| Literature DB >> 35409419 |
Sachiko Hirobe1,2,3, Keisuke Imaeda4, Masashi Tachibana4,5, Naoki Okada4,5.
Abstract
To improve the efficacy and safety of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-expressing T cell therapeutics through enhanced CAR design, we analysed CAR structural factors that affect CAR-T cell function. We studied the effects of disulphide bonding at cysteine residues and glycosylation in the HD on CAR-T function. We used first-generation CAR[V/28/28/3z] and CAR[V/8a/8a/3z], consisting of a mouse vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (VEGFR2)-specific single-chain variable fragment tandemly linked to CD28- or CD8α-derived HD, transmembrane domain (TMD) and a CD3ζ-derived signal transduction domain (STD). We constructed structural variants by substituting cysteine with alanine and asparagine (putative N-linked glycosylation sites) with aspartate. CAR[V/28/28/3z] and CAR[V/8a/8a/3z] formed homodimers, the former through a single HD cysteine residue and the latter through the more TMD-proximal of the two cysteine residues. The absence of disulphide bonds did not affect membrane CAR expression but reduced antigen-specific cytokine production and cytotoxic activity. CAR[V/28/28/3z] and CAR[V/8a/8a/3z] harboured one N-linked glycosylation site, and CAR[V/8a/8a/3z] underwent considerable O-linked glycosylation at an unknown site. Thus, N-linked glycosylation of CAR[V/28/28/3z] promotes stable membrane CAR expression, while having no effect on the expression or CAR-T cell activity of CAR[V/8a/8a/3z]. Our findings demonstrate that post-translational modifications of the CAR HD influence CAR-T cell activity, establishing a basis for future CAR design.Entities:
Keywords: CAR-T cell therapy; chimeric antigen receptor; disulphide bonds; glycosylation; hinge domain
Mesh:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35409419 PMCID: PMC8999629 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23074056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Analysis of cysteine-mediated disulphide bonds and glycosylation in the HD of CAR[V/28/28/3z] and CAR[V/8a/8a/3z]. SDS-PAGE and Western blotting analysis showing the expression of two CARs in whole CAR-T cell lysate on day 0 (24 h after transduction).
Figure 2Illustration of the retroviral vector construct containing the gene encoding a VEGFR2-specific CAR and the amino acid sequence of the HD.
Figure 3Influence on expression and antigen-specific function of CAR[V/28/28/3z] or CAR[V/8a/8a/3z] following deletion of the cysteine in HD. (A) SDS-PAGE and Western blotting analysis showing the expression modality of six CAR variants in whole CAR-T cell lysate on day 0. (B) The surface expression and antigen-binding ability were determined via FCM analysis on day 0. All cells were pre-gated with live cells, lymphocytes, and CD8α+ cell. (C) CAR mRNA expression was analysed via RT-qPCR, and their transcription levels were calculated relative to GAPDH mRNA as an endogenous control. (D) CAR expression on T cells was analysed via FCM. Each CAR expression level was calculated from the ratio of geometric mean fluorescence intensity (GMFI) when stained with the anti-HA-tag mAb to GMFI when stained with the isotype control antibody. (E) Proliferation activity of HD-modified CAR-T cells following mVEGFR2 stimulation. (F) Cytokine production ability of the above cells following mVEGFR2 stimulation. (G) Cytotoxic activity of the above cells four days after Rv transduction against mVEGFR2+ EL4 cells. The data were obtained from three independent tests. Statistical analysis was performed using Welch’s t-test (* p < 0.05 and ** p < 0.01 versus WT) in CAR[V/28/28/3z] or Tukey’s test (* p < 0.05 and ** p < 0.01 versus WT, † p < 0.05 and †† p < 0.01 versus C178A/C193A, ‡‡ p < 0.01 versus C193A) in CAR[V/8a/8a/3z].
Figure 4Influence on the expression and antigen-specific function of CAR[V/28/28/3z] or CAR[V/8a/8a/3z] after deletion of N-linked glycosylation in HD. (A) SDS-PAGE and Western blotting analysis showing the expression modality of four CAR variants in the whole CAR-T cell lysate on day 0. (B) The surface expression and antigen-binding ability were determined via FCM analysis on day 0. All cells were pre-gated with live cells, lymphocytes, and CD8α+ cells. (C) CAR mRNA expression was analysed via RT-qPCR and normalised relative to GAPDH mRNA as an endogenous control. (D) CAR expression on T cells was analysed via FCM. CAR expression level was calculated from the ratio of GMFI when stained with the anti-HA-tag mAb to GMFI when stained with the isotype control antibody. (E) Proliferation activity of HD-modified CAR-T cells following mVEGFR2 stimulation. (F) Cytokine production ability of the above cells following mVEGFR2 stimulation. (G) Cytotoxic activity of the above cells four days after Rv transduction against mVEGFR2+ EL4 cells. The data were obtained from three independent tests. Statistical analysis was performed using Welch’s t-test (* p < 0.05 and ** p < 0.01 versus WT).
Figure 5Role of disulphide bonding via cysteine residue and glycosylation in the HD on CAR[V/28/28/3z] and CAR[V/8a/8a/3z] expression and function.