on immature plasma cells may limit the efficacy of this modality and facilitate relapse. The purpose of this study is to characterize a novel CAR that includes both a single-chain variable fragment (scFv)-BCMA and an scFv-CD19 in tandem orientation (tan-CAR) in an attempt to target both BCMA and CD19 expression on MM cells. Method: The scFv sequences from the anti-CD19 antibody FMC63 and the anti-BCMA antibody C11D5.3 were ligated in tandem with transmembrane and T-cell signaling domains to generate the tan-CAR construct. Specificity and efficacy of activated tan-CAR T cells were analyzed using in vitro proliferation, cytokine release, and cytolysis assays. We also evaluated the in vivo efficacy with a xenograft mouse model that included target tumor cells that expressed CD19 or BCMA and compared the results to those obtained with conventional CAR T cells. Results: The in vitro studies revealed specific activation of tan-CAR T cells by K562 cells that overexpressed CD19 and/or BCMA. Cell proliferation, cytokine release, and cytolytic activity were all comparable to the responses of single scFv CAR T cells. Importantly, in vivo studies of tan-CAR T cells revealed specific inhibition of tumor growth in the mouse xenograft model that included cells expressing both CD19 and BCMA. Systemic administration of tan-CAR T cells resulted in complete tumor remission, in contrast to the reduced efficacies of BCMA-CAR T and CD19-CAR T alone in this setting. Conclusion: We report the successful design and execution of novel tan-CAR T cells that promote significant anti-tumor efficacy against both CD19 and BCMA antigen-positive tumor cells in vitro and in vivo . The data from this study reveal a novel strategy that may help to reduce the rate of relapse in the treatment with single scFv-CAR T cells.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong Jia Zhu ◽  
Yujie Jia ◽  
Jingwen Tan ◽  
Xiaoyan Fang ◽  
Jing Ye ◽  
...  

Abstract Purpose: Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy has demonstrated clinical success in treating haematologic malignancies but has not been effective against solid tumours thus far. Trop2 is a tumour-related antigen broadly overexpressed on a variety of tumours and has been reported as a promising target for pancreatic cancers. Our study aimed to determine whether CAR T cells designed with a fully human Trop2-specific single-chain fragment variable (scFv) can be used in the treatment of Trop2-positive pancreatic tumours.Methods: We designed Trop2-targeted chimeric antigen receptor engineered T cells with a novel human anti-Trop2 scFv (2F11) and then investigated the cytotoxicity, degranulation, and cytokine secretion profiles of the anti-Trop2 CAR T cells when they were exposed to Trop2+ cancer cells in vitro. We also studied the antitumour efficacy and toxicity of Trop2-specific CAR T cells in vivo using a BxPC-3 pancreatic xenograft model.Results: Trop2-targeted CAR T cells designed with 2F11 effectively killed Trop2-positive pancreatic cancer cells and produced high levels of cytotoxic cytokines in vitro. In addition, Trop2-targeted CAR T cells, which persistently circulate in vivo and efficiently infiltrate into tumour tissues, significantly blocked and even eliminated BxPC-3 pancreatic xenograft tumour growth without obvious deleterious effects observed after intravenous injection into NSG mice. Moreover, disease-free survival was efficiently prolonged.Conclusion: These results show that Trop2-targeted CAR T cells equipped with a fully human anti-Trop2 scFv could be a potential treatment strategy for pancreatic cancer and could be useful for clinical evaluation.


Author(s):  
Dongrui Wang ◽  
Renate Starr ◽  
Wen-Chung Chang ◽  
Brenda Aguilar ◽  
Darya Alizadeh ◽  
...  

AbstractWhile chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have demonstrated antitumor activity against glioblastoma (GBM), tumor heterogeneity remains a critical challenge. To more effectively target heterogeneous GBMs, we report the development of a novel peptide-based CAR exploiting the GBM-binding potential of chlorotoxin (CLTX). CLTX bound a greater proportion of tumor cells than GBM-associated antigens EGFR, HER2 and IL13Rα2. CAR T cells bearing CLTX as the targeting domain (CLTX-CAR), mediated potent in vitro and in vivo anti-GBM activity, and efficiently targeted tumors lacking expression of other GBM-associated antigens. Importantly, CLTX-CAR T cells exhibited no observable off-target effector activity against normal cells, or when adoptively transferred into mice. Effective targeting by CLTX-CAR T cells required cell surface expression of matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2). Our results are the first demonstration of a peptide toxin utilized as a CAR targeting domain, expanding the repertoire of tumor-selective CAR T cells with the potential to reduce antigen escape.One Sentence SummaryChimeric antigen receptors incorporating chlorotoxin as the tumor targeting domain recognize and kill glioblastoma with high specificity and potency.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 381-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bijan Boldajipour ◽  
Roman Galetto ◽  
Cesar Sommer ◽  
Thomas Pertel ◽  
Julien Valton ◽  
...  

Abstract Multiple myeloma (MM) is a hematological disease of plasma B cells that remains incurable despite the availability of numerous therapies. The plasma cell-specific expression of the TNF superfamily receptor BCMA may allow targeting of normal and malignant plasma cells. Genetically engineered chimeric antigen-receptor T cells (CAR T) have shown tremendous promise in the treatment of several hematological diseases, including MM. However, conventional autologous CAR T therapies use patient-derived T cells and the logistics of on-demand CAR T manufacture limits their availability to a broad patient pool. Here we describe the preclinical evaluation of an allogeneic CAR T therapy targeting BCMA that has the potential for a readily available, off-the-shelf therapy for MM and other malignancies expressing BCMA. Human T cells were transduced with recombinant lentiviral vectors encoding three BCMA CAR candidates designed with fully human anti-BCMA scFvs, CD8a transmembrane domains and the intracellular signaling domains of 4-1BB and CD3zeta. All CAR T efficiently killed BCMA-expressing multiple myeloma cell lines (KMS12BM, MM1.S, Molp-8 and OPM-2), but not BCMA-negative REH cells in vitro and in vivo. Whereas 2 of the 3 candidates exhibited target-independent cytokine production, accelerated T cell differentiation and reduced target cell-induced expansion in vitro, the third candidate did not exhibit this scFv-induced autoactivation and was chosen as the lead molecule. Due to the allogeneic nature of this T cell therapy, the possibility of graft-versus-host (GvH) reactions can be a safety concern. We applied Cellectis' know-how and TALEN® technology for the gene inactivation of the T cell receptor (TCR) alpha chain to significantly reduce the probability for TCR-mediated GvH reactions and found that TCR knockout did not affect CAR T activity in vitro or in vivo. Furthermore, we incorporated intra-CAR rituximab-recognition domains into the CAR molecule to enable depletion of CAR T cells from patients when necessary. We found that this modified CAR retained anti-BCMA CAR T activity and enabled CAR T depletion by rituximab. Another aspect of allogeneic CAR T therapies is the rejection of the CAR T by host-versus-graft (HvG) reactions. Lymphodepletion prior to CAR T infusion enhances CAR T efficacy in autologous CAR T trials and may also prevent anti-CAR HvG reactions in allogeneic therapy settings. Engineering lymphodepletion resistance into CAR T cells could therefore enable sustained lymphodepletion for enhanced allogeneic CAR T persistence and efficacy. CD52 is expressed on all lymphocytes and administration of the anti-CD52 antibody alemtuzumab for prolonged lymphodepletion is an approved treatment for multiple sclerosis. TALEN®-mediated knockout of CD52 protected BCMA CAR T from alemtuzumab-induced cytotoxicity and did not alter BCMA CAR T anti-tumor activity. Taken together these results support allogeneic BCMA CAR T as an off-the-shelf adoptive immunotherapy for the treatment of multiple myeloma and other BCMA-positive malignancies. Disclosures Boldajipour: Pfizer: Employment. Galetto:Cellectis SA: Employment. Sommer:Pfizer Inc.: Employment. Pertel:Pfizer Inc.: Employment. Valton:Cellectis Inc.: Employment. Park:Pfizer Inc.: Employment. Gariboldi:Cellectis SA: Employment. Chen:Alexo Therapeutics: Employment. Geng:Kodiak Sciences: Employment. Dong:Pfizer Inc.: Employment. Boucher:Pfizer Inc.: Employment. Van Blarcom:Pfizer Inc.: Employment. Chaparro-Riggers:Pfizer Inc.: Employment. Rajpal:Pfizer Inc.: Employment. Smith:Cellectis SA: Employment. Kuo:Pfizer Inc.: Employment. Sasu:Pfizer Inc.: Employment.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liqing Kang ◽  
Jian Zhang ◽  
Minghao Li ◽  
Nan Xu ◽  
Wei Qi ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) engineered T cells directed B cell maturation antigen (BCMA) showed transient recovery to multiple myeloma (MM). However, the expression of CD19 on immature plasma cell may escape the recognition by BCMA-CAR T, which restrict the efficacy and facilitate to relapse. The purpose of this study is to characterize a novel CAR structure with a tandem orientation of scFv-BCMA and scFv-CD19, tandem CAR (tan-CAR), to provide an effective solution for killing both BCMA and/or CD19 expression MM cells.Method: Single-chain variable fragment (scFv) sequences from the anti-CD19 antibody FMC63 and the anti-BCMA antibody C11D5.3 were ligated in tandem with transmembrane and T cell signaling domains to achieve tan-CAR construct. The therapeutic specificity and efficiency were analyzed for tan-CAR T cells activation, proliferation, cytokine release and cytolytic toxicity in vitro. Also, in vivo efficacy evaluation conducted in xenograft mouse models with the combination of two corresponding target tumor cells, in comparison with conventional CAR.Results: The in vitro studies demonstrated specific activation of tan-CAR T cells to the K562 tumor cell overexpressing CD19, BCMA, or both. Besides, it also elicits the comparable immunoreactivities, in terms of proliferation, cytokine release and cytolytic activity compared to single scFv modified CAR T cells. Importantly, the in vivo studies of tan-CAR-transduced T cells results specific inhibition of tumor growth in xenograft model that express combined tumor antigen i.e. CD19 and BCMA. Moreover, systemic administration of tan-CAR resulted in complete tumor remission, whilst neither BCMA-CAR T nor CD19-CAR-T could. Conclusion: A novel tan-CAR T was successfully designed and showed the significant antitumor efficacy for combined antigen-positive tumor cells in vitro and in vivo. However, the single CAR T cells with targeting one antigen didn’t achieve similar potency. The data from this study suggest a novel strategy to help reduce relapse due to existing CD19-expressing multiple myeloma cells or downregulation of the BCMA antigen after CAR-based treatment of multiple myeloma.


Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 4804-4804
Author(s):  
Eider F. Moreno Cortes ◽  
Juan Esteban Garcia Robledo ◽  
Natalie Booth ◽  
Jose V. Forero ◽  
Januario E Castro

Abstract Background: Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T cell therapy is arguably one of the most significant breakthroughs in cancer treatment. There are currently five FDA-approved products that are commercially available. However, despite their success, these CAR T-cell therapies cannot induce long-term durable responses in approximately 50% of leukemia or lymphoma-treated patients. Similarly, the results of CAR T-cells in solid tumors have been somewhat disappointing. Therefore, there is an urgent need to design and develop novel CAR T cells with improved efficacy in hematologic malignancies and solid tumors. ROR1 is a carcinoembryonic antigen expressed in different cancers and is associated with tumor stemness, proliferation, metastatic transformation, and treatment resistance. In this project, we optimize an anti-ROR1 CAR using a humanized single-chain variable fragment (scFv) with second (2G) or third-generation (3G) costimulatory domains. Methods: Several optimization steps in silico were performed using a selected scFv binding domain that targets ROR1. Those included codon optimizations, positional arrangement of heavy-light chains, evaluation of the ideal length of linkers based on tridimensional modeling of the docking between the antibody-like paratope with the target antigen (Figure 1A). After this initial scFv optimization process, we constructed a lentiviral vector that encodes CARs using the selected scFv linked to a transmembrane domain CD28 and different signaling endodomains for 2G and 3G variants (CD28, 41BB, ICOS, OX40), each linked to the T cell receptor CD3z domain. The cytotoxic activity of these constructs was evaluated using an in vitro rechallenge luciferase assay in ROR1 expressing JeKo-1 cells and ROR1(negative) controls. Results: The 2G 41BB-z construct with V H-V L scFv orientation and a long linker (V H-L-V L) showed optimal cytotoxicity with a CAR expression level in T cells of 36% (Range 28-49% for other constructs, Figure 1B-C). The V H-L-V L 41BB-z construct was evaluated comparatively using a rechallenge cytotoxic assay with 3G constructs that expressed CD28, ICOS, or OX40 signaling domains using JeKo-1 and ROR1(negative) target cells as controls. All the tested constructs showed specific ROR1 medicated cytotoxicity. CD28-41BB-z and ICOS-41BB-z showed the lowest cytotoxicity levels during the Day 1 of the repetitive rechallenge. However, the cytotoxicity levels of those constructs gradually increased during the 7 days of rechallenge and were closed to the levels induced by the 2G- 41BB-z construct (>80% of cytotoxicity). There were no significant differences in CAR T cells subsets generated by the different constructs during the 7 days of rechallenge with a predominance of effector memory phenotype (CCR7-, CD45RA-) and no difference in PD1 expression. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that optimization of the CAR constructs enhances T-cell effector function and cytotoxicity against ROR1+ target cells. In previous studies, 3G CARs have shown longer persistence of the transduced T cells in peripheral blood, sustained and regulated cellular activation, improved solid tumor infiltration, and positive modulation of the tumor microenvironment. Our preclinical in vitro optimization demonstrates strategies to generate 3G constructs with a progressive and modulated cytotoxic profile that may confer benefits when tested in vivo in terms of enhanced persistence and lower adverse events profile. Additional experiments in vivo will be presented during the meeting to corroborate our findings. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A124-A124
Author(s):  
Letizia Giardino ◽  
Ryan Gilbreth ◽  
Cui Chen ◽  
Erin Sult ◽  
Noel Monks ◽  
...  

BackgroundChimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T therapy has yielded impressive clinical results in hematological malignancies and it is a promising approach for solid tumor treatment. However, toxicity, including on-target off-tumor antigen binding, is a concern hampering its broader use.MethodsIn selecting a lead CAR-T candidate against the oncofetal antigen glypican 3 (GPC3), we compared CAR bearing a low and high affinity single-chain variable fragment (scFv,) binding to the same epitope and cross-reactive with murine GPC3. We characterized low and high affinity CAR-T cells immunophenotype and effector function in vitro, followed by in vivo efficacy and safety studies in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) xenograft models.ResultsCompared to the high-affinity construct, the low-affinity CAR maintained cytotoxic function but did not show in vivo toxicity. High-affinity CAR-induced toxicity was caused by on-target off-tumor binding, based on the evidence that high-affinity but not low-affinity CAR, were toxic in non-tumor bearing mice and accumulated in organs with low expression of GPC3. To add another layer of safety, we developed a mean to target and eliminate CAR-T cells using anti-TNFα antibody therapy post-CAR-T infusion. This antibody functioned by eliminating early antigen-activated CAR-T cells, but not all CAR-T cells, allowing a margin where the toxic response could be effectively decoupled from anti-tumor efficacy.ConclusionsSelecting a domain with higher off-rate improved the quality of the CAR-T cells by maintaining cytotoxic function while reducing cytokine production and activation upon antigen engagement. By exploring additional traits of the CAR-T cells post-activation, we further identified a mechanism whereby we could use approved therapeutics and apply them as an exogenous kill switch that would eliminate early activated CAR-T following antigen engagement in vivo. By combining the reduced affinity CAR with this exogenous control mechanism, we provide evidence that we can modulate and control CAR-mediated toxicity.Ethics ApprovalAll animal experiments were conducted in a facility accredited by the Association for Assessment of Laboratory Animal Care (AALAC) under Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) guidelines and appropriate animal research approval.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. e0248973
Author(s):  
Nami Iwamoto ◽  
Bhavik Patel ◽  
Kaimei Song ◽  
Rosemarie Mason ◽  
Sara Bolivar-Wagers ◽  
...  

Achieving a functional cure is an important goal in the development of HIV therapy. Eliciting HIV-specific cellular immune responses has not been sufficient to achieve durable removal of HIV-infected cells due to the restriction on effective immune responses by mutation and establishment of latent reservoirs. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells are an avenue to potentially develop more potent redirected cellular responses against infected T cells. We developed and tested a range of HIV- and SIV-specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell reagents based on Env-binding proteins. In general, SHIV/SIV CAR T cells showed potent viral suppression in vitro, and adding additional CAR molecules in the same transduction resulted in more potent viral suppression than single CAR transduction. Importantly, the primary determinant of virus suppression potency by CAR was the accessibility to the Env epitope, and not the neutralization potency of the binding moiety. However, upon transduction of autologous T cells followed by infusion in vivo, none of these CAR T cells impacted either acquisition as a test of prevention, or viremia as a test of treatment. Our study illustrates limitations of the CAR T cells as possible antiviral therapeutics.


2020 ◽  
Vol 94 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew T. Ollerton ◽  
Edward A. Berger ◽  
Elizabeth Connick ◽  
Gregory F. Burton

ABSTRACT The major obstacle to a cure for HIV infection is the persistence of replication-competent viral reservoirs during antiretroviral therapy. HIV-specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have been developed to target latently infected CD4+ T cells that express virus either spontaneously or after intentional latency reversal. Whether HIV-specific CAR-T cells can recognize and eliminate the follicular dendritic cell (FDC) reservoir of HIV-bound immune complexes (ICs) is unknown. We created HIV-specific CAR-T cells using human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and a CAR construct that enables the expression of CD4 (domains 1 and 2) and the carbohydrate recognition domain of mannose binding lectin (MBL) to target native HIV Env (CD4-MBL CAR). We assessed CAR-T cell cytotoxicity using a carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester (CFSE) release assay and evaluated CAR-T cell activation through interferon gamma (IFN-γ) production and CD107a membrane accumulation by flow cytometry. CD4-MBL CAR-T cells displayed potent lytic and functional responses to Env-expressing cell lines and HIV-infected CD4+ T cells but were ineffective at targeting FDC bearing HIV-ICs. CD4-MBL CAR-T cells were unresponsive to cell-free HIV or concentrated, immobilized HIV-ICs in cell-free experiments. Blocking intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) inhibited the cytolytic response of CD4-MBL CAR-T cells to Env-expressing cell lines and HIV-infected CD4+ T cells, suggesting that factors such as adhesion molecules are necessary for the stabilization of the CAR-Env interaction to elicit a cytotoxic response. Thus, CD4-MBL CAR-T cells are unable to eliminate the FDC-associated HIV reservoir, and alternative strategies to eradicate this reservoir must be sought. IMPORTANCE Efforts to cure HIV infection have focused primarily on the elimination of latently infected CD4+ T cells. Few studies have addressed the unique reservoir of infectious HIV that exists on follicular dendritic cells (FDCs), persists in vivo during antiretroviral therapy, and likely contributes to viral rebound upon cessation of antiretroviral therapy. We assessed the efficacy of a novel HIV-specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell to target both HIV-infected CD4+ T cells and the FDC reservoir in vitro. Although CAR-T cells eliminated CD4+ T cells that express HIV, they did not respond to or eliminate FDC bound to HIV. These findings reveal a fundamental limitation to CAR-T cell therapy to eradicate HIV.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document