| Literature DB >> 26056592 |
Haven R Garber1, Asma Mirza1, Elizabeth A Mittendorf2, Gheath Alatrash1.
Abstract
Allogeneic stem cell transplantation (alloSCT) is the most robust form of adoptive cellular therapy (ACT) and has been tremendously effective in the treatment of leukemia. It is one of the original forms of cancer immunotherapy and illustrates that lymphocytes can specifically recognize and eliminate aberrant, malignant cells. However, because of the high morbidity and mortality that is associated with alloSCT including graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), refining the anti-leukemia immunity of alloSCT to target distinct antigens that mediate the graft-versus-leukemia (GvL) effect could transform our approach to treating leukemia, and possibly other hematologic malignancies. Over the past few decades, many leukemia antigens have been discovered that can separate malignant cells from normal host cells and render them vulnerable targets. In concert, the field of T-cell engineering has matured to enable transfer of ectopic high-affinity antigen receptors into host or donor cells with greater efficiency and potency. Many preclinical studies have demonstrated that engineered and conventional T-cells can mediate lysis and eradication of leukemia via one or more leukemia antigen targets. This evidence now serves as a foundation for clinical trials that aim to cure leukemia using T-cells. The recent clinical success of anti-CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) cells for treating patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia and chronic lymphocytic leukemia displays the potential of this new therapeutic modality. In this review, we discuss some of the most promising leukemia antigens and the novel strategies that have been implemented for adoptive cellular immunotherapy of lymphoid and myeloid leukemias. It is important to summarize the data for ACT of leukemia for physicians in-training and in practice and for investigators who work in this and related fields as there are recent discoveries already being translated to the patient setting and numerous accruing clinical trials. We primarily focus on ACT that has been used in the clinical setting or that is currently undergoing preclinical testing with a foreseeable clinical endpoint.Entities:
Keywords: Adoptive cellular therapy; Chimeric antigen receptor; Engineered T-cell; Immunotherapy; Leukemia; Stem cell transplant; T-cell; Tumor antigen
Year: 2014 PMID: 26056592 PMCID: PMC4452065 DOI: 10.1186/2052-8426-2-25
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Ther ISSN: 2052-8426
Classes of Leukemia Antigens
| Leukemia antigens | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Class | Example(s) | Pros | Cons | |
|
| WT-1
[ | - multiple candidates identified- often shared by > 1 malignancy | - present on normal tissue |
|
|
| PR1
[ | - more restricted distribution than TAAs | - present on subset of normal cells, which can include hematopoietic stem cells | |
|
| Cyclin-A1
[ | - frequently restricted to non-essential tissues and tumor | - few identified in leukemia | |
|
| HA-1
[ | - result in high avidity allo T-cells since epitopes are foreign to donor- some are largely restricted to hematopoietic compartment | - Necessitate rescue with mHA-negative stem cells to restore normal hematopoiesis- need for allogeneic TCRs |
|
|
| BCR-ABL
[ | - result in high avidity autologous T-cells- many derive from proteins critical in leukomogenesis | - individual-specific- few identified in leukemia since mutation rate is low | |
|
| HTLV-I Tax protein
[ | - generate very high-avidity T-cells | - only relevant to virus-initiated malignancies | |
|
| CD19 (see CD19 section), Lewis Y
[ |
| - many are present on normal tissues | - |
Additional references added in the table [31–34, 36–38, 40, 45].
Figure 1Graphic representations of the various T-cell approaches used to target leukemia antigens. (a) Conventional T-cells target peptides that are presented in the context of an MHC molecule. (b) Modified Ectopic α/β T-cells target the same epitope as a conventional TCR (MHC-peptide) but with an engineered (often higher affinity) TCR from an autologous, allogeneic, or xenogeneic cell. (c) CAR T-cells contain a synthetic polypeptide that contains the single chain variable fragment (scFv) of an antibody as the antigen-binding domain, a hinge, a transmembrane region, a costimulatory (Costim) domain, and a CD3ζ signaling domain. CARs recognize extracellular antigens that are not MHC-bound. (d) A TCR-like CAR utilizes the scFv fragment of a TCR-mimicking Ab, which recognizes a peptide antigen in the context of an MHC molecule, but with a much higher affinity than conventional or most engineered TCRs.
Figure 2Diagram of ACT within the alloSCT platform. T-cell depleted SCT would eliminate the need for post-SCT immunosuppressive medications that can limit the efficacy of modified T-cells. Since allogeneic cells are used, the endogenous specificity of the T-cells would be pre-selected (CMV, EBV, varicella, etc.) or other GvHD prevention measures would need to be incorporated, such as naïve T cell depletion.
Summary of hematologic tumor antigens being targeted in clinical trials of ACT
| Antigen | HLA-restriction | Hematologic Malignancy † | Immunotherapeutic Potential |
|---|---|---|---|
| CD19 | No | ALL, CLL, Lymphoma | 1) Common to several lymphoid malignancies |
| 2) Highly potent effectors have been developed | |||
| 3) Cell surface protein that does not require processing or MHC presentation | |||
| 4) Anti-leukemia effects must be balanced with toxicity against normal B cells | |||
| WT-1 | Yes | AML, CML, MDS, ALL | 1) Has been studied primarily in myeloid hematologic malignancies, although recent work suggests its potential in lymphoid malignancies
[ |
| 2) Minimal expression in normal tissues | |||
| 3) Requires intracellular processing and antigen presentation | |||
| Lewis Y | No | AML, MM | 1) At this time, studies are limited to AML and MM |
| 2) Studies to date have shown moderate potency against malignant cells | |||
| 3) May be limited by GI toxicity | |||
| κ Light Chain | No | CLL, lymphoma, MM | 1) Limited to lymphoid malignancies and MM |
| 2) Still in early stages of development, therefore potency is difficult to assess | |||
| mHA | Yes | Applicable to all hematologic malignancies | 1) Potent immune responses against malignant cells, including stem cells |
| 2) May also trigger GvHD | |||
| 3) Limited by the frequency of the minor allele in the population | |||
| 4) Difficult to predict off-target tissue expression | |||
| BCR-ABL | Yes | CML | 1) Limited studies using ACT to target BCR-ABL in the era of tyrosine kinase inhibitors |
| 2) Mainly useful in CML and possibly Ph+ ALL |
Expression of the antigens has been reported in other hematologic and solid tumor malignancies.