| Literature DB >> 28969098 |
Xinxin Zhu1,2, Han Cai1, Ling Zhao1, Li Ning1, Jinghe Lang1.
Abstract
Ovarian cancer (OC) is the most lethal gynecological malignancy and is responsible for most gynecological cancer deaths. Apart from conventional surgery, chemotherapy, and radiotherapy, chimeric antigen receptor-modified T (CAR-T) cells as a representative of adoptive cellular immunotherapy have received considerable attention in the research field of cancer treatment. CARs combine antigen specificity and T-cell-activating properties in a single fusion molecule. Several preclinical experiments and clinical trials have confirmed that adoptive cell immunotherapy using typical CAR-engineered T cells for OC is a promising treatment approach with striking clinical efficacy; moreover, the emerging CAR-Ts targeting various antigens also exert great potential. However, such therapies have side effects and toxicities, such as cytokine-associated and "on-target, off-tumor" toxicities. In this review, we systematically detail and highlight the present knowledge of CAR-Ts including the constructions, vectors, clinical applications, development challenges, and solutions of CAR-T-cell therapy for OC. We hope to provide new insight into OC treatment for the future.Entities:
Keywords: T lymphocyte; chimeric antigen receptor; immunotherapy; ovarian neoplasms; toxicity
Year: 2017 PMID: 28969098 PMCID: PMC5610030 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.19929
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Evolution of CARs
CAR 1° represents the first-generation CARs; an scFv links the CD3ζ or FcεRIγ in the transmembrane region. CAR 2° represents the second-generation CARs; costimulatory molecules such as CD28 are engineered to the signal-transduction region. CAR 3° represents the third-generation CARs; they contain two costimulatory domains. CAR 4° (also called TRUCK) represents the fourth-generation CARs; they are additionally modified using a constitutive or inducible expression cassette for a transgenic protein (e.g., a cytokine), which is released by the CAR-T-cell to modulate T-cell response.
Frequently used approaches to transduction in tumors
| Viral vectors | Nonviral vectors | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Features | RV | LV | AV | AAV | liposomal | mRNA | transposon/ |
| Structure | ssRNA | ssRNA | dsDNA | ssDNA | |||
| Infected cell | dividing cells | dividing and quiescent cells | dividing and quiescent cells | dividing and quiescent cells | dividing and quiescent cells | ||
| Integration | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | poor |
| Clinical applications | most widely used now | most widely used nonviral vectors | less been applied but have great potential | ||||
| General advantage | higher infection rate | safety, ability to transfer large size gene, less toxicity | |||||
| General chanllege | immunogenicity, carcinogenicity, poor target cell specificity, inability to transfer large size genes | low transfection efficiency, poor transgene expression | |||||
| Cost of production | costly and laborious | cheap and relatively simple | |||||
AAV, adeno-associated virus vector; AV, adenovirus vector; dsDNA, double-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid; LV, lentiviral vector; mRNA, messenger ribonucleic acid; RV, retroviral vector; ssDNA, single-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid; ssRNA, single-stranded ribonucleic acid.
Active clinical trials of CAR-T immunotherapies for ovarian cancer*
| Target antigen | Receptor type (other specificity) | Gene transfer vehicle | NCT | Phase | Sponsor | Indication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MUC16 | 4H11-28z/ | RVs | 02498912 | I | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center | Recurrent |
| α-Folate receptor | n.p. | RVs | 00019136 | I | NCI | Advanced EOC |
| ScFV- | LVs | 02159716 | I | University of Pennsylvania | Patients with mesothelin expressing cancers | |
| n.p. | LVs | 03054298 | I | University of Pennsylvania | Patients with mesothelin expressing cancers | |
| Mesothelin | ScFV- | RVs | 02580747 | I | Chinese PLA General Hospital | Relapsed and/or chemotherapy refractory malignancies |
| n.p. | RVs | 01583686 | I, II | National Cancer Institute(NCI) | Metastatic cancer expressing the mesothelin molecule | |
| HER2 | ScFV- | n.p. | 01935843 | I, II | Chinese PLA General Hospital | Chemotherapy refractory HER2+ advanced solid tumors |
| n.p. | n.p. | 02713984 | I, II | Zhi Yang | HER2+ cancer | |
| EGFR | ScFV- | LVs | 01869166 | I, II | Chinese PLA General Hospital | Chemotherapy refractory EGFR+advanced solid tumors |
| CD133 | ScFV- | RVs | 02541370 | I | Chinese PLA General Hospital | Relapsed and/or chemotherapy refractory advanced |
| CEA | n.p. | RVs | 01212887 | I | Cancer Research UK | Patients with advanced CEA positive tumors |
| NKG2D | n.p. | n.p. | 03018405 | I | Celyad | Various tumors expressing NKR-2 |
| NY-ESO-1 | n.p. | RVs | 02366546 | I | Mie University | Unresectable, refractory solid tumors expressing NY-ESO-1 |
| MAGE-A4 | n.p. | RVs | 02096614 | I | Mie University | Unresectable, refractory, metastatic or recurrent tumors expressing MAGE-A4 |
| WT-1 | n.p. | n.p. | 00562640 | I | Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center | Recurrent or persistent advanced EOC |
* ClinicalTrials.gov
EOC, epithelial ovarian cancer; LVs, lentiviral vectors; NCI, National Cancer Institute; n.p., not provided; RVs, retroviral vectors.
Figure 2Schematic of MUC16 structure
The full-length MUC16 contains a large cleaved and released domain named CA125 consisting of multiple repeat sequences, followed by a conserved cytoplasmic domain MUC16ecto including a nonrepeating ectodomain, a transmembrane domain, and a cytoplasmic tail.