Tandem Car T Cells Targeting Her2 And Il13r Alpha 2 Mitigate Tumor Antigen Escape

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION(2021)

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摘要
In preclinical models of glioblastoma, antigen escape variants can lead to tumor recurrence after treatment with CAR T cells that are redirected to single tumor antigens. Given the heterogeneous expression of antigens on glioblastomas, we hypothesized that a bispecific CAR molecule would mitigate antigen escape and improve the antitumor activity of T cells. Here, we created a CAR that joins a HER2-binding scFv and an IL13R alpha 2-binding IL-13 mutein to make a tandem CAR exodomain (TanCAR) and a CD28 zeta. endodomain. We determined that patient TanCAR T cells showed distinct binding to HER2 or IL13R alpha 2 and had the capability to lyse autologous glioblastoma. TanCAR T cells exhibited activation dynamics that were comparable to those of single CAR T cells upon encounter of HER2 or IL13R alpha 2. We observed that TanCARs engaged HER2 and IL13R alpha 2 simultaneously by inducing HER2-IL13R alpha 2 heterodimers, which promoted superadditive T cell activation when both antigens were encountered concurrently. TanCAR T cell activity was more sustained but not more exhaustible than that of T cells that coexpressed a HER2 CAR and an IL13R alpha 2 CAR, T cells with a unispecific CAR, or a pooled product. In a murine glioblastoma model, TanCAR T cells mitigated antigen escape, displayed enhanced antitumor efficacy, and improved animal survival. Thus, TanCAR T cells show therapeutic potential to improve glioblastoma control by coengaging HER2 and IL13R alpha 2 in an augmented, bivalent immune synapse that enhances T cell functionality and reduces antigen escape.
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