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1.
Nat Med ; 28(9): 1860-1871, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36097223

ABSTRACT

Approximately 60% of patients with large B cell lymphoma treated with chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapies targeting CD19 experience disease progression, and neurotoxicity remains a challenge. Biomarkers associated with resistance and toxicity are limited. In this study, single-cell proteomic profiling of circulating CAR T cells in 32 patients treated with CD19-CAR identified that CD4+Helios+ CAR T cells on day 7 after infusion are associated with progressive disease and less severe neurotoxicity. Deep profiling demonstrated that this population is non-clonal and manifests hallmark features of T regulatory (TReg) cells. Validation cohort analysis upheld the link between higher CAR TReg cells with clinical progression and less severe neurotoxicity. A model combining expansion of this subset with lactate dehydrogenase levels, as a surrogate for tumor burden, was superior for predicting durable clinical response compared to models relying on each feature alone. These data credential CAR TReg cell expansion as a novel biomarker of response and toxicity after CAR T cell therapy and raise the prospect that this subset may regulate CAR T cell responses in humans.


Subject(s)
Neurotoxicity Syndromes , Receptors, Chimeric Antigen , Antigens, CD19 , Humans , Immunotherapy, Adoptive/adverse effects , Immunotherapy, Adoptive/methods , Lactate Dehydrogenases , Neurotoxicity Syndromes/etiology , Proteomics , Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell
2.
Science ; 372(6537)2021 04 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33795428

ABSTRACT

T cell exhaustion limits immune responses against cancer and is a major cause of resistance to chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell therapeutics. Using murine xenograft models and an in vitro model wherein tonic CAR signaling induces hallmark features of exhaustion, we tested the effect of transient cessation of receptor signaling, or rest, on the development and maintenance of exhaustion. Induction of rest through enforced down-regulation of the CAR protein using a drug-regulatable system or treatment with the multikinase inhibitor dasatinib resulted in the acquisition of a memory-like phenotype, global transcriptional and epigenetic reprogramming, and restored antitumor functionality in exhausted CAR-T cells. This work demonstrates that rest can enhance CAR-T cell efficacy by preventing or reversing exhaustion, and it challenges the notion that exhaustion is an epigenetically fixed state.


Subject(s)
Dasatinib/pharmacology , Epigenesis, Genetic , Immunotherapy, Adoptive , Receptors, Chimeric Antigen/metabolism , T-Lymphocytes/immunology , Animals , Cell Line, Tumor , Cytotoxicity, Immunologic , Down-Regulation , Enhancer of Zeste Homolog 2 Protein/metabolism , Epigenome , Female , Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 1-alpha/metabolism , High Mobility Group Proteins/metabolism , Humans , Immunologic Memory , Lymphocyte Activation , Lymphoid Enhancer-Binding Factor 1/metabolism , Male , Mice , Neoplasms, Experimental/therapy , Protein Domains , Protein Stability , Receptors, Chimeric Antigen/chemistry , Receptors, Chimeric Antigen/immunology , Signal Transduction , T-Lymphocytes/metabolism , Transcription, Genetic , Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
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