作者
Ruchi P. Patel,Guido Ghilardi,Yunlin Zhang,Yi‐Hao Chiang,Wei Xie,Puneeth Guruprasad,Ki Hyun Kim,Inkook Chun,Mathew G. Angelos,Raymone Pajarillo,Seok Jae Hong,Yong Gu Lee,Olga Shestova,Carolyn E. Shaw,Ilan Cohen,Aasha Gupta,Trang Vu,Dean Qian,S. T. Yang,Aditya Nimmagadda,Adam E. Snook,Nicholas A. Siciliano,Antonia Rotolo,Arati A. Inamdar,Jaryse Harris,Ositadimma Ugwuanyi,Michael Wang,Alberto Carturan,Luca Paruzzo,Linhui Chen,Hatcher J. Ballard,Tatiana Blanchard,Chong Xu,Mohamed Abdel‐Mohsen,Khatuna Gabunia,Maria Wysocka,Gerald P. Linette,Beatriz M. Carreno,David M. Barrett,David T. Teachey,Avery D. Posey,Daniel J. Powell,C Sauter,Stefano Pileri,Vinodh Pillai,John Scholler,Alain H. Rook,Stephen J. Schuster,Stefan K. Barta,Patrizia Porazzi,Marco Ruella
摘要
Most patients treated with US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)–approved chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells eventually experience disease progression. Furthermore, CAR T cells have not been curative against solid cancers and several hematological malignancies such as T cell lymphomas, which have very poor prognoses. One of the main barriers to the clinical success of adoptive T cell immunotherapies is CAR T cell dysfunction and lack of expansion and/or persistence after infusion. In this study, we found that CD5 inhibits CAR T cell activation and that knockout (KO) of CD5 using CRISPR-Cas9 enhances the antitumor effect of CAR T cells in multiple hematological and solid cancer models. Mechanistically, CD5 KO drives increased T cell effector function with enhanced cytotoxicity, in vivo expansion, and persistence, without apparent toxicity in preclinical models. These findings indicate that CD5 is a critical inhibitor of T cell function and a potential clinical target for enhancing T cell therapies.