| Literature DB >> 33652996 |
Synat Kang1, Xuefeng Gao1,2, Li Zhang1, Erna Yang1, Yonghui Li1,2, Li Yu1.
Abstract
Natural killer (NK) cells can be widely applied for cancer immunotherapy due to their ability to lyse tumor targets without prior sensitization or human leukocyte antigens-matching. Several NK-based therapeutic approaches have been attempted in clinical practice, but their efficacy is not sufficient to suppress tumor development mainly because of lacking specificity. To this end, the engineering of NK cells with T cell receptor along with CD3 subunits (TCR-NK) has been developed to increase the reactivity and recognition specificity of NK cells toward tumor cells. Here, we review recent advances in redirecting NK cells for cancer immunotherapy and discuss the major challenges and future explorations for their clinical applications.Entities:
Keywords: T cell receptor; TCR-NK; cancer immunotherapy; natural killer cells
Year: 2021 PMID: 33652996 PMCID: PMC8025748 DOI: 10.3390/curroncol28020105
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Oncol ISSN: 1198-0052 Impact factor: 3.677
Figure 1Interactions between NK cells and cancer cells in immunosurveillance. (A) Mechanism of NK cells in tumor immunosurveillance. NK cells can identify the tumor cells by stress or danger signals. Upon stimulation, NK cells directly killed tumor cells through many tactics, including the release of cytokine productions (e.g., IFN-g, NO), cytoplasmic granule release (e.g., granzyme B, perforin), death receptor-induced apoptosis (e.g., Fas-L, TRAIL), and ADCC. (B) Mechanism of tumor cells invading NK cells. Tumor cells defend themselves from NK cell attack through several techniques, including secretion soluble ligand of NK cell receptors (e.g., MICA/B), upregulation of HLA molecules, secretion immunosuppressive factor products (e.g., TGF-β or IL-10), and activation of Treg or phagocyte-derived inhibitory cytokines (ROS).
Strategies to eliminate tumors and some limitations.
| Therapy | Strategies | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Autologous NK cells | Systemic administration cytokines (IL)-2, IL-15, IL-18, IL-21, and interferon (IFN)α | Safe and widely used in clinic | Low efficacy caused by the suppression of recognition MHC molecule, cytokine administration | [ |
| Allogeneic NK cells | In combing with interleukine (IL)-2, IL-12, IL-15, IL-18, IL-21 and IFN-α | Highly effective against KIR-ligand mismatch malignancies | Rejection by patient’s immune system, lack of antigen specificity, insufficient numbers | [ |
| NK cell lines | Stimulated with cytokine IL-2, IL-12, IL-15, IL-18 | Unlimited cell expansion, easily manipulated, high cytotoxicity, low cost | Low efficacy (except ha-NK), irradiated | [ |
| Antibody-based NK cell therapy | Combined with mAb (e.g., cetuximab, rituximab, alemtuzumab, dinituximab) | More effective against cancers, higher cytotoxicity | Dose-related safety concerns | [ |
| Genetic modification of NK cells | CAR-NK | Highly efficacy, stronger intracellular signals | Limited large-scale expansion of primary CAR-NK, low transduction efficiency, loss functional activity (freeze-thaw process), lack of available targets. | [ |
| TCR-NK | Highly efficacy and safety, cost-effective, easily manipulated | MHC restriction | [ |
Clinical study of CAR-NK in hematological and solid tumors.
| NCT Number | Title | Conditions | Interventions | NK Source | Phase | Status | Locations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT03940833 | Clinical research of adoptive BCMA CAR-NK cells on relapse/refractory MM | Multiple myeloma | Biological: BCMA CAR-NK 92 cells | NK-92 | Phase 1 | Recruiting | Department of Hematology, Wuxi People’s Hospital, Nanjing Medical University |
| NCT03940820 | Clinical research of ROBO1 specific CAR-NK cells on patients with solid tumors | Solid tumor | Biological: ROBO1 CAR-NK cells | PB NK | Phase 1 | Recruiting | Radiation Therapy Department, Suzhou Cancer Center, Suzhou Hospital Affiliated to Nanjing Medical University |
| NCT03692637 | Study of anti-Mesothelin Car NK cells in epithelial ovarian cancer | Epithelial | Biological: Anti-mesothelin Car NK cells | PB NK | Early phase 1 | Not yet recruiting | Unknown |
| NCT03692663 | Study of anti-PSMA CAR NK cell in castration-resistant prostate cancer | Castration-resistant prostate cancer | Biological: anti-PSMA CAR NK cells | PB NK | Early phase 1 | Not yet recruiting | Unknown |
| NCT03692767 | Study of anti-CD22 CAR NK cells in relapsed and refractory B cell lymphoma | Refractory B-cell lymphoma | Biological: Anti-CD22 CAR NK cells | PB NK | Early phase 1 | Not yet recruiting | Unknown |
| NCT03690310 | Study of anti-CD19 CAR NK cells in relapsed and refractory B cell lymphoma | Refractory B-cell lymphoma | Biological: Anti-CD19 CAR NK cells | PB NK | Early phase 1 | Not yet recruiting | Unknown |
| NCT03415100 | Pilot study of NKG2D-ligand targeted CAR-NK cells in patients with metastatic solid tumors | Solid tumors | Biological: CAR-NK cells targeting NKG2D ligands | PB NK | Phase 1 | Unknown | Third Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University |
| NCT03824964 | Study of anti-CD19/CD22 CAR NK cells in relapsed and refractory B cell lymphoma | Refractory B-cell lymphoma | Biological: Anti-CD19/ | PB NK | Early phase 1 | Not yet recruiting | Unknown |
| NCT03579927 | CAR.CD19-CD28-zeta-2A-iCasp9-IL15-transduced cord blood NK cells, high-dose chemotherapy, and stem cell transplant in treating participants with B-cell lymphoma | CD19 positive, | Biological: Autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, high-dose chemotherapy | CB NK | Phase 1 | Withdrawn | M D Anderson Cancer Center Houston, Texas, United States |
| NCT02944162 | CAR-pNK cell immunotherapy for relapsed/refractory CD33+ AML | Leukemia | Biological: anti-CD33 CAR-NK cells | NK-92 | Phase 1 | Unknown | PersonGen BioTherapeutics (Suzhou) Co., Ltd. |
| NCT04324996 | A phase I/II study of universal off-the-shelf NKG2D-ACE2 CAR-NK cells for therapy of COVID-19 | COVID-19 | Biological: | PB-NK | Phase 1 | Recruiting | Chongqing Public Health Medical Center |
Figure 2Genetic modifications of NK-92 cells with TCR for cancer immunotherapy. Tumor-specific TCRs are generated from the tumor-specific TCR library. TCRs are constructed into a lentivirus vector. The lentiviral particles of TCR are produced by transfection with the TCRs lentivirus vector into packing cells (293T cell). To make a stable expression of TCR and CD3 in NK-92 cells, the NK-92 cells are transduced with the lentiviral particles of CD3 (NK-92-CD3). Then, the stable expression of NK-92-CD3 is transduced with lentiviral particles of TCR (TCR-NK-92-CD3, in the short term called TCR-NK). The positive TCRs expressing in NK-92 cells are expanded ex vivo. TCR-NK products are manufactured under GMP-compliant conditions (e.g., irradiated cells prior infusion to patients). The final products of TCR-NK are infused into patients.
TCR-NK cell-based therapy in pre-clinical study.
| TCRs Used in the Study | Source of NK Cells | Diseases | Antigen-Specific Targets | Functional Activities | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tyr TCR | NK-92, YTS | Melanoma | HLA-A2/Tyr368-377 peptide (YMDGTMSQV) | Highly cytotoxicity and cytokine secretion with antigen-specific recognition both in vitro and in vivo | [ |
| Radium-1 TCR and DMF-5 TCR | NK-92 | Colorectal carcinoma and mantle B cell lymphoma | HLA-A2/TGFβRII131-139 peptide (RLSSCVPVA) and | Enhanced antigen-specific recognition of target cells both in vitro and in vivo | [ |