| Literature DB >> 28356156 |
Shengnan Yu1, Anping Li2, Qian Liu1, Tengfei Li2, Xun Yuan1, Xinwei Han3, Kongming Wu4.
Abstract
The chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR-T) cell therapy is a newly developed adoptive antitumor treatment. Theoretically, CAR-T cells can specifically localize and eliminate tumor cells by interacting with the tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) expressing on tumor cell surface. Current studies demonstrated that various TAAs could act as target antigens for CAR-T cells, for instance, the type III variant epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFRvIII) was considered as an ideal target for its aberrant expression on the cell surface of several tumor types. CAR-T cell therapy has achieved gratifying breakthrough in hematological malignancies and promising outcome in solid tumor as showed in various clinical trials. The third generation of CAR-T demonstrates increased antitumor cytotoxicity and persistence through modification of CAR structure. In this review, we summarized the preclinical and clinical progress of CAR-T cells targeting EGFR, human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2), and mesothelin (MSLN), as well as the challenges for CAR-T cell therapy.Entities:
Keywords: CAR-T cell; EGFR; HER2; Mesothelin; Solid tumors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28356156 PMCID: PMC5372296 DOI: 10.1186/s13045-017-0444-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hematol Oncol ISSN: 1756-8722 Impact factor: 17.388
Fig. 1The structure of TCR and the three generations of CAR. T cell receptor (TCR) includes antigen-binding domain, transmembrane domain (TM domain), and immune receptor tyrosine-based activation motifs (ITAMs). The binding domain of CAR consists of a scFv, comprising the light (VL) and heavy (VH) variable fragments of a TAA-specific monoclonal antibody joined by a flexible linker. The intracellular parts are different between the three generations of CAR. The first-generation CAR only has the signal transduction domain of the CD3-zeta chain (CD3ζ) or Fc receptor γ (FcRγ) which mediated transient persistence, inefficient cytotoxicity, and low-level cytokine secretion. The second and third generation CAR add one or more co-stimulatory domains (CD28, 4-1BB, or OX40) to the first generation, which lead to the enhanced cytotoxicity and cytokine secretion along with prolonged T cell persistence
Tumor-associated antigens of CAR-T cell target
| Antigen | Full name | Disease |
|---|---|---|
| EGFR | Epidermal growth factor receptor | NSCLC, epithelial carcinoma, glioma |
| EGFRvIII | Variant III of the epidermal growth factor receptor | Glioblastoma |
| HER2 | Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 | Ovarian cancer, breast cancer, glioblastoma, colon cancer, osteosarcoma, medulloblastoma |
| MSLN | Mesothelin | Mesothelioma, ovarian cancer, pancreatic adenocarcinoma |
| PSMA | Prostate-specific membrane antigen | Prostate cancer |
| CEA | Carcinoembryonic antigen | Pancreatic adenocarcinoma, breast cancer, colorectal carcinoma |
| GD2 | Disialoganglioside 2 | Neuroblastoma, melanoma |
| IL13Rα2 | Interleukin-13Ra2 | Glioma |
| GPC3 | Glypican-3 | Hepatocellular carcinoma |
| CAIX | Carbonic anhydrase IX | Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) |
| L1-CAM | L1 cell adhesion molecule | Neuroblastoma, melanoma, ovarian adenocarcinoma |
| CA125 | Cancer antigen 125 (also known as MUC16) | Epithelial ovarian cancers |
| CD133 | Cluster of differentiation 133 (also known as prominin-1) | Glioblastoma, cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) |
| FAP | Fibroblast activation protein | Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) |
| CTAG1B | Cancer/testis antigen 1B (also known as NY-ESO-1) | Melanoma and ovarian cancer |
| MUC1 | Mucin 1 | Seminal vesicle cancer |
| FR-α | Folate receptor-α | Ovarian cancer |
Fig. 2Antitumor mechanism of CAR-T. a TCR recognizes TAAs depending on the MHC presentation. The advantage is that TCR could recognize intracellular and extracellular antigens. While tumor cells often downregulate MHC expression to escape the killer T cells, b CAR-T cells can specifically recognize the tumor antigens in a MHC-independent manner. And then, the T cells were activated through the phosphorylation of ITAMs followed by enhanced cytokine (include IL-2, IL-4, IFN-γ, IL-12, and TNF) secretion, T cell proliferation, and cytotoxicity. IL-12 could recruit and reinforce the functions of innate immune cells such as NK cell and macrophage. Activated T and CAR-T cells perform cytotoxicity mainly through secretion of perforin and granzyme granules, also through the death receptor pathway such as Fas/Fas-L. Due to added co-stimulatory signal to endodomain, antitumor activity mediated by CARs is stronger than TCRs
Clinical trials of CAR-T cells
| Target | Identifier | Institution | Phase | Status | Disease | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EGFR | NCT02331693 | Shanghai Cancer Institute | I | Recruiting | Glioma | Autologous T cells transduced with a lentiviral vector |
| EGFRvIII | NCT02844062 | Beijing Sanbo Brain Hospital | I | Recruiting | Glioma | Lymphodepletion chemotherapy, followed by CAR-T |
| EGFRvIII | NCT01454596 | National Cancer Institute (NCI) | I/II | Recruiting | Glioma | Autologous T cells, a retroviral vector |
| EGFRvIII | NCT02209376 | University of Pennsylvania/University of California | I | Recruiting | Glioma | Autologous T cells, a lentiviral vector |
| EGFRvIII | NCT02664363 | Duke University Medical Center | I | Not yet recruiting | Glioma | Dose escalation cohorts for 4 dose levels |
| EGFR | NCT01869166 | Chinese PLA General Hospital | I/II | Completed | NSCLC | Safe and feasible |
| HER2 | NCT02713984 | Southwest Hospital, China | I/II | Recruiting | HER2-positive cancer | |
| HER2 | NCT01935843 | Chinese PLA General Hospital | I/II | Recruiting | HER2-positive cancer | |
| HER2 | NCT02547961 | Fuda Cancer Hospital Guangzhou | I/II | Recruiting | Breast cancer | A retrovirus vector, preconditioning treatment |
| HER2 | NCT02442297 | Baylor College of Medicine | I | Recruiting | Glioma | Intracranial injection |
| HER2 | NCT01109095 | Baylor College of Medicine | I | Active, not recruiting | Glioma | CMV-specific cytotoxic T cells (CMV-T cells) |
| HER2 | NCT00889954 | Baylor College of Medicine | I | Active, not recruiting | HER2-positive cancer | TGFBeta resistant HER2/EBV-CTLs |
| HER2 | NCT00924287 | National Cancer Institute (NCI) | I/II | Completed | HER2-positive sarcoma | Results is not encouraging |
| HER2 | NCT00902044 | Baylor College of Medicine | I/II | Completed | HER2-positive sarcoma | Safe and feasible |
| MSLN | NCT02930993 | China Meitan General Hospital | I | Recruiting | Mesothelin-positive tumors | Followed lymphodepletion |
| MSLN | NCT02706782 | Shanghai Renji Hospital | I | Recruiting | Pancreatic cancer | Transcatheter arterial infusion |
| MSLN | NCT02159716 | University of Pennsylvania | I | Active not recruiting | Mesothelin-positive tumors | Lentiviral transduced |
| MSLN | NCT02792114 | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center | I | Recruiting | Mesothelin-expressing breast cancer | Premedicated with acetaminophen and diphenhydramine, and administered cyclophosphamide |
| MSLN | NCT02465983 | University of Pennsylvania | I | Active not recruiting | Pancreatic cancer | Combination therapy with CART-meso cells and CART19 cells |
| MSLN | NCT02959151 | Shanghai Tumor Hospital | I/II | Recruiting | Pancreatic cancer | Combined with interventional therapy |
| MSLN | NCT02590747 | Chinese PLA General Hospital | I | Recruiting | Mesothelin-positive tumors | Retroviral vector-transduced |
| MSLN | NCT01355965 | University of Pennsylvania | I | Completed | Pleural mesothelioma | Safe and feasible |
| MSLN | NCT02414269 | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center | I | Recruiting | Malignant pleural disease | With/without chemotherapy |
| MSLN | NCT01583686 | National Cancer Institute (NCI) | I/II | Recruiting | Mesothelin-positive tumors | Followed lymphodepletion |
| MSLN | NCT01897415 | University of Pennsylvania | I | Active not recruiting | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) | Transfected with chimeric anti-mesothelin immunoreceptor SS1 |
| IL13Rα2 | NCT00730613 | City of Hope Medical Center | I | Completed | Glioblastoma | Safe and feasible |
| IL13Rα2 | NCT02208362 | City of Hope Medical Center | I | Completed | Glioblastoma | Safe and feasible |
| CEA | NCT01373047 | Roger Williams Medical Center | I | Completed | Liver metastases | Safe and feasible |
| FAP | NCT01722149 | University of Zurich | I | Recruiting | Malignant pleural mesothelioma | Followed lymphodepletion |
| GD2 | NCT00085930 | Baylor College of Medicine | I | Completed | Neuroblastoma | Safe and feasible |
| GD2 | NCT02107963 | National Cancer Institute (NCI) | I | Completed | Sarcoma | Safe and feasible |
| CD133 | NCT02541370 | Chinese PLA General Hospital | I | Recruiting | CD133-positive malignancies | Relapsed and/or chemotherapy refractory advanced malignancies |
The details of Table 2 derived from http://clinicaltrials.gov/