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CRISPR-based gene disruption and integration of high-avidity, WT1-specific T cell receptors improve antitumor T cell function

Authors :
Eliana Ruggiero
Erica Carnevale
Aaron Prodeus
Zulma Irene Magnani
Barbara Camisa
Ivan Merelli
Claudia Politano
Lorena Stasi
Alessia Potenza
Beatrice Claudia Cianciotti
Francesco Manfredi
Mattia Di Bono
Luca Vago
Michela Tassara
Sara Mastaglio
Maurilio Ponzoni
Francesca Sanvito
Dai Liu
Ishina Balwani
Rossella Galli
Marco Genua
Renato Ostuni
Matteo Doglio
Daniel O’Connell
Ivy Dutta
Stephanie Ann Yazinski
Mark McKee
Mohamed Simo Arredouani
Birgit Schultes
Fabio Ciceri
Chiara Bonini
Ruggiero, E.
Carnevale, E.
Prodeus, A.
Magnani, Z. I.
Camisa, B.
Merelli, I.
Politano, C.
Stasi, L.
Potenza, A.
Cianciotti, B. C.
Manfredi, F.
Di Bono, M.
Vago, L.
Tassara, M.
Mastaglio, S.
Ponzoni, M.
Sanvito, F.
Liu, D.
Balwani, I.
Galli, R.
Genua, M.
Ostuni, R.
Doglio, M.
O'Connell, D.
Dutta, I.
Yazinski, S. A.
Mckee, M.
Arredouani, M. S.
Schultes, B.
Ciceri, F.
Bonini, C.
Source :
Science translational medicine 14 (2022). doi:10.1126/scitranslmed.abg8027, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Ruggiero, Eliana; Carnevale, Erica; Prodeus, Aaron; Magnani, Zulma Irene; Camisa, Barbara; Merelli, Ivan; Politano, Claudia; Stasi, Lorena; Potenza, Alessia; Cianciotti, Beatrice Claudia; Manfredi, Francesco; Di Bono, Mattia; Vago, Luca; Tassara, Michela; Mastaglio, Sara; Ponzoni, Maurilio; Sanvito, Francesca; Liu, Dai; Balwani, Ishina; Galli, Rossella; Genua, Marco; Ostuni, Renato; Doglio, Matteo; O'Connell, Daniel; Dutta, Ivy; Yazinski, Stephanie Ann; McKee, Mark; Arredouani, Mohamed Simo; Schultes, Birgit; Ciceri, Fabio; Bonini, Chiara/titolo:CRISPR-based gene disruption and integration of high-avidity, WT1-specific T cell receptors improve antitumor T cell function/doi:10.1126%2Fscitranslmed.abg8027/rivista:Science translational medicine/anno:2022/pagina_da:/pagina_a:/intervallo_pagine:/volume:14
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

T cell receptor (TCR)–based therapy has the potential to induce durable clinical responses in patients with cancer by targeting intracellular tumor antigens with high sensitivity and by promoting T cell survival. However, the need for TCRs specific for shared oncogenic antigens and the need for manufacturing protocols able to redirect T cell specificity while preserving T cell fitness remain limiting factors. By longitudinal monitoring of T cell functionality and dynamics in 15 healthy donors, we isolated 19 TCRs specific for Wilms’ tumor antigen 1 (WT1), which is overexpressed by several tumor types. TCRs recognized several peptides restricted by common human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles and displayed a wide range of functional avidities. We selected five high-avidity HLA-A*02:01–restricted TCRs, three that were specific to the less explored immunodominant WT1 37–45 and two that were specific to the noncanonical WT1 −78–64 epitopes, both naturally processed by primary acute myeloid leukemia (AML) blasts. With CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing tools, we combined TCR-targeted integration into the TCR α constant ( TRAC ) locus with TCR β constant ( TRBC ) knockout, thus avoiding TCRαβ mispairing and maximizing TCR expression and function. The engineered lymphocytes were enriched in memory stem T cells. A unique WT1 37–45 -specific TCR showed antigen-specific responses and efficiently killed AML blasts, acute lymphoblastic leukemia blasts, and glioblastoma cells in vitro and in vivo in the absence of off-tumor toxicity. T cells engineered to express this receptor are being advanced into clinical development for AML immunotherapy and represent a candidate therapy for other WT1-expressing tumors.

Details

ISSN :
19466242
Volume :
14
Issue :
631
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science translational medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....721e152e0f9ed32a72141cc049879e3a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.abg8027