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Rationally Designed Transgene-Encoded Cell-Surface Polypeptide Tag for Multiplexed Programming of CAR T-cell Synthetic Outputs.

Authors :
Johnson AJ
Wei J
Rosser JM
Künkele A
Chang CA
Reid AN
Jensen MC
Source :
Cancer immunology research [Cancer Immunol Res] 2021 Sep; Vol. 9 (9), pp. 1047-1060. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Jul 09.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Synthetic immunology, as exemplified by chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell immunotherapy, has transformed the treatment of relapsed/refractory B cell-lineage malignancies. However, there are substantial barriers-including limited tumor homing, lack of retention of function within a suppressive tumor microenvironment, and antigen heterogeneity/escape-to using this technology to effectively treat solid tumors. A multiplexed engineering approach is needed to equip effector T cells with synthetic countermeasures to overcome these barriers. This, in turn, necessitates combinatorial use of lentiviruses because of the limited payload size of current lentiviral vectors. Accordingly, there is a need for cell-surface human molecular constructs that mark multi-vector cotransduced T cells, to enable their purification ex vivo and their tracking in vivo . To this end, we engineered a cell surface-localizing polypeptide tag based on human HER2, designated HER2t, that was truncated in its extracellular and intracellular domains to eliminate ligand binding and signaling, respectively, and retained the membrane-proximal binding epitope of the HER2-specific mAb trastuzumab. We linked HER2t to CAR coexpression in lentivirally transduced T cells and showed that co-transduction with a second lentivirus expressing our previously described EGFRt tag linked to a second CAR efficiently generated bispecific dual-CAR T cells. Using the same approach, we generated T cells expressing a CAR and a second module, a chimeric cytokine receptor. The HER2txEGFRt multiplexing strategy is now being deployed for the manufacture of CD19xCD22 bispecific CAR T-cell products for the treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (NCT03330691).<br /> (©2021 American Association for Cancer Research.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2326-6074
Volume :
9
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer immunology research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34244298
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-20-0470