Affinity-Tuned ErbB2 or EGFR Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Cells Exhibit an Increased Therapeutic Index against Tumors in Mice

Xiaojun Liu(University of Pennsylvania), Shuguang Jiang(University of Pennsylvania), Chongyun Fang(University of Pennsylvania), Shiyu Yang(University of Pennsylvania), Devvora Olalere(University of Pennsylvania), Edward Pequignot(University of Pennsylvania), Alexandria P. Cogdill(University of Pennsylvania), Na Li(American Institutes for Research), Melissa Ramones(American Institutes for Research), Brian Granda(American Institutes for Research), Li Zhou(American Institutes for Research), Andreas Loew(American Institutes for Research), Regina M. Young(Cancer Research Institute), Carl H. June(Cancer Research Institute), Yangbing Zhao(Cancer Research Institute)
Cancer Research
August 31, 2015
Cited by 563Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Target-mediated toxicity is a major limitation in the development of chimeric antigen T-cell receptors (CAR) for adoptive cell therapy of solid tumors. In this study, we developed a strategy to adjust the affinities of the scFv component of CAR to discriminate tumors overexpressing the target from normal tissues that express it at physiologic levels. A CAR-expressing T-cell panel was generated with target antigen affinities varying over three orders of magnitude. High-affinity cells recognized target expressed at any level, including at levels in normal cells that were undetectable by flow cytometry. Affinity-tuned cells exhibited robust antitumor efficacy similar to high-affinity cells, but spared normal cells expressing physiologic target levels. The use of affinity-tuned scFvs offers a strategy to empower wider use of CAR T cells against validated targets widely overexpressed on solid tumors, including those considered undruggable by this approach.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis