A rational approach to assess off-target reactivity of a dual-signal integrator for T cell therapy

Cell therapy is an emerging therapeutic modality with the power to exploit new cancer targets and potentially achieve positive outcomes for patients with few other options. Like all synthetic treatments, cell therapy has the risk of toxicity via unpredicted off-target behavior. We describe an empiri...

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Veröffentlicht in:Toxicology and applied pharmacology 2022-02, Vol.437, p.115894-115894, Article 115894
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Xueyin, Wong, Lu Min, McElvain, Michele E., Martire, Sara, Lee, Wen-Hua, Li, Chuck Z., Fisher, Fernando A., Maheshwari, Ruchika L., Wu, Ming Lun, Imun, Maria C., Murad, Rabi, Toledo Warshaviak, Dora, Yin, Jun, Kamb, Alexander, Xu, Han
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cell therapy is an emerging therapeutic modality with the power to exploit new cancer targets and potentially achieve positive outcomes for patients with few other options. Like all synthetic treatments, cell therapy has the risk of toxicity via unpredicted off-target behavior. We describe an empirical method to model off-tumor, off-target reactivity of receptors used for investigational T cell therapies. This approach utilizes an optimal panel of diverse human cell-lines to capture the large majority of protein-coding gene expression in adult human tissues. We apply this cell-line set to test Jurkat and primary T cells engineered with a dual-signal integrator, called TmodTM, that contains an activating receptor (activator) and a separate inhibitory receptor (blocker). In proof-of-concept experiments, we use CD19 as the activating antigen and HLA-A*02 as the blocker antigen. This specific Tmod system, which employs a blocker targeting a ubiquitously expressed HLA class I antigen to inhibit CAR activation, has an inherent mechanism for selectivity/safety, designed to activate only when a specific HLA class I antigen is lost. Nonetheless, it is important to test off-target reactivity in functional assays, especially given the disconnect between ligand-binding and function among T cell receptors (TCRs) and chimeric antigen receptors (CARs). We show these cell-based assays yield consistent results with high sensitivity and specificity. The general strategy is likely applicable to more traditional single-receptor CAR- and TCR-T therapeutics. [Display omitted] •We describe an in vitro system to assess off-target function of a cell therapeutic.•A set of 14 cell lines achieved >90% coverage of protein-coding genes.•CD19-directed receptor constructs were tested as proofs-of-concept.•The approach may have more general applications.
ISSN:0041-008X
1096-0333
DOI:10.1016/j.taap.2022.115894