Back to Search Start Over

Antigen-dependent IL-12 signaling in CAR T cells promotes regional to systemic disease targeting.

Authors :
Jun Lee EH
Cullen C
Murad JP
Gumber D
Park AK
Yang J
Stern LA
Adkins LN
Dhapola G
Gittins B
Chung-Chang W
Martinez C
Woo Y
Cristea M
Rodriguez-Rodriguez L
Ishihara J
Lee JK
Forman SJ
Wang LD
Priceman SJ
Source :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology [bioRxiv] 2023 Jan 07. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Jan 07.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapeutic responses are hampered by limited T cell trafficking, persistence, and durable anti-tumor activity in solid tumor microenvironments. However, these challenges can be largely overcome by relatively unconstrained synthetic engineering strategies, which are being harnessed to improve solid tumor CAR T cell therapies. Here, we describe fully optimized CAR T cells targeting tumor-associated glycoprotein-72 (TAG72) for the treatment of solid tumors, identifying the CD28 transmembrane domain upstream of the 4-1BB co-stimulatory domain as a driver of potent anti-tumor activity and IFNγ secretion. These findings have culminated into a phase 1 trial evaluating safety, feasibility, and bioactivity of TAG72-CAR T cells for the treatment of patients with advanced ovarian cancer ( NCT05225363 ). Preclinically, we found that CAR T cell-mediated IFNγ production facilitated by IL-12 signaling was required for tumor cell killing, which was recapitulated by expressing an optimized membrane-bound IL-12 (mbIL12) molecule on CAR T cells. Critically, mbIL12 cell surface expression and downstream signaling was induced and sustained only following CAR T cell activation. CAR T cells with mbIL12 demonstrated improved antigen-dependent T cell proliferation and potent cytotoxicity in recursive tumor cell killing assays in vitro and showed robust in vivo anti-tumor efficacy in human xenograft models of ovarian cancer peritoneal metastasis. Further, locoregional administration of TAG72-CAR T cells with antigen-dependent IL-12 signaling promoted durable anti-tumor responses against both regional and systemic disease in mice and was associated with improved systemic T cell persistence. Our study features a clinically-applicable strategy to improve the overall efficacy of locoregionally-delivered CAR T cells engineered with antigen-dependent immune-modulating cytokines in targeting both regional and systemic disease.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Accession number :
36711615
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.01.06.522784