Impact of the selective A2AR and A2BR dual antagonist AB928/etrumadenant on CAR T cell function

Matthias Seifert(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Mohamed-Reda Benmebarek(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Daria Briukhovetska(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Florian Märkl(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Janina Dörr(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Bruno L. Cadilha(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Jakob Jobst(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Sophia Stock(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), David Andreu-Sanz(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Theo Lorenzini(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Ruth Grünmeier(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Arman Öner(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Hannah Obeck(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Lina Majed(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Dario Dhoqina(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Manouk Feinendegen(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Adrian Gottschlich(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Jin Zhang(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Ulrike Schindler, Stefan Endres(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Sebastian Kobold(German Cancer Research Center)
British Journal of Cancer
October 20, 2022
Cited by 40Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy has been successfully translated to clinical practice for the treatment of B cell malignancies. The suppressive microenvironment of many malignancies is a bottleneck preventing treatment success of CAR T cells in a broader range of tumours. Among others, the immunosuppressive metabolite adenosine is present in high concentrations within many tumours and dampens anti-tumour function of immune cells and consequently therapeutic response. METHODS: receptor antagonist AB928/etrumadenant on CAR T cell cytokine secretion, proliferation, and cytotoxicity. Using phosphorylation-specific flow cytometry, we evaluated the capability of AB928 to shield CAR T cells from adenosine-mediated signalling. The effect of orally administered AB928 on CAR T cells was assessed in a syngeneic mouse model of colon carcinoma. RESULTS: We found that immunosuppressive signalling in CAR T cells in response to adenosine was fully blocked by the small molecule inhibitor. AB928 treatment enhanced CAR T cell cytokine secretion and proliferation, granted efficient cytolysis of tumour cells in vitro and augmented CAR T cell activation in vivo. CONCLUSIONS: Together our results suggest that combination therapy with AB928 represents a promising approach to improve adoptive cell therapy.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis