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Blocking TCR restimulation induced necroptosis in adoptively transferred T cells improves tumor control

Advancements in adoptive cell transfer therapy (ACT) has led to the use of T cells engineered with tumor specific T cell receptors, which after rapid expansion can be obtained in sufficient numbers for treating patients. However, due to massive proliferation these cells are close to replicative sene...

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Autores principales: Kesarwani, Pravin, Chakraborty, Paramita, Gudi, Radhika, Chatterjee, Shilpak, Scurti, Gina, Toth, Kyle, Simms, Patt, Husain, Mahvash, Armeson, Kent, Husain, Shahid, Garrett-Mayer, Elizabeth, Vasu, Chethamarakshan, Nishimura, Michael I., Mehrotra, Shikhar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5342484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27750220
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.12674
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author Kesarwani, Pravin
Chakraborty, Paramita
Gudi, Radhika
Chatterjee, Shilpak
Scurti, Gina
Toth, Kyle
Simms, Patt
Husain, Mahvash
Armeson, Kent
Husain, Shahid
Garrett-Mayer, Elizabeth
Vasu, Chethamarakshan
Nishimura, Michael I.
Mehrotra, Shikhar
author_facet Kesarwani, Pravin
Chakraborty, Paramita
Gudi, Radhika
Chatterjee, Shilpak
Scurti, Gina
Toth, Kyle
Simms, Patt
Husain, Mahvash
Armeson, Kent
Husain, Shahid
Garrett-Mayer, Elizabeth
Vasu, Chethamarakshan
Nishimura, Michael I.
Mehrotra, Shikhar
author_sort Kesarwani, Pravin
collection PubMed
description Advancements in adoptive cell transfer therapy (ACT) has led to the use of T cells engineered with tumor specific T cell receptors, which after rapid expansion can be obtained in sufficient numbers for treating patients. However, due to massive proliferation these cells are close to replicative senescence, exhibit exhausted phenotype, and also display increased susceptibility to activation induced cell death. We have previously shown that tumor reactive T cells undergo caspase-independent cell death upon TCR restimulation with cognate antigen, which involves reactive oxygen species and c-jun N-terminal kinase. Herein, we show that a large fraction of the human melanoma epitope tyrosinase reactive TCR transduced T cells that exhibit effector memory (T(EM)) phenotype and undergo programmed necrosis, or necroptosis, upon TCR restimulation. As compared to the T central memory (T(CM)) subsets, the T(EM) subset displayed an increased expression of genes involved in necroptotic cell death, and a necrotic phenotype upon TCR restimulation as confirmed by electron microscopy. Higher expression of receptor-interacting kinases (RIPK) that mediate necroptosis was also observed in the T(EM) fraction. Further, the T(EM) cells were rescued from undergoing necroptosis when pretreated with necroptotic inhibitor NecroX2 before TCR restimulation. Importantly, NecroX2 pretreated tumor reactive T cells also exhibited better tumor control and increased in vivo persistence when adoptively-transferred to treat subcutaneously established murine melanoma B16-F10. Thus, it is likely that the outcome of ACT could be vastly improved by interfering with the necroptotic cell death pathway in activated tumor reactive T cells used in immunotherapy.
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spelling pubmed-53424842017-03-24 Blocking TCR restimulation induced necroptosis in adoptively transferred T cells improves tumor control Kesarwani, Pravin Chakraborty, Paramita Gudi, Radhika Chatterjee, Shilpak Scurti, Gina Toth, Kyle Simms, Patt Husain, Mahvash Armeson, Kent Husain, Shahid Garrett-Mayer, Elizabeth Vasu, Chethamarakshan Nishimura, Michael I. Mehrotra, Shikhar Oncotarget Research Paper: Immunology Advancements in adoptive cell transfer therapy (ACT) has led to the use of T cells engineered with tumor specific T cell receptors, which after rapid expansion can be obtained in sufficient numbers for treating patients. However, due to massive proliferation these cells are close to replicative senescence, exhibit exhausted phenotype, and also display increased susceptibility to activation induced cell death. We have previously shown that tumor reactive T cells undergo caspase-independent cell death upon TCR restimulation with cognate antigen, which involves reactive oxygen species and c-jun N-terminal kinase. Herein, we show that a large fraction of the human melanoma epitope tyrosinase reactive TCR transduced T cells that exhibit effector memory (T(EM)) phenotype and undergo programmed necrosis, or necroptosis, upon TCR restimulation. As compared to the T central memory (T(CM)) subsets, the T(EM) subset displayed an increased expression of genes involved in necroptotic cell death, and a necrotic phenotype upon TCR restimulation as confirmed by electron microscopy. Higher expression of receptor-interacting kinases (RIPK) that mediate necroptosis was also observed in the T(EM) fraction. Further, the T(EM) cells were rescued from undergoing necroptosis when pretreated with necroptotic inhibitor NecroX2 before TCR restimulation. Importantly, NecroX2 pretreated tumor reactive T cells also exhibited better tumor control and increased in vivo persistence when adoptively-transferred to treat subcutaneously established murine melanoma B16-F10. Thus, it is likely that the outcome of ACT could be vastly improved by interfering with the necroptotic cell death pathway in activated tumor reactive T cells used in immunotherapy. Impact Journals LLC 2016-10-14 /pmc/articles/PMC5342484/ /pubmed/27750220 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.12674 Text en Copyright: © 2016 Kesarwani et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper: Immunology
Kesarwani, Pravin
Chakraborty, Paramita
Gudi, Radhika
Chatterjee, Shilpak
Scurti, Gina
Toth, Kyle
Simms, Patt
Husain, Mahvash
Armeson, Kent
Husain, Shahid
Garrett-Mayer, Elizabeth
Vasu, Chethamarakshan
Nishimura, Michael I.
Mehrotra, Shikhar
Blocking TCR restimulation induced necroptosis in adoptively transferred T cells improves tumor control
title Blocking TCR restimulation induced necroptosis in adoptively transferred T cells improves tumor control
title_full Blocking TCR restimulation induced necroptosis in adoptively transferred T cells improves tumor control
title_fullStr Blocking TCR restimulation induced necroptosis in adoptively transferred T cells improves tumor control
title_full_unstemmed Blocking TCR restimulation induced necroptosis in adoptively transferred T cells improves tumor control
title_short Blocking TCR restimulation induced necroptosis in adoptively transferred T cells improves tumor control
title_sort blocking tcr restimulation induced necroptosis in adoptively transferred t cells improves tumor control
topic Research Paper: Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5342484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27750220
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.12674
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