嵌合抗原受体
生物
T细胞
抗原
CD28
慢性淋巴细胞白血病
癌症研究
白血病
免疫学
CD19
免疫系统
作者
Sangya Agarwal,M. Ángela Aznar,Andrew J. Rech,Charly R. Good,Shunichiro Kuramitsu,Tong Da,Mercy Gohil,Linhui Chen,Seok-Jae Albert Hong,Pranali Ravikumar,Austin K. Rennels,January Salas-McKee,Weimin Kong,Marco Ruella,Megan M. Davis,Gabriela Plesa,Joseph A. Fraietta,David L. Porter,Regina M. Young,Carl H. June
出处
期刊:Immunity
[Cell Press]
日期:2023-09-29
卷期号:56 (10): 2388-2407.e9
被引量:41
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.immuni.2023.09.001
摘要
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy targeting CD19 has achieved tremendous success treating B cell malignancies; however, some patients fail to respond due to poor autologous T cell fitness. To improve response rates, we investigated whether disruption of the co-inhibitory receptors CTLA4 or PD-1 could restore CART function. CRISPR-Cas9-mediated deletion of CTLA4 in preclinical models of leukemia and myeloma improved CAR T cell proliferation and anti-tumor efficacy. Importantly, this effect was specific to CTLA4 and not seen upon deletion of CTLA4 and/or PDCD1 in CAR T cells. Mechanistically, CTLA4 deficiency permitted unopposed CD28 signaling and maintenance of CAR expression on the T cell surface under conditions of high antigen load. In clinical studies, deletion of CTLA4 rescued the function of T cells from patients with leukemia that previously failed CAR T cell treatment. Thus, selective deletion of CTLA4 reinvigorates dysfunctional chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patient T cells, providing a strategy for increasing patient responses to CAR T cell therapy.
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