嵌合抗原受体
转录因子
癌症研究
T细胞
CD28
CD19
免疫学
医学
细胞生物学
生物
抗原
免疫系统
基因
遗传学
作者
Mehmet Emrah Selli,Jack H. Landmann,Marina Terekhova,John Lattin,Amanda Heard,Yu-Sung Hsu,Tien-Ching Chang,Juan Chang,John M. Warrington,Helen Ha,Natalie L. Kingston,Graham D. Hogg,Michael Slade,Melissa M. Berrien-Elliot,Mark P. Foster,Samantha Kersting-Schadek,Agata Gruszczynska,David G. DeNardo,Todd A. Fehniger,Maxim N. Artyomov,Nathan Singh
标识
DOI:10.1101/2023.01.26.525725
摘要
Abstract Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) engineered T cells often fail to enact effector functions after infusion into patients. Understanding the biological pathways that lead CAR T cells to failure is of critical importance in the design of more effective therapies. We developed and validated an in vitro model that drives T cell dysfunction through chronic CAR activation and interrogated how CAR costimulatory domains contribute to T cell failure. We found that dysfunctional CD28-based CARs targeting CD19 bear hallmarks of classical T cell exhaustion while dysfunctional 41BB-based CARs are phenotypically, transcriptionally and epigenetically distinct. We confirmed activation of this unique transcriptional program in CAR T cells that failed to control clinical disease. Further, we demonstrate that 41BB-dependent activation of the transcription factor FOXO3 is a significant contributor to this dysfunction and disruption of FOXO3 improves CAR T cell function. These findings identify that chronic activation of 41BB leads to novel state of T cell dysfunction that can be alleviated by genetic modification of FOXO3. Summary Chronic stimulation of CARs containing the 41BB costimulatory domain leads to a novel state of T cell dysfunction that is distinct from T cell exhaustion.
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