Trispecific CD19-CD20-CD22–targeting duoCAR-T cells eliminate antigen-heterogeneous B cell tumors in preclinical models

Dina Schneider(Lentigen Technology (United States)), Ying Xiong(Lentigen Technology (United States)), Darong Wu(Lentigen Technology (United States)), Peirong Hu(Lentigen Technology (United States)), Leah Alabanza(Lentigen Technology (United States)), Brittany Steimle(Lentigen Technology (United States)), Hasan Mahmud(Lentigen Technology (United States)), Kim Anthony-Gonda(Lentigen Technology (United States)), Winfried Krueger(Lentigen Technology (United States)), Zhongyu Zhu(Lentigen Technology (United States)), Dimiter S. Dimitrov(Lentigen Technology (United States)), Rimas J. Orentas(Lentigen Technology (United States)), Boro Dropulić(Lentigen Technology (United States))
Science Translational Medicine
March 24, 2021
Cited by 141

Abstract

A substantial number of patients with leukemia and lymphoma treated with anti-CD19 or anti-CD22 monoCAR-T cell therapy relapse because of antigen loss or down-regulation. We hypothesized that B cell tumor antigen escape may be overcome by a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) design that simultaneously targets three B cell leukemia antigens. We engineered trispecific duoCAR-T cells with lentiviral vectors encoding two CAR open reading frames that target CD19, CD20, and CD22. The duoCARs were composed of a CAR with a tandem CD19- and CD20-targeting binder, linked by the P2A self-cleaving peptide to a second CAR targeting CD22. Multiple combinations of intracellular T cell signaling motifs were evaluated. The most potent duoCAR architectures included those with ICOS, OX40, or CD27 signaling domains rather than those from CD28 or 4-1BB. We identified four optimal binder and signaling combinations that potently rejected xenografted leukemia and lymphoma tumors in vivo. Moreover, in mice bearing a mixture of B cell lymphoma lines composed of parental triple-positive cells, CD19-negative, CD20-negative, and CD22-negative variants, only the trispecific duoCAR-T cells rapidly and efficiently rejected the tumors. Each of the monoCAR-T cells failed to prevent tumor progression. Analysis of intracellular signaling profiles demonstrates that the distinct signaling of the intracellular domains used may contribute to these differential effects. Multispecific duoCAR-T cells are a promising strategy to prevent antigen loss-mediated relapse or the down-regulation of target antigen in patients with B cell malignancies.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis