[HTML][HTML] TCR-engineered adoptive cell therapy effectively treats intracranial murine glioblastoma

MO Schaettler, R Desai, AZ Wang… - … for immunotherapy of …, 2023 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
MO Schaettler, R Desai, AZ Wang, AJ Livingstone, DK Kobayashi, AT Coxon
Journal for immunotherapy of cancer, 2023ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Background Adoptive cellular therapies with chimeric antigen receptor T cells have
revolutionized the treatment of some malignancies but have shown limited efficacy in solid
tumors such as glioblastoma and face a scarcity of safe therapeutic targets. As an
alternative, T cell receptor (TCR)–engineered cellular therapy against tumor-specific
neoantigens has generated significant excitement, but there exist no preclinical systems to
rigorously model this approach in glioblastoma. Methods We employed single-cell PCR to …
Abstract
Background
Adoptive cellular therapies with chimeric antigen receptor T cells have revolutionized the treatment of some malignancies but have shown limited efficacy in solid tumors such as glioblastoma and face a scarcity of safe therapeutic targets. As an alternative, T cell receptor (TCR)–engineered cellular therapy against tumor-specific neoantigens has generated significant excitement, but there exist no preclinical systems to rigorously model this approach in glioblastoma.
Methods
We employed single-cell PCR to isolate a TCR specific for the Imp3 D81N neoantigen (mImp3) previously identified within the murine glioblastoma model GL261. This TCR was used to generate the Mutant Imp3-Specific TCR TransgenIC (MISTIC) mouse in which all CD8 T cells are specific for mImp3. The therapeutic efficacy of neoantigen-specific T cells was assessed through a model of cellular therapy consisting of the transfer of activated MISTIC T cells and interleukin 2 into lymphodepleted tumor-bearing mice. We employed flow cytometry, single-cell RNA sequencing, and whole-exome and RNA sequencing to examine the factors underlying treatment response.
Results
We isolated and characterized the 3× 1.1 C TCR that displayed a high affinity for mImp3 but no wild-type cross-reactivity. To provide a source of mImp3-specific T cells, we generated the MISTIC mouse. In a model of adoptive cellular therapy, the infusion of activated MISTIC T cells resulted in rapid intratumoral infiltration and profound antitumor effects with long-term cures in a majority of GL261-bearing mice. The subset of mice that did not respond to the adoptive cell therapy showed evidence of retained neoantigen expression but intratumoral MISTIC T cell dysfunction. The efficacy of MISTIC T cell therapy was lost in mice bearing a tumor with heterogeneous mImp3 expression, showcasing the barriers to targeted therapy in polyclonal human tumors.
Conclusions
We generated and characterized the first TCR transgenic against an endogenous neoantigen within a preclinical glioma model and demonstrated the therapeutic potential of adoptively transferred neoantigen-specific T cells. The MISTIC mouse provides a powerful novel platform for basic and translational studies of antitumor T-cell responses in glioblastoma.
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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