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Humanization of a strategic CD3 epitope enables evaluation of clinical T-cell engagers in a fully immunocompetent in vivo model

T-cell engagers (TCEs) are a growing class of biotherapeutics being investigated in the clinic for treatment of a variety of hematological and solid tumor indications. However, preclinical evaluation of TCEs in vivo has been mostly limited to xenograft tumor models in human T-cell reconstituted immu...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zorn, Julie A., Wheeler, Matthew L., Barnes, Ralston M., Kaberna, Jim, Morishige, Winse, Harris, Marek, Huang, Richard Y.-C., Lohre, Jack, Chang, Yu Ching, Chau, Bryant, Powers, Kathleen, Schindler, Ian, Neradugomma, Naveen, Thomas, Winston, Liao, Xiaoyun, Zhou, Yinhan, West, Sean M., Wang, Feng, Kotapati, Srikanth, Chen, Guodong, Yamazoe, Sayumi, Kosenko, Anastasia, Dollinger, Gavin, Sproul, Tim, Rajpal, Arvind, Strop, Pavel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group UK 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8894342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35241687
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-06953-7
Descripción
Sumario:T-cell engagers (TCEs) are a growing class of biotherapeutics being investigated in the clinic for treatment of a variety of hematological and solid tumor indications. However, preclinical evaluation of TCEs in vivo has been mostly limited to xenograft tumor models in human T-cell reconstituted immunodeficient mice, which have a number of limitations. To explore the efficacy of human TCEs in fully immunocompetent hosts, we developed a knock-in mouse model (hCD3E-epi) in which a 5-residue N-terminal fragment of murine CD3-epsilon was replaced with an 11-residue stretch from the human sequence that encodes for a common epitope recognized by anti-human CD3E antibodies in the clinic. T cells from hCD3E-epi mice underwent normal thymic development and could be efficiently activated upon crosslinking of the T-cell receptor with anti-human CD3E antibodies in vitro. Furthermore, a TCE targeting human CD3E and murine CD20 induced robust T-cell redirected killing of murine CD20-positive B cells in ex vivo hCD3E-epi splenocyte cultures, and also depleted nearly 100% of peripheral B cells for up to 7 days following in vivo administration. These results highlight the utility of this novel mouse model for exploring the efficacy of human TCEs in vivo, and suggest a useful tool for evaluating TCEs in combination with immuno-oncology/non-immuno-oncology agents against heme and solid tumor targets in hosts with a fully intact immune system.