Optimizing Adoptive Polyclonal T Cell Immunotherapy of Lymphomas, Using a Chimeric T Cell Receptor Possessing CD28 and CD137 Costimulatory Domains

Jinjuan Wang(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Michael C. Jensen(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Yukang Lin(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Xingwei Sui(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Eric Chen(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Catherine Lindgren, Brian G. Till(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Andrew Raubitschek(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Stephen J. Forman(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Xiaojun Qian(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Scott E. James(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Philip D. Greenberg(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Stanley R. Riddell(Fred Hutch Cancer Center), Oliver W. Press(Fred Hutch Cancer Center)
Human Gene Therapy
August 1, 2007
Cited by 213

Abstract

We previously demonstrated the feasibility of generating therapeutic numbers of cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) clones expressing a CD20-specific scFvFc:CD3zeta chimeric T cell receptor (cTCR), making them specifically cytotoxic for CD20+ B lymphoma cells. However, the process of generating and expanding he CTL clones was laborious, the CTL clones expressed the cTCR at low surface density, and they exhibited suboptimal proliferation and cytotoxicity. To improve the performance of the CTLs in vitro and in vivo, we engineered "second-generation'' plasmid constructs containing a translational enhancer (SP163) and CD28 and CD137 costimulatory domains in cis with the CD3zeta intracellular signaling domain of the cTCR gene. Furthermore, we verified the superiority of generating genetically modified polyclonal T cells expressing the second-generation cTCR rather than T cell clones. Our results demonstrate that SP163 enhances the surface expression of the cTCR; that the second-generation cTCR improves CTL activation, proliferation, and cytotoxicity; and that polyclonal T cells proliferate rapidly in vitro and mediate potent CD20-specific cytotoxicity. This study provides the preclinical basis for a clinical trial of adoptive T cell immunotherapy for patients with relapsed CD20+ mantle cell lymphoma and indolent lymphomas.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis