| Literature DB >> 20454585 |
Toshiki Ochi1, Hiroshi Fujiwara, Masaki Yasukawa.
Abstract
The last decade has seen great strides in the field of cancer immunotherapy, especially the treatment of melanoma. Beginning with the identification of cancer antigens, followed by the clinical application of anti-cancer peptide vaccination, it has now been proven that adoptive T-cell therapy (ACT) using cancer antigen-specific T cells is the most effective option. Despite the apparent clinical efficacy of ACT, the timely preparation of a sufficient number of cancer antigen-specific T cells for each patient has been recognized as its biggest limitation. Currently, therefore, attention is being focused on ACT with engineered T cells produced using cancer antigen-specific T-cell receptor (TCR) gene transfer. With regard to human leukemia, ACT using engineered T cells bearing the leukemia antigen-specific TCR gene still remains in its infancy. However, several reports have provided preclinical data on TCR gene transfer using Wilms' tumor gene product 1 (WT1), and also preclinical and clinical data on TCR gene transfer involving minor histocompatibility antigen, both of which have been suggested to provide additional clinical benefit. In this review, we examine the current status of anti-leukemia ACT with engineered T cells carrying the leukemia antigen-specific TCR gene, and discuss the existing barriers to progress in this area.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20454585 PMCID: PMC2864513 DOI: 10.1155/2010/521248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Currently reported TCR gene transfer attempts for hematological malignancies.
| Target antigen | HLA restriction | vector | Comments | Transduction efficacy | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WT1 | HLA-A*0201 | retroviral vector | WT1-specific TCR gene was transduced into PBL. CD8+ or CD4+ T cells could exert target specificity. | 40~60% in total T cells by Vb2 Ab after 2 rounds of antigen-specific stimulation | [ |
| HLA-A*0201 | optimized retroviral vector | WT1-specific TCR gene was modified to express more efficiently (hybrid human-murine TCR, Cys-mutant TCR). Patients' PBL transduced WT1-specific TCR could reject the engraftment of autologous CML-BC cells in NOD/SCID mice model. | conventional vector: 0.6% in total CD8+ T cells by tetramer (nonstimulated) optimised vector: 6% in total CD8+ T cells by tetramer (nonstimulated) | [ | |
| HLA-A*2402 | lentiviral vector | WT1-specific TCR gene was transduced into PBL. CD8+ or CD4+ T cells could exert target specificity in an HLA class I-restricted fashion. | 60% in total T cells by Vb5.1 Ab (nonstimulated) 20% in sorted CD8+ T cells by tetramer | [ | |
| HLA-A*2402 | optimized retroviral vector | The vector could suppress endogenous TCR by shRNA and increase transduced codon-optimized TCR simultaneously. | 44% in transduced CD8+ T cells by tetramer | [ | |
| HA-1 | HLA-A*0201 | retroviral vector | HA-1-specific TCR gene was transduced into T cells. These transfectants could exert target specificity. | 6.6% in transduced T cells by tetrameter | [ |
| HA-2 | HLA-A*0201 | retroviral vector | HA-2-specific TCR gene transduced CD8+ T cell clone was established. These transfectants could exert target specificity. | NA | [ |
| HLA-A*0201 | retroviral vector | HA-2-specific TCR gene was transduced into CMV-specific CTL clone to exploit the viral specific response in vivo for the long-term persistence of target TCR transfectants. | NA | [ |
Abbreviations: WT1, Wilms' tumor gene product 1; PBL, peripheral blood lymphocytes; CML-BC, chronic myelogenous leukemia-blastic crisis; CMV, cytomegalovirus; NA, not available; Ab, antibody.
Figure 1Reported modifications of TSA/TAA-specific TCR transduction. With the aim of enhancing the surface expression level of the transduced TCR heterodimer, modifications are largely categorized into two options. One is to modify the target-TCR gene itself, and the other is to transduce alternative cells other than normal peripheral T lymphocytes. The former involves the murine/human hybrid, a modified two-chain TCR that encompasses total human CD3ζ, additional disulfide-bond insertion, codon modification, and insertion of built-in silencers for endogenous TCR. The latter involves TCR transduction into γδ T cells. These options aim to enhance the immediate antitumor effect of transfectants. On the other hand, TCR-gene transduction into hematopoietic stem cells is particularly aimed at achieving the prolonged presence of transfectants, which will be able to provide a durable antitumor effect.