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Olfactory Receptor OR2H1 is an effective target for CAR T cells in human epithelial tumors

Authors :
Alexandra L. Martin
Carmen M. Anadon
Subir Biswas
Jessica A. Mine
Katelyn F. Handley
Kyle K. Payne
Gunjan Mandal
Ricardo A. Chaurio
John J. Powers
Kimberly B. Sprenger
Kristen E. Rigolizzo
Patrick Innamarato
Carly M. Harro
Sumit Mehta
Bradford A. Perez
Robert M. Wenham
Jose R. Conejo-Garcia
Source :
Mol Cancer Ther
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Although chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-expressing T cells have proven success in hematologic malignancies, their effectiveness in solid tumors has been largely unsuccessful thus far. We found that some olfactory receptors are expressed in a variety of solid tumors of different histologic subtypes, with a limited pattern of expression in normal tissues. Quantification of OR2H1 expression by qRT-PCR and Western blot analysis of 17 normal tissues, 82 ovarian cancers of various histologies, eight non–small cell lung cancers (NSCLCs), and 17 breast cancers demonstrated widespread OR2H1 expression in solid epithelial tumors with expression in normal human tissues limited to the testis. CAR T cells recognizing the extracellular domain of the olfactory receptor OR2H1 were generated with a targeting motif identified through the screening of a phage display library and demonstrated OR2H1-specific cytotoxic killing in vitro and in vivo, using tumor cells with spontaneous expression of variable OR2H1 levels. Importantly, recombinant OR2H1 IgG generated with the VH/VL sequences of the CAR construct specifically detected OR2H1 protein signal in 60 human lung cancers, 40 ovarian carcinomas, and 73 cholangiocarcinomas, at positivity rates comparable with mRNA expression and without OR2H1 staining in 58 normal tissues. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated ablation of OR2H1 confirmed targeting specificity of the CAR and the tumor-promoting role of OR2H1 in glucose metabolism. Therefore, T cells redirected against OR2H1-expressing tumor cells represent a promising therapy against a broad range of epithelial cancers, likely with an admissible toxicity profile.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mol Cancer Ther
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dca5b64f20600bc9e48d7cf9208ff1a2