| Literature DB >> 26759369 |
David T Rodgers1, Magdalena Mazagova1, Eric N Hampton1, Yu Cao2, Nitya S Ramadoss1, Ian R Hardy1, Andrew Schulman1, Juanjuan Du1, Feng Wang1, Oded Singer1, Jennifer Ma1, Vanessa Nunez1, Jiayin Shen1, Ashley K Woods1, Timothy M Wright1, Peter G Schultz3, Chan Hyuk Kim4, Travis S Young4.
Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR-T) cell therapy has produced impressive results in clinical trials for B-cell malignancies. However, safety concerns related to the inability to control CAR-T cells once infused into the patient remain a significant challenge. Here we report the engineering of recombinant antibody-based bifunctional switches that consist of a tumor antigen-specific Fab molecule engrafted with a peptide neo-epitope, which is bound exclusively by a peptide-specific switchable CAR-T cell (sCAR-T). The switch redirects the activity of the bio-orthogonal sCAR-T cells through the selective formation of immunological synapses, in which the sCAR-T cell, switch, and target cell interact in a structurally defined and temporally controlled manner. Optimized switches specific for CD19 controlled the activity, tissue-homing, cytokine release, and phenotype of sCAR-T cells in a dose-titratable manner in a Nalm-6 xenograft rodent model of B-cell leukemia. The sCAR-T-cell dosing regimen could be tuned to provide efficacy comparable to the corresponding conventional CART-19, but with lower cytokine levels, thereby offering a method of mitigating cytokine release syndrome in clinical translation. Furthermore, we demonstrate that this methodology is readily adaptable to targeting CD20 on cancer cells using the same sCAR-T cell, suggesting that this approach may be broadly applicable to heterogeneous and resistant tumor populations, as well as other liquid and solid tumor antigens.Entities:
Keywords: antibody engineering; autologous cell therapy; cancer; chimeric antigen receptor T cell; leukemia
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26759369 PMCID: PMC4743815 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1524155113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205