| Literature DB >> 28929447 |
Hua Jiang1, Bo Song2, Peng Wang2, Bizhi Shi1, Qixiang Li3, Mingliang Fan1, Shengmeng Di1, Jie Yang4, Zonghai Li5,6.
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28929447 PMCID: PMC5712292 DOI: 10.1007/s13238-017-0472-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein Cell ISSN: 1674-800X Impact factor: 14.870
Figure 1Binding properties of anti-mesothelin antibody and CAR constructs on primary human T cells. (A) Mesothelin expression in the established cell lines. Cell extracts from mesothelin-transfected cells were subjected to Western blot analysis. The blot was incubated with a mouse monoclonal antibody mesothelin (K1). GAPDH was used as a loading control. (B) The mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) of different scFv proteins bound cells was determined by flow cytometric analysis. (C) Binding specificity of the anti-mesothelin antibody to MSLN-transfected CHO-K1 or PANC-1 cells. (D) Affinity measurements of antibody binding to mesothelin through Biacore Surface Plasmon resonance. (E) A schematic diagram showing the MSLN-specific CAR used in this study. (F) The primary human T cells efficiently express MSLN-specific CAR, as measured by flow cytometry. Mock T cells were demonstrated by assessing the expression of eGFP
Figure 2cytotoxic activity and cytokine release of MSLN-targeted CAR T cells and antitumor activity of the modified T cells against established pancreatic cancer PDX tumor models . (A) Modified T cells were coincubated with tumor cells for 18 h at different effector: target ratios. Cell lysis was determined through a standard nonradioactive cytotoxic assay. Each data point is the mean ± SEM of triplicates. (B) The modified T cells were cocultured with tumor cells for 24 h. The levels of TNF-α, IL-2, and IFN-γ in the supernatants were evaluated by ELISA. The results are representative of triplicates. Statistically significant difference is marked by asterisks (*, P < 0.05; ***, P < 0.001). (C) NOD/SCID mice were inoculated subcutaneously with pancreatic cancer PDX tumors on day 0. On day 30, when the tumor volumes reached 100 mm3, T cells were injected i.v. with a single dose of 1 × 107 MSLN-28Z and MSLN-28BBZ CAR-T cells or mock transduced T cells. Data are presented as mean tumor volume ± SEM. Statistically significant differences of MSLN-28Z vs. mock T-cells or MSLN-28BBZ vs. mock T-cells are marked by asterisks (***, P < 0.001). (D) On day 53 after pancreatic cancer PDX tumor inoculation, mice were euthanized. The tumor weight was measured. Efficacy was evaluated by measuring the reduction of the mean tumor weight relative to mock control (P < 0.01). (E) The images of xenograft tumors treated with different CAR-T cells. (F) The persistence of CAR-T cells in vivo. The flow cytometric analysis of human CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from mice bearing pancreatic cancer PDX tumors treated with the indicated genetically modified T cells. (G) The quantities of circulating human CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. The mean cell concentration (cells/μL ± SEM) for mice in the untransduced or modified T cell treatment groups and P values are shown. (H) MSLN-CAR T cells infiltrate into pancreatic cancer PDX tumors. Tumors were collected from mice bearing pancreatic cancer PDX subcutaneous tumors treated with MSLN-28Z, MSLN-28BBZ CAR-T cells and mock T cells. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumor sections were consecutively cut and stained for human CD3 expression (brown). The images were obtained under 200× magnification. The scale bar is 200 μm. (I) The quantities of infiltrated CAR-T cells in pancreatic cancer PDX subcutaneous tumors. Data are expressed as mean ± SEM