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Overcoming CAR-Mediated CD19 Downmodulation and Leukemia Relapse with T Lymphocytes Secreting Anti-CD19 T-cell Engagers

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)–modified T cells have revolutionized the treatment of CD19-positive hematologic malignancies. Although anti-CD19 CAR-engineered autologous T cells can induce remission in patients with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, a large subset relapse, most of them with CD19...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Blanco, Belén, Ramírez-Fernández, Ángel, Bueno, Clara, Argemí-Muntadas, Lidia, Fuentes, Patricia, Aguilar-Sopeña, Óscar, Gutierrez-Agüera, Francisco, Zanetti, Samanta Romina, Tapia-Galisteo, Antonio, Díez-Alonso, Laura, Segura-Tudela, Alejandro, Castellà, Maria, Marzal, Berta, Betriu, Sergi, Harwood, Seandean L., Compte, Marta, Lykkemark, Simon, Erce-Llamazares, Ainhoa, Rubio-Pérez, Laura, Jiménez-Reinoso, Anaïs, Domínguez-Alonso, Carmen, Neves, Maria, Morales, Pablo, Paz-Artal, Estela, Guedan, Sonia, Sanz, Laura, Toribio, María L., Roda-Navarro, Pedro, Juan, Manel, Menéndez, Pablo, Álvarez-Vallina, Luis
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Association for Cancer Research 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7612571/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35362043
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/2326-6066.CIR-21-0853
Descripción
Sumario:Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)–modified T cells have revolutionized the treatment of CD19-positive hematologic malignancies. Although anti-CD19 CAR-engineered autologous T cells can induce remission in patients with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, a large subset relapse, most of them with CD19-positive disease. Therefore, new therapeutic strategies are clearly needed. Here, we report a comprehensive study comparing engineered T cells either expressing a second-generation anti-CD19 CAR (CAR-T19) or secreting a CD19/CD3-targeting bispecific T-cell engager antibody (STAb-T19). We found that STAb-T19 cells are more effective than CAR-T19 cells at inducing cytotoxicity, avoiding leukemia escape in vitro, and preventing relapse in vivo. We observed that leukemia escape in vitro is associated with rapid and drastic CAR-induced internalization of CD19 that is coupled with lysosome-mediated degradation, leading to the emergence of transiently CD19-negative leukemic cells that evade the immune response of engineered CAR-T19 cells. In contrast, engineered STAb-T19 cells induce the formation of canonical immunologic synapses and prevent the CD19 downmodulation observed in anti-CD19 CAR-mediated interactions. Although both strategies show similar efficacy in short-term mouse models, there is a significant difference in a long-term patient-derived xenograft mouse model, where STAb-T19 cells efficiently eradicated leukemia cells, but leukemia relapsed after CAR-T19 therapy. Our findings suggest that the absence of CD19 downmodulation in the STAb-T19 strategy, coupled with the continued antibody secretion, allows an efficient recruitment of the endogenous T-cell pool, resulting in fast and effective elimination of cancer cells that may prevent CD19-positive relapses frequently associated with CAR-T19 therapies.