| Literature DB >> 34970253 |
Muhammad Babar Khawar1,2,3,4, Haibo Sun1,2.
Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) are fusion proteins with an extracellular antigen recognition domain and numerous intracellular signaling domains that have been genetically modified. CAR-engineered T lymphocyte-based therapies have shown great success against blood cancers; however, potential fatal toxicity, such as in cytokine release syndrome, and high costs are some shortcomings that limit the clinical application of CAR-engineered T lymphocytes and remain to overcome. Natural killer (NK) cells are the focal point of current immunological research owing to their receptors that prove to be promising immunotherapeutic candidates for treating cancer. However, to date, manipulation of NK cells to treat malignancies has been moderately successful. Recent progress in the biology of NK cell receptors has greatly transformed our understanding of how NK cells recognize and kill tumor and infected cells. CAR-NK cells may serve as an alternative candidate for retargeting cancer because of their unique recognition mechanisms, powerful cytotoxic effects especially on cancer cells in both CAR-dependent and CAR-independent manners and clinical safety. Moreover, NK cells can serve as an 'off-the-shelf product' because NK cells from allogeneic sources can also be used in immunotherapies owing to their reduced risk of alloreactivity. Although ongoing fundamental research is in the beginning stages, this review provides an overview of recent developments implemented to design CAR constructs to stimulate NK activation and manipulate NK receptors for improving the efficiency of immunotherapy against cancer, summarizes the preclinical and clinical advances of CAR-NK cells against both hematological malignancies and solid tumors and confronts current challenges and obstacles of their applications. In addition, this review provides insights into prospective novel approaches that further enhance the efficiency of CAR-NK therapies and highlights potential questions that require to be addressed in the future.Entities:
Keywords: CAR-NK; CAR-T; HLA; KIR; cancer immunotherapy; clinical trials; receptors; tumor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34970253 PMCID: PMC8712563 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.707542
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Different ways of NK-cell mediated tumor killing and immune system modulation: (A) NK cells are capable of enhancing the antigen presentation to T cells by killing the immature DC while promoting the IFN-γ and TNF-α mediated maturation of DC. (B) NK cells can specifically recognize the cells that lack the expression of self-MHC class I molecules (Missing-self). (C) ADCC can kill the target cell. (D) Fas/FasL pathway is a very effective NK cell-mediated cell killing as the binding of FasL to Fas results in delivering a “death signal” to the target cell that undergoes apoptosis shortly. (E) Cytokine pathway can exert anti-tumor potential as Cytokines such as NK cells secret several cytokines such as TNF-α. (F) NK cell receptors NKG2D are capable of recognizing the “induced-self” ligands that are express at a very high rate in response to the activation of tumor-associated pathways. (G) Checkpoint blockade may inhibit NK cell suppression by preventing the interaction of NK cell inhibitory receptors with their ligands. (H) As a result of adoptive NK cells transfer, the mismatch between donor and recipient, inhibitory KIRs, NK cells eliminate the allogeneic tumor cells that lack self-MHC. (I) CAR-NK cells designed specifically to target overexpressed tumor antigens are also useful in eliminating the specific tumor cells. (J) Specifically designed bispecific molecules are also being utilized to specifically eliminate tumor cells as these special molecules bind to activating NK cell receptors on one arm and tumor antigens on the other. (K) NK cells can enhance or diminish macrophage and T cell activities via IFN-γ and IL-10 production.
Figure 2NK-Cell Surface Receptors and their corresponding ligands: NK cells express a vast array of both Activating and inhibitory cell surface receptors that interact with their corresponding ligands found on the tumor cell surface.
Figure 3Schematic of NK cell sources and CAR-NK cell/immune therapy workflow: NK cells harvested from multiple sources, followed by NK-cell activation by IL-2 and subsequent transduction with a construct encoding CAR. Next, these reprogrammed CAR-NK cells are expanded ex-vivo and passed through strict quality control testing before cryopreservation and subsequent validation and approval for final clinical administration.
Figure 4The evolution of the chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) structure over time: The structural components of 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th generation of CAR. The CAR “generations” denote the number and composition of the intracellular signaling domains. The 1st generation’s CARs failed to deliver cell proliferation signals for the retention of anti-cancer potential. However, 2nd and 3rd generation CARs have CD28, CD134 (OX40), and CD137 (4-1BB) to promote the anti-tumor potential. The 4th CAR generation is designed to secrete cytokines to further improvise the therapeutic activity of the CAR-based immunotherapies.
Figure 5Few of the next generation CARs to better cope with the immune escape and improve the cytotoxic potential of CAR-based immunotherapies: Multi CARs are equipped with two or more separate CARs expressing various ScFvs to target the cancer cells. Tandem CARs are equipped with two different scFvs in a single CAR molecule. Upon antigen recognition in healthy cells, Inhibitory CARs tend to inhibit immune cell activation. In switch CARs, certain chemicals capable of dimerization with the iCasp9 are conditionally administered to activates the downstream caspase molecules leading to the apoptosis of CAR-expressing cells. Supra CARs are equipped with two split structures; the antigen-binding domain (zipFV) and function domain (zipCAR) that upon binding activates the CAR-expressing cells.
Figure 6A comparison of CAR-T and CAR-NK immunotherapy: CAR-NK cell therapies are becoming increasingly popular due to several advantageous features such as low safety concerns, low costs, and higher tumor potential.
Clinical trials of CAR-NK cell therapies against hematological malignancies and solid tumors.
| Serial No. | Tumor Type | Specific Target | Source of NK-cells | Status | Phase | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Leukemia and lymphoma | CD7 | NK-92 | Unknown | I/II | NCT02742727 |
| 2. | Leukemia and lymphoma | CD19 | NK-92 | Recruiting | I/II | NCT02892695 |
| 3. | Leukemia and lymphoma | CD19 | Umbilical cord blood | Recruiting | I/II | NCT03056339 |
| 4. | Leukemia and lymphoma | CD19 | Umbilical cord blood | Withdrawn | I/II | NCT03579927 |
| 5. | Acute myeloid leukemia | CD33 | NK-92 | Unknown | I/II | NCT02944162 |
| 6. | Acute myeloid leukemia | CD19 | Expanded donor NK cells | Completed | I | NCT00995137 |
| 7. | Acute myeloid leukemia | CD19 | Haploidentical donor NK cells | Suspended | II | NCT01974479 |
| 8. | Relapsed & Refractory Acute myeloid leukemias | CD33 | NK-92 | Unknown | I/II | NCT02944162 |
| 9. | Relapsed & Refractory B Cell Lymphoma | CD19 | Unknown | Not Yet Recruiting | Early phase I | NCT03690310 |
| 10. | Relapsed & Refractory B Cell Lymphoma | CD22 | Unknown | Not Yet Recruiting | Early phase I | NCT03692767 |
| 11. | Relapsed & Refractory B Cell Lymphoma | CD19/CD22 | Unknown | Not Yet Recruiting | Early phase I | NCT03824964 |
| 12. | Multiple Myeloma | BCMA | NK 92 | Recruiting | I/II | NCT03940833 |
| 13. | Pancreatic Cancer | ROBO1 | Unknown | Recruiting | I/II | NCT03941457 |
| 14. | Epithelial ovarian cancer | Mesothelin | Unknown | Not Yet Recruiting | Early phase I | NCT03692637 |
| 15. | Castration-resistant Prostate Cancer | PSMA | Unknown | Not Yet Recruiting | Early phase I | NCT03692663 |
| 16. | Non-small cell lung cancer | Unknown | CCCR-NK-92 | Recruiting | I | NCT03656705 |
| 17. | Glioblastoma | HER2 | NK-92 | Recruiting | I | NCT03383978 |
| 18. | Solid tumors | MUC1 | Unknown | Unknown | I/II | NCT02839954 |
| 19. | Solid tumors | NKG2D ligands | Autologous or allogeneic NK cells | Recruiting | I | NCT03415100 |
| 20. | Solid Tumors | ROBO1 | Unknown | Recruiting | I/II | NCT03940820 |
Recent preclinical studies employing CAR-NK cells against various hematological cancers.
| Serial No. | Tumor Type | Specific Target | Source of NK-cells | CAR composition | Clinical Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| T cell malignancies | CD5 | NK-92 | CD28+4-1BB+CD3ζ | Inhibition and control of disease progression | ( |
|
| B-cell malignancies | CD19 | PB-NK | CD28+4-1BB+CD3ζ | Complete elimination of leukemia after 48 h | ( |
|
| B-cell malignancies | CD19 | PB-NK | 4-1BB+CD3ζ | Augmented cytotoxicity of NK cells | ( |
|
| B-ALL | CD19 | PB-NK | CD28+CD3ζ | Complete and durable molecular remissions of pre-B-ALL | ( |
|
| B-cell malignancies | CD19 | NK-92 | CD3ζ | Successful inhibition of disease progression | ( |
|
| B-cell malignancies | CD19 | NK-92 | CD3ζ | Overcame NK resistance and markedly enhanced NK-cell-mediated killing | ( |
|
| B-cell malignancies | CD19 | PB-NK | CD28+CD3ζ+IL15 | Superior cytotoxicity with up to 90% specific killing activity | ( |
|
| B-cell malignancies | CD19 | NK-92 | 41BB-CD3ζ, | Specific and efficient lysis of leukemia cell lines and lymphoblasts | ( |
|
| B-ALL | FLT3 | NK-92 | CD28+CD3ζ+iCasp9 | Remarkable inhibition of disease progression and high antileukemic activity | ( |
|
| B-cell malignancies | CD19 | UCB-NK | 4-1BB+CD3ζ+iCasp9+IL15 | Efficient killing of CD19-expressing cell lines and primary leukemia cells with marked prolongation of survival | ( |
|
| B-cell malignancies | CD20 | PB-NK | 4-1BB+CD3ζ | Significantly enhanced cytotoxicity and IFNγ production, extended survival time and reduced tumor size | ( |
|
| Burkitt lymphoma | CD20 | PB-NK | 4-1BB+CD3ζ+IL15 | Significant anti-tumor effects and enhanced | ( |
|
| MM | CD-38 | NK-92 | CD28-41BB-CD3ζ | Specific lysis of CD38-expressing tumor cell lines and effective depletion of MM | ( |
|
| MM | CD138 | NK-92MI | CD3ζ | Remarkable cytotoxicity against human MM cell lines and elevated secretion of granzyme B, interferon-γ and CD107a proportion | ( |
|
| MM | CS-1 | NK-92 | CD28+CD3ζ | Enhanced MM cytolysis and IFN-γ production, efficient suppression of human IM9 MM cells and significant survival of mice | ( |
|
| Peripheral T cell lymphoma | CD-4 | NK-92 | CD28-41BBCD3ζ | Specific elimination of T-cell leukemia, lymphoma cell lines, and patient samples | ( |
|
| T cell malignancies | CD-5 | NK-92 | 2B4-CD3ζ | Specific cytotoxicity against CD5+ malignant cells and prolonged survival of T-ALL xenograft mice | ( |
|
| T-ALL | CD-7 | NK-92 | CD28-41BBCD3ζ | Potent anti-tumor activity, elevated Granzyme B and IFNγ secretion, and significant inhibition of disease progression | ( |
|
| EBV+ T cell | EBNA3C | NK-92 | 4-1BB+CD3ζ | Exquisite specificity, potent cytotoxicity, and induction of ADCC toward the targeted T-cell epitope (TCE) | ( |
|
| Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma or chronic lymphocytic leukemia | CD-19 | UCB-NK | CD28+CD3ζ+ IL15+iCasp9 | complete remission in 7/11 (4 with lymphoma and 3 with CLL) | ( |
Recent preclinical studies employing CAR-NK cells against various solid tumors.
| Serial No. | Tumor Type | Specific Target | Source of NK-cells | CAR composition | Clinical Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Osteosarcoma/Prostate/HCC/Breast cancer | NKG2D | PB-NK | NKG2D+DAP10+CD3ζ | Enhanced cytotoxicity and secretion of IFN-γ, GM-CSF, IL-13, MIP-1α, MIP-1β, CCL5, and TNF-α, and cytotoxic granules which persisted after 48h | ( |
| 2. | Multiple solid tumors | NKG2D | NK-92 | DAP10+CD3ζ | Enhanced anti-tumor cytotoxicity both | ( |
| 3. | Ovarian cancer | NKG2D | PBMCs | CD8α+ CD3ζ | Augmented tumor infiltration and significant antitumor responses | ( |
| 4. | Bladder carcinoma | PSCA | YTS/PB-NK | DAP12 | Improved cytotoxicity, delayed tumor growth and complete tumor eradication | ( |
| 5. | Breast carcinoma | EpCAM | NK-92/NKL | CD28+CD3ζ+IL-15 | Predominantly intracellular expression of the cytokine, and STAT5 activation, high and selective cell-killing activity | ( |
| 6. | Colorectal cancer | EGFRvIII | NK-92 | CD8α+ CD28+ CD3ζ | Development of a sensitive | ( |
| 7. | Breast cancer | EGFR | PB-NK/NK-92 | CD28+CD3ζ+oHSV | Enhanced cytotoxicity and IFN-γ production, efficient killing and significantly longer survival | ( |
| 8. | Renal cell carcinoma | EGFR | NK-92 | CD28+4-1BB+CD3ζ | Potent antitumor activity and long-lasting immunological memory | ( |
| 9. | GBM | EGFRvIII | YTS | DAP12 | Specific cytotoxicity, significantly delayed tumor growth, increased survival, and complete tumor remission | ( |
| 10. | GBM | EGFR/EGFRvIII | NK-92/NKL | CD28+CD3ζ | Enhanced cytolytic capability, IFN-γ production, efficient suppression of tumor, and significantly prolonged the survival | ( |
| 11. | GBM | EGFR/EGFRvIII | NK-92 | CD28+CD3ζ | High and specific cytotoxicity and tumor lysis, and marked extension of survival | ( |
| 12. | Melanoma | GPA7 | NK-92 | HLA-A2TM+CD3ζ | Enhanced tumor killing and suppression of the growth of human melanoma | ( |
| 13. | GBM/breast cancer | HER2 | NK-92 | CD8α+CD3ζ | Specific and efficient tumor lysis | ( |
| 14. | GBM/breast cancer | HER2 | NK-92 | CD28+CD3ζ | Potent | ( |
| 15. | Breast cancer/renal | HER2 | NK-92 | CD28+4-1BB+CD3ζ | Efficient | ( |
| 16. | Neuroblastoma | GD2 | NK-92 | CD3ζ | Remarkable cell killing activity | ( |
| 17. | Ewing sarcomas | GD2 | PB-NK | CD28+4-1BB+CD3ζ | Enhanced | ( |
| 18. | hepatocellular cancer | Glypican-3 (GPC3) | NK-92 | CD28+41BB+CD3ζ | More quick expansion, more persistence, and higher cytotoxicity | ( |
| 19. | Ovarian cancer | Glypican-3 (GPC3) | iPSC | CD8α+CD28+CD137+CD3ζ, | Enhanced cytotoxicity, IFN-γ production, and prolonged the survival | ( |
| 20. | Ovarian cancer | Mesothelin | iPSC | 2B4+CD3z | Superior anti-tumor potential, significant inhibition of tumor growth and prolonged survival | ( |
| 21. | Ovarian cancer | Mesothelin | NK-92 | CD28+41BB+CD3ζ | Specific | ( |
| 22. | Prostate Cancer | Prostate Stem Cell Ag | YST cell line, primary NK | DAP12 | Improved cytotoxicity, delayed tumor growth and complete tumor eradication | ( |
| 23. | Colorectal Cancer | Carcinoembryonic | NK-92 | CD3ζ | Improved recognition and lysis of the tumor cell lines | ( |
| 24. | ovarian cancer | CD133 | NK-92 | CD28-41BBCD3ζ | Enhanced cytotoxicity and IFN-γ production | ( |
| 25. | Liver cancer | c-MET | Peripheral blood | 41BB+DAP12 | Improved specific cytotoxic potential | ( |
| 26. | PD-L1+Solid tumors | PD-L1 | NK-92 | 41BB | Improved antitumor potential and significant inhibition of tumor growth | ( |
| 27. | Triple-negative breast | Tissue Factor (TF) | NK-92 | CD28+41BB+CD3ζ | Superior tumor killing | ( |