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Targeting of acute myeloid leukaemia by cytokine-induced killer cells redirected with a novel CD123-specific chimeric antigen receptor

Authors :
Tettamanti, S
Marin, V
Pizzitola, I
Magnani, C
GIORDANO ATTIANESE, G
Cribioli, E
Maltese, F
Galimberti, S
Lopez, A
Biondi, A
Bonnet, D
Biagi, E
PIZZITOLA, IRENE
MAGNANI, CHIARA FRANCESCA
GIORDANO ATTIANESE, GRETA MARIA PAOLA
GALIMBERTI, STEFANIA
BIONDI, ANDREA
BIAGI, ETTORE
Tettamanti, S
Marin, V
Pizzitola, I
Magnani, C
GIORDANO ATTIANESE, G
Cribioli, E
Maltese, F
Galimberti, S
Lopez, A
Biondi, A
Bonnet, D
Biagi, E
PIZZITOLA, IRENE
MAGNANI, CHIARA FRANCESCA
GIORDANO ATTIANESE, GRETA MARIA PAOLA
GALIMBERTI, STEFANIA
BIONDI, ANDREA
BIAGI, ETTORE
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Current therapeutic regimens for acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) are still associated with high rates of relapse. Immunotherapy with T-cells genetically modified to express chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) represents an innovative approach. Here we investigated the targeting of the interleukin three receptor alpha (IL3RA; CD123) molecule, which is overexpressed on AML bulk population, CD34(+) leukaemia progenitors, and leukaemia stem cells (LSC) compared to normal haematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs), and whose overexpression is associated with poor prognosis. Cytokine-induced killer (CIK) cells were transduced with SFG-retroviral-vector encoding an anti-CD123 CAR. Transduced cells were able to strongly kill CD123(+) cell lines, as well as primary AML blasts. Interestingly, secondary colony experiments demonstrated that anti-CD123.CAR preserved in vitro HSPCs, in contrast to a previously generated anti-CD33.CAR, while keeping an identical cytotoxicity profile towards AML. Furthermore, limited killing of normal monocytes and CD123-low-expressing endothelial cells was noted, thus indicating a low toxicity profile of the anti-CD123.CAR. Taken together, our results indicate that CD123-specific CARs strongly enhance anti-AML CIK functions, while sparing HSPCs and normal low-expressing antigen cells, paving the way to develop novel immunotherapy approaches for AML treatment.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1308904430
Document Type :
Electronic Resource