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Generation and application of human induced‐stem cell memory T cells for adoptive immunotherapy

Adoptive T‐cell therapy is an effective strategy for cancer immunotherapy. However, infused T cells frequently become functionally exhausted, and consequently offer a poor prognosis after transplantation into patients. Adoptive transfer of tumor antigen‐specific stem cell memory T (T(SCM)) cells is...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kondo, Taisuke, Imura, Yuki, Chikuma, Shunsuke, Hibino, Sana, Omata‐Mise, Setsuko, Ando, Makoto, Akanuma, Takashi, Iizuka, Mana, Sakai, Ryota, Morita, Rimpei, Yoshimura, Akihiko
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6029822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29790621
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cas.13648
Descripción
Sumario:Adoptive T‐cell therapy is an effective strategy for cancer immunotherapy. However, infused T cells frequently become functionally exhausted, and consequently offer a poor prognosis after transplantation into patients. Adoptive transfer of tumor antigen‐specific stem cell memory T (T(SCM)) cells is expected to overcome this shortcoming as T(SCM) cells are close to naïve T cells, but are also highly proliferative, long‐lived, and produce a large number of effector T cells in response to antigen stimulation. We previously reported that activated effector T cells can be converted into T(SCM)‐like cells (iT(SCM)) by coculturing with OP9 cells expressing Notch ligand, Delta‐like 1 (OP9‐hDLL1). Here we show the methodological parameters of human CD8(+) iT(SCM) cell generation and their application to adoptive cancer immunotherapy. Regardless of the stimulation by anti‐CD3/CD28 antibodies or by antigen‐presenting cells, human iT(SCM) cells were more efficiently induced from central memory type T cells than from effector memory T cells. During the induction phase by coculture with OP9‐hDLL1 cells, interleukin (IL)‐7 and IL‐15 (but not IL‐2 or IL‐21) could efficiently generate iT(SCM) cells. Epstein–Barr virus‐specific iT(SCM) cells showed much stronger antitumor potentials than conventionally activated T cells in humanized Epstein–Barr virus transformed‐tumor model mice. Thus, adoptive T‐cell therapy with iT(SCM) offers a promising therapeutic strategy for cancer immunotherapy.