Combining SiRPα decoy-coengineered T cells and antibodies augments macrophage-mediated phagocytosis of tumor cells.
Humans
Animals
Mice
Phagocytosis
Receptors, Immunologic
/ immunology
Macrophages
/ immunology
T-Lymphocytes
/ immunology
Antigens, Differentiation
/ immunology
HLA-A2 Antigen
/ immunology
Antigens, Neoplasm
/ immunology
Cell Line, Tumor
Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
CD47 Antigen
/ immunology
Immunotherapy, Adoptive
Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell
/ immunology
Cancer immunotherapy
Immunology
Innate immunity
T cells
Therapeutics
Journal
The Journal of clinical investigation
ISSN: 1558-8238
Titre abrégé: J Clin Invest
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 7802877
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
23 Apr 2024
23 Apr 2024
Historique:
received:
06
05
2022
accepted:
16
04
2024
medline:
3
6
2024
pubmed:
3
6
2024
entrez:
3
6
2024
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
The adoptive transfer of T cell receptor-engineered (TCR-engineered) T cells (ACT) targeting the HLA-A2-restricted cancer-testis epitope NY-ESO-1157-165 (A2/NY) has yielded favorable clinical responses against several cancers. Two approaches to improve ACT are TCR affinity optimization and T cell coengineering to express immunomodulatory molecules that can exploit endogenous immunity. By computational design we previously developed a panel of binding-enhanced A2/NY-TCRs including A97L, which augmented the in vitro function of gene-modified T cells as compared with WT. Here, we demonstrated higher persistence and improved tumor control by A97L-T cells. In order to harness macrophages in tumors, we further coengineered A97L-T cells to secrete a high-affinity signal regulatory protein α (SiRPα) decoy (CV1) that blocks CD47. While CV1-Fc-coengineered A97L-T cells mediated significantly better control of tumor outgrowth and survival in Winn assays, in subcutaneous xenograft models the T cells, coated by CV1-Fc, were depleted. Importantly, there was no phagocytosis of CV1 monomer-coengineered T cells by human macrophages. Moreover, avelumab and cetuximab enhanced macrophage-mediated phagocytosis of tumor cells in vitro in the presence of CV1 and improved tumor control upon coadministration with A97L-T cells. Taken together, our study indicates important clinical promise for harnessing macrophages by combining CV1-coengineered TCR-T cells with targeted antibodies to direct phagocytosis against tumor cells.
Identifiants
pubmed: 38828721
pii: 161660
doi: 10.1172/JCI161660
doi:
pii:
Substances chimiques
Receptors, Immunologic
0
SIRPA protein, human
0
Antigens, Differentiation
0
HLA-A2 Antigen
0
Antigens, Neoplasm
0
CD47 Antigen
0
CD47 protein, human
0
Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell
0
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM