| Literature DB >> 33649188 |
Suman Paul1,2,3, Alexander H Pearlman2,3, Jacqueline Douglass2,3, Brian J Mog2,3,4, Emily Han-Chung Hsiue2,3, Michael S Hwang2,3, Sarah R DiNapoli2,3, Maximilian F Konig2,3,5, Patrick A Brown6, Katharine M Wright7, Surojit Sur2,3, Sandra B Gabelli8,7,9, Yana Li7, Gabriel Ghiaur10, Drew M Pardoll8,11, Nickolas Papadopoulos8,3, Chetan Bettegowda3,12, Kenneth W Kinzler8,3,11, Shibin Zhou8,3,11, Bert Vogelstein1,2,3,11.
Abstract
Immunotherapies such as chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells and bispecific antibodies redirect healthy T cells to kill cancer cells expressing the target antigen. The pan-B cell antigen-targeting immunotherapies have been remarkably successful in treating B cell malignancies. Such therapies also result in the near-complete loss of healthy B cells, but this depletion is well tolerated by patients. Although analogous targeting of pan-T cell markers could, in theory, help control T cell cancers, the concomitant healthy T cell depletion would result in severe and unacceptable immunosuppression. Thus, therapies directed against T cell cancers require more selective targeting. Here, we describe an approach to target T cell cancers through T cell receptor (TCR) antigens. Each T cell, normal or malignant, expresses a unique TCR β chain generated from 1 of 30 TCR β chain variable gene families (TRBV1 to TRBV30). We hypothesized that bispecific antibodies targeting a single TRBV family member expressed in malignant T cells could promote killing of these cancer cells, while preserving healthy T cells that express any of the other 29 possible TRBV family members. We addressed this hypothesis by demonstrating that bispecific antibodies targeting TRBV5-5 (α-V5) or TRBV12 (α-V12) specifically lyse relevant malignant T cell lines and patient-derived T cell leukemias in vitro. Treatment with these antibodies also resulted in major tumor regressions in mouse models of human T cell cancers. This approach provides an off-the-shelf, T cell cancer selective targeting approach that preserves enough healthy T cells to maintain cellular immunity.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33649188 PMCID: PMC8236299 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abd3595
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956