CAR-T cells targeting a nucleophosmin neoepitope exhibit potent specific activity in mouse models of acute myeloid leukaemia
Author(s)
Xie, Guozhu; Ivica, Nikola A.; Jia, Bin; Li, Yingzhong; Dong, Han; Liang, Yong; Brown, Douglas; Romee, Rizwan; Chen, Jianzhu; ... Show more Show less
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© 2020, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. Therapies employing chimeric antigen receptor T cells (CAR-T cells) targeting tumour-associated antigens (TAAs) can lead to on-target–off-tumour toxicity and to resistance, owing to TAA expression in normal tissues and to TAA expression loss in tumour cells. These drawbacks can be circumvented by CAR-T cells targeting tumour-specific driver gene mutations, such as the four-nucleotide duplication in the oncogene nucleophosmin (NPM1c), which creates a neoepitope presented by the human leukocyte antigen with the A2 serotype (HLA-A2) that has been observed in about 35% of patients with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). Here, we report a human single-chain variable fragment (scFv), identified via yeast surface display, that specifically binds to the NPM1c epitope–HLA-A2 complex but not to HLA-A2 or to HLA-A2 loaded with control peptides. In vitro and in mice, CAR-T cells with the scFv exhibit potent cytotoxicity against NPM1c+HLA-A2+ leukaemia cells and primary AML blasts, but not NPM1c–HLA-A2+ leukaemia cells or HLA-A2– tumour cells. Therapies using NPM1c CAR-T cells for the treatment of NPM1c+HLA-A2+ AML may limit on-target–off-tumour toxicity and tumour resistance.
Date issued
2020-10Department
Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of BiologyJournal
Nature Biomedical Engineering
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
ISSN
2157-846X