| Literature DB >> 27849617 |
Lenka V Hurton1,2, Harjeet Singh1, Amer M Najjar3, Kirsten C Switzer1, Tiejuan Mi1, Sourindra Maiti1, Simon Olivares1, Brian Rabinovich1, Helen Huls1,4, Marie-Andrée Forget1,5, Vrushali Datar3, Partow Kebriaei6, Dean A Lee1, Richard E Champlin6, Laurence J N Cooper7,8.
Abstract
Adoptive immunotherapy retargeting T cells to CD19 via a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) is an investigational treatment capable of inducing complete tumor regression of B-cell malignancies when there is sustained survival of infused cells. T-memory stem cells (TSCM) retain superior potential for long-lived persistence, but challenges exist in manufacturing this T-cell subset because they are rare among circulating lymphocytes. We report a clinically relevant approach to generating CAR+ T cells with preserved TSCM potential using the Sleeping Beauty platform. Because IL-15 is fundamental to T-cell memory, we incorporated its costimulatory properties by coexpressing CAR with a membrane-bound chimeric IL-15 (mbIL15). The mbIL15-CAR T cells signaled through signal transducer and activator of transcription 5 to yield improved T-cell persistence independent of CAR signaling, without apparent autonomous growth or transformation, and achieved potent rejection of CD19+ leukemia. Long-lived T cells were CD45ROnegCCR7+CD95+, phenotypically most similar to TSCM, and possessed a memory-like transcriptional profile. Overall, these results demonstrate that CAR+ T cells can develop long-term persistence with a memory stem-cell phenotype sustained by signaling through mbIL15. This observation warrants evaluation in clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: CAR; IL-15; T-cell persistence; T-memory stem cell; adoptive immunotherapy
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27849617 PMCID: PMC5137758 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1610544113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205