Potentiating adoptive cell therapy using synthetic IL-9 receptors

Anusha Kalbasi(University of California, Los Angeles), Mikko Siurala(Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy), Leon Su(Stanford University), Mito Tariveranmoshabad(University of California, Los Angeles), Lora K. Picton(Stanford University), Pranali Ravikumar(University of Pennsylvania), Peng Li(National Institutes of Health), Jian‐Xin Lin(National Institutes of Health), Helena Escuin-Ordinas(University of California, Los Angeles), Tong Da(University of Pennsylvania), Sarah Kremer(University of California, Los Angeles), Amy Sun(University of California, Los Angeles), Sofia Castelli(University of Pennsylvania), Sangya Agarwal(University of Pennsylvania), John Scholler(University of Pennsylvania), Decheng Song(University of Pennsylvania), Philipp C. Rommel(University of Pennsylvania), Enrico Radaelli(University of Pennsylvania), Regina M. Young(University of Pennsylvania), Warren J. Leonard(National Institutes of Health), Antoni Ribas(University of California, Los Angeles), Carl H. June(Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy), K. Christopher García(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Nature
June 8, 2022
Cited by 114Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Synthetic receptor signalling has the potential to endow adoptively transferred T cells with new functions that overcome major barriers in the treatment of solid tumours, including the need for conditioning chemotherapy 1,2 . Here we designed chimeric receptors that have an orthogonal IL-2 receptor extracellular domain (ECD) fused with the intracellular domain (ICD) of receptors for common γ-chain (γ c ) cytokines IL-4, IL-7, IL-9 and IL-21 such that the orthogonal IL-2 cytokine elicits the corresponding γ c cytokine signal. Of these, T cells that signal through the chimeric orthogonal IL-2Rβ-ECD–IL-9R-ICD (o9R) are distinguished by the concomitant activation of STAT1, STAT3 and STAT5 and assume characteristics of stem cell memory and effector T cells. Compared to o2R T cells, o9R T cells have superior anti-tumour efficacy in two recalcitrant syngeneic mouse solid tumour models of melanoma and pancreatic cancer and are effective even in the absence of conditioning lymphodepletion. Therefore, by repurposing IL-9R signalling using a chimeric orthogonal cytokine receptor, T cells gain new functions, and this results in improved anti-tumour activity for hard-to-treat solid tumours.


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