| Literature DB >> 30865026 |
Luciana D'Apice1, Fausta Cuccaro2,3, Sonia Varriale2,3, Deborah Cipria1, Rossella Sartorius1, Paola Circosta4, Alessandro Cignetti4, Massimiliano Salerno2,3, Maria R Coscia1, Umberto Oreste1, Vincenzo M Marzullo1, Giuseppe Martini5, Oreste Acuto6, Piergiuseppe De Berardinis1.
Abstract
Adoptive transfer of T lymphocytes (ACT) engineered with T-cell receptors (TCRs) of known antitumor specificity is an effective therapeutic strategy. However, a major constraint of ACT is the unpredictable interference of the endogenous TCR α and β chains in pairing of the transduced TCR. This effect reduces the efficacy of the genetically modified primary T cells and carries the risk of generating novel TCR reactivities with unintended functional consequences. Here, we show a powerful approach to overcome these limitations. We engineered TCR α and β chains with mutations encompassing a conserved motif (FXXXFXXS) required to stabilize the pairing of immunoglobulin heavy chain transmembrane domains. Molecular modeling supported the preferential pairing of mutated TCR and impaired pairing between mutated and wild-type TCRs. Expression of the mutated TCR was similar to wild type and conferred the expected specificity. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer analysis in mouse splenocytes transduced with mutated or wild-type TCRs showed a higher proximity of the former over the latter. Importantly, we show that mutated TCRs effectively outcompete endogenous TCRs and improve in vitro antitumor cytotoxicity when expressed in ex vivo isolated human T cells. This approach should contribute to improving current protocols of anticancer immunetherapy protocols.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30865026 DOI: 10.1097/CJI.0000000000000259
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother ISSN: 1524-9557 Impact factor: 4.456