| Literature DB >> 34740973 |
Jiao Wang1, Sandra Toregrosa-Allen2, Bennett D Elzey2, Sagar Utturkar2, Nadia Atallah Lanman2,3, Victor Bernal-Crespo4, Matthew M Behymer1, Gregory T Knipp1, Yeonhee Yun5, Michael C Veronesi5, Anthony L Sinn6, Karen E Pollok6,7,8,9, Randy R Brutkiewicz10, Kathryn S Nevel11, Sandro Matosevic12,2.
Abstract
Tumor antigen heterogeneity, a severely immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME) and lymphopenia resulting in inadequate immune intratumoral trafficking, have rendered glioblastoma (GBM) highly resistant to therapy. To address these obstacles, here we describe a unique, sophisticated combinatorial platform for GBM: a cooperative multifunctional immunotherapy based on genetically engineered human natural killer (NK) cells bearing multiple antitumor functions including local tumor responsiveness that addresses key drivers of GBM resistance to therapy: antigen escape, immunometabolic reprogramming of immune responses, and poor immune cell homing. We engineered dual-specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) NK cells to bear a third functional moiety that is activated in the GBM TME and addresses immunometabolic suppression of NK cell function: a tumor-specific, locally released antibody fragment which can inhibit the activity of CD73 independently of CAR signaling and decrease the local concentration of adenosine. The multifunctional human NK cells targeted patient-derived GBM xenografts, demonstrated local tumor site-specific activity in the tissue, and potently suppressed adenosine production. We also unveil a complex reorganization of the immunological profile of GBM induced by inhibiting autophagy. Pharmacologic impairment of the autophagic process not only sensitized GBM to antigenic targeting by NK cells but promoted a chemotactic profile favorable to NK infiltration. Taken together, our study demonstrates a promising NK cell-based combinatorial strategy that can target multiple clinically recognized mechanisms of GBM progression simultaneously.Entities:
Keywords: CD73; autophagy; glioblastoma; immunotherapy; natural killer cells
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34740973 PMCID: PMC8609337 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2107507118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779