Literature DB >> 23116267

The weal and woe of costimulation in the adoptive therapy of cancer with chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-redirected T cells.

A A Hombach1, A Holzinger, H Abken.   

Abstract

Adoptive cell therapy has shown impressive efficacy to combat cancer in early phase clinical trials, in particular when T cells engineered to specifically target tumor cells were applied. The patient's T cells are genetically equipped with a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) which allows them to be redirected in a predefined manner towards virtually any target; by using an antibody-derived domain for binding, CAR T cells can be redirected in a major histocompatibility complex (MHC) dependent and independent fashion. The CAR also provides the stimuli required to induce and maintain T cell activation. Recent clinical data sustain the notion that strong costimulation in conjunction with the primary activation signal is crucial for lasting therapeutic efficacy of CAR T cells. However, costimulation is a double-edged sword and the impact of the individual costimuli to optimize T cell activation is still under debate; some general rules are emerging. The review summarizes how costimulation modulates, improves and prolongs the redirected anti-tumor T cell response and how the same costimulatory signals may contribute to unintended side effects including "cytokine storm" and T cell repression. Upcoming strategies to break the activation/repression circle by using CAR's with modified costimulatory signals are also discussed.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23116267     DOI: 10.2174/1566524011313070003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Mol Med        ISSN: 1566-5240            Impact factor:   2.222


  15 in total

1.  Arming cytokine-induced killer cells with chimeric antigen receptors: CD28 outperforms combined CD28-OX40 "super-stimulation".

Authors:  Andreas A Hombach; Gunter Rappl; Hinrich Abken
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2013-08-28       Impact factor: 11.454

2.  Novel CD4-Based Bispecific Chimeric Antigen Receptor Designed for Enhanced Anti-HIV Potency and Absence of HIV Entry Receptor Activity.

Authors:  Li Liu; Bhavik Patel; Mustafa H Ghanem; Virgilio Bundoc; Zhili Zheng; Richard A Morgan; Steven A Rosenberg; Barna Dey; Edward A Berger
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2015-04-15       Impact factor: 5.103

3.  EGFRvIII mCAR-modified T-cell therapy cures mice with established intracerebral glioma and generates host immunity against tumor-antigen loss.

Authors:  John H Sampson; Bryan D Choi; Luis Sanchez-Perez; Carter M Suryadevara; David J Snyder; Catherine T Flores; Robert J Schmittling; Smita K Nair; Elizabeth A Reap; Pamela K Norberg; James E Herndon; Chien-Tsun Kuan; Richard A Morgan; Steven A Rosenberg; Laura A Johnson
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2013-12-18       Impact factor: 12.531

4.  Adoptive Transfer of IL13Rα2-Specific Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells Creates a Pro-inflammatory Environment in Glioblastoma.

Authors:  Katarzyna C Pituch; Jason Miska; Giedre Krenciute; Wojciech K Panek; Gina Li; Tania Rodriguez-Cruz; Meijing Wu; Yu Han; Maciej S Lesniak; Stephen Gottschalk; Irina V Balyasnikova
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2018-02-08       Impact factor: 11.454

5.  T-cells expressing a chimeric-PD1-Dap10-CD3zeta receptor reduce tumour burden in multiple murine syngeneic models of solid cancer.

Authors:  Geoffrey Parriott; Kelsey Deal; Shane Crean; Elle Richardson; Emily Nylen; Amorette Barber
Journal:  Immunology       Date:  2020-04-07       Impact factor: 7.397

6.  Adoptive transfer of murine T cells expressing a chimeric-PD1-Dap10 receptor as an immunotherapy for lymphoma.

Authors:  Adam Lynch; William Hawk; Emily Nylen; Sean Ober; Pierre Autin; Amorette Barber
Journal:  Immunology       Date:  2017-07-27       Impact factor: 7.397

Review 7.  Engineering broadly neutralizing antibodies for HIV prevention and therapy.

Authors:  Casey K Hua; Margaret E Ackerman
Journal:  Adv Drug Deliv Rev       Date:  2016-01-29       Impact factor: 15.470

8.  HIV-1-Specific CAR-T Cells With Cell-Intrinsic PD-1 Checkpoint Blockade Enhance Anti-HIV Efficacy in vivo.

Authors:  Zhengtao Jiang; Huitong Liang; Hanyu Pan; Yue Liang; Hua Wang; Xinyi Yang; Panpan Lu; Xiao Zhang; Jinlong Yang; Dengji Zhang; Xiaoting Shen; Jing Wang; Zhiming Liang; Qinru Lin; Yanan Wang; Lin Zhao; Yangcheng Zhong; Hongzhou Lu; Huanzhang Zhu
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2021-07-06       Impact factor: 5.640

Review 9.  Tumor-Associated Glycans and Immune Surveillance.

Authors:  Behjatolah Monzavi-Karbassi; Anastas Pashov; Thomas Kieber-Emmons
Journal:  Vaccines (Basel)       Date:  2013-06-17

10.  A novel ex vivo isolation and expansion procedure for chimeric antigen receptor engrafted human T cells.

Authors:  Marc Cartellieri; Stefanie Koristka; Claudia Arndt; Anja Feldmann; Slava Stamova; Malte von Bonin; Katrin Töpfer; Thomas Krüger; Mathias Geib; Irene Michalk; Achim Temme; Martin Bornhäuser; Dirk Lindemann; Gerhard Ehninger; Michael P Bachmann
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-04-03       Impact factor: 3.240

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