Identification of potential resistance mechanisms and therapeutic targets for the relapse of BCMA CAR-T therapy in relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma through single-cell sequencing

Wei Li(Henan Provincial People's Hospital), Binglei Zhang(Henan Provincial People's Hospital), Weijie Cao(Henan Provincial People's Hospital), Wenli Zhang(Zhengzhou University), Tiandong Li(Zhengzhou University), Lina Liu(Zhengzhou University), Linping Xu(Zhengzhou University), Fengcai Gao(Henan Provincial People's Hospital), Yanmei Wang(Zhengzhou People's Hospital), Fang Wang(Henan Provincial People's Hospital), Haizhou Xing(Henan Provincial People's Hospital), Zhongxing Jiang(Henan Provincial People's Hospital), Jianxiang Shi(Henan Academy of Sciences), Zhilei Bian(Henan Provincial People's Hospital), Yongping Song(Henan Provincial People's Hospital)
Experimental Hematology and Oncology
May 8, 2023
Cited by 59Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Background BCMA CAR-T is highly effective for relapsed/refractory multiple myeloma(R/R-MM) and significantly improves the survival of patients. However, the short remission time and high relapse rate of MM patients treated with BCMA CAR-T remain bottlenecks that limit long-term survival. The immune microenvironment of the bone marrow (BM) in R/R-MM may be responsible for this. The present study aims to present an in-depth analysis of resistant mechanisms and to explore potential novel therapeutic targets for relapse of BCMA CAR-T treatment via single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) of BM plasma cells and immune cells. Methods This study used 10X Genomic scRNA-seq to identify cell populations in R/R-MM CD45 + BM cells before BCMA CAR-T treatment and relapse after BCMA CAR-T treatment. Cell Ranger pipeline and CellChat were used to perform detailed analysis. Results We compared the heterogeneity of CD45 + BM cells before BCMA CAR-T treatment and relapse after BCMA CAR-T treatment. We found that the proportion of monocytes/macrophages increased, while the percentage of T cells decreased at relapse after BCMA CAR-T treatment. We then reclustered and analyzed the alterations in plasma cells, T cells, NK cells, DCs, neutrophils, and monocytes/macrophages in the BM microenvironment before BCMA CAR-T treatment and relapse after BCMA CAR-T treatment. We show here that the percentage of BCMA positive plasma cells increased at relapse after BCMA CAR-T cell therapy. Other targets such as CD38, CD24, SLAMF7, CD138, and GPRC5D were also found to be expressed in plasma cells of the R/R-MM patient at relapse after BCMA CAR-T cell therapy. Furthermore, exhausted T cells, TIGIT + NK cells, interferon-responsive DCs, and interferon-responsive neutrophils, increased in the R/R-MM patient at relapse after BCMA CAR-T cell treatment. Significantly, the proportion of IL1β hi Mφ, S100A9 hi Mφ, interferon-responsive Mφ, CD16 hi Mφ, MARCO hi Mφ, and S100A11 hi Mφ significantly increased in the R/R-MM patient at relapse after BCMA CAR-T cell therapy. Cell–cell communication analysis indicated that monocytes/macrophages, especially the MIF and APRIL signaling pathway are key players in R/R-MM patient at relapse after BCMA CAR-T cell therapy. Conclusion Taken together, our data extend the understanding of intrinsic and extrinsic relapse of BCMA CAR-T treatment in R/R-MM patient and the potential mechanisms involved in the alterations of antigens and the induced immunosuppressive microenvironment, which may provide a basis for the optimization of BCMA CAR-T strategies. Further studies should be performed to confirm these findings.


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