A Costimulatory CAR Improves TCR-based Cancer Immunotherapy

Bilal Omer, Mara G. Cardenas, Thomas Pfeiffer, Rachel Daum, Mai Huynh, Sandhya Sharma, Nazila Nouraee, Cicilyn Xie, Candise Tat, Silvana Perconti, Stacey Van Pelt, Lauren Scherer, Chris DeRenzo, Thomas Shum, Stephen Gottschalk, Caroline Arber, Cliona M. Rooney

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Scopus citations

Abstract

T-cell receptors (TCR) recognize intracellular and extracellular cancer antigens, allowing T cells to target many tumor antigens. To sustain proliferation and persistence, T cells require not only signaling through the TCR (signal 1), but also costimulatory (signal 2) and cytokine (signal 3) signaling. Because most cancer cells lack costimulatory molecules, TCR engagement at the tumor site results in incomplete T-cell activation and transient antitumor effects. To overcome this lack of signal 2, we genetically modified tumor-specific T cells with a costimulatory chimeric antigen receptor (CoCAR). Like classical CARs, CoCARs combine the antigenbinding domain of an antibody with costimulatory endodomains to trigger T-cell proliferation, but CoCARs lack the cytotoxic CD3z chain to avoid toxicity to normal tissues. We first tested a CD19- targeting CoCAR in combination with an HLA-A_02:01-restricted, survivin-specific transgenic TCR (sTCR) in serial cocultures with leukemia cells coexpressing the cognate peptide-HLA complex (signal 1) and CD19 (signal 2). The CoCAR enabled sTCR+ T cells to kill tumors over a median of four additional tumor challenges. CoCAR activity depended on CD19 but was maintained in tumors with heterogeneous CD19 expression. In a murine tumor model, sTCR+CoCAR+ T cells improved tumor control and prolonged survival compared with sTCR+ T cells. We further evaluated the CoCAR in Epstein-Barr virus-specific T cells (EBVST). CoCARexpressing EBVSTs expanded more rapidly than nontransduced EBVSTs and delayed tumor progression in an EBV+ murine lymphoma model. Overall, we demonstrated that the CoCAR can increase the activity of T cells expressing both native and transgenic TCRs and enhance antitumor responses.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)512-524
Number of pages13
JournalCancer immunology research
Volume10
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2022

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