Therapeutic high affinity T cell receptor targeting a KRASG12D cancer neoantigen

Neoantigens derived from somatic mutations are specific to cancer cells and are ideal targets for cancer immunotherapy. KRAS is the most frequently mutated oncogene and drives the pathogenesis of several cancers. Here we show the identification and development of an affinity-enhanced T cell receptor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2022-09, Vol.13 (1), p.5333-15, Article 5333
Hauptverfasser: Poole, Andrew, Karuppiah, Vijaykumar, Hartt, Annabelle, Haidar, Jaafar N., Moureau, Sylvie, Dobrzycki, Tomasz, Hayes, Conor, Rowley, Christopher, Dias, Jorge, Harper, Stephen, Barnbrook, Keir, Hock, Miriam, Coles, Charlotte, Yang, Wei, Aleksic, Milos, Lin, Aimee Bence, Robinson, Ross, Dukes, Joe D., Liddy, Nathaniel, Van der Kamp, Marc, Plowman, Gregory D., Vuidepot, Annelise, Cole, David K., Whale, Andrew D., Chillakuri, Chandramouli
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Neoantigens derived from somatic mutations are specific to cancer cells and are ideal targets for cancer immunotherapy. KRAS is the most frequently mutated oncogene and drives the pathogenesis of several cancers. Here we show the identification and development of an affinity-enhanced T cell receptor (TCR) that recognizes a peptide derived from the most common KRAS mutant, KRAS G12D , presented in the context of HLA-A*11:01. The affinity of the engineered TCR is increased by over one million-fold yet fully able to distinguish KRAS G12D over KRAS WT . While crystal structures reveal few discernible differences in TCR interactions with KRAS WT versus KRAS G12D , thermodynamic analysis and molecular dynamics simulations reveal that TCR specificity is driven by differences in indirect electrostatic interactions. The affinity enhanced TCR, fused to a humanized anti-CD3 scFv, enables selective killing of cancer cells expressing KRAS G12D . Our work thus reveals a molecular mechanism that drives TCR selectivity and describes a soluble bispecific molecule with therapeutic potential against cancers harboring a common shared neoantigen. Cancers often harbor mutations in genes encoding important regulatory proteins, but therapeutic targeting of these molecules proves difficult due to their high structural similarity to their non-mutated counterpart. Here authors show the engineering of T cell engaging bispecific protein able to selectively target cancer cells with a high-frequency mutation in the KRAS oncogene.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-022-32811-1