1. Multimodal In Vivo Tracking of Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells in Preclinical Glioblastoma Models.
- Author
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Wu WE, Chang E, Jin L, Liu S, Huang CH, Kamal R, Liang T, Aissaoui NM, Theruvath AJ, Pisani L, Moseley M, Stoyanova T, Paulmurugan R, Huang J, Mitchell DA, and Daldrup-Link HE
- Subjects
- Mice, Humans, Animals, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Contrast Media, T-Lymphocytes, Cell Line, Tumor, Glioblastoma therapy, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen
- Abstract
Objectives: Iron oxide nanoparticles have been used to track the accumulation of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). However, the only nanoparticle available for clinical applications to date, ferumoxytol, has caused rare but severe anaphylactic reactions. MegaPro nanoparticles (MegaPro-NPs) provide an improved safety profile. We evaluated whether MegaPro-NPs can be applied for in vivo tracking of CAR T cells in a mouse model of glioblastoma multiforme., Materials and Methods: We labeled tumor-targeted CD70CAR (8R-70CAR) T cells and non-tumor-targeted controls with MegaPro-NPs, followed by inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy, Prussian blue staining, and cell viability assays. Next, we treated 42 NRG mice bearing U87-MG/eGFP-fLuc glioblastoma multiforme xenografts with MegaPro-NP-labeled/unlabeled CAR T cells or labeled untargeted T cells and performed serial MRI, magnetic particle imaging, and histology studies. The Kruskal-Wallis test was conducted to evaluate overall group differences, and the Mann-Whitney U test was applied to compare the pairs of groups., Results: MegaPro-NP-labeled CAR T cells demonstrated significantly increased iron uptake compared with unlabeled controls ( P < 0.01). Cell viability, activation, and exhaustion markers were not significantly different between the 2 groups ( P > 0.05). In vivo, tumor T2* relaxation times were significantly lower after treatment with MegaPro-NP-labeled CAR T cells compared with untargeted T cells ( P < 0.01). There is no significant difference in tumor growth inhibition between mice injected with labeled and unlabeled CAR T cells., Conclusions: MegaPro-NPs can be used for in vivo tracking of CAR T cells. Because MegaPro-NPs recently completed phase II clinical trial investigation as an MRI contrast agent, MegaPro-NP is expected to be applied to track CAR T cells in cancer immunotherapy trials in the near future., Competing Interests: Conflicts of interest and sources of funding: This work was supported by the ReMission Alliance Against Brain Tumors and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NIH/NICHD, grant number R01HD103638). Infrastructure support was provided by an NIH S10 Shared Instrumentation Grant (S10RR026917-01, PI Michael Moseley, PhD), the Stanford Center for Innovation in In Vivo Imaging (SCi 3 ), the Canary Preclinical Core Imaging Facility (Canary Center at Stanford, Stanford University), and an NCI Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA124435-02). Dr Jianping Huang was supported by the Department of Defense (grant W81XWH-20-1-0726) for developing tumor-targeted CAR T cells. For the remaining authors, none were declared., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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