Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer (Mar 2021)

Designed improvement to T-cell immunotherapy by multidimensional single cell profiling

  • Navin Varadarajan,
  • Ivan Liadi,
  • Gabrielle Romain,
  • Harjeet Singh,
  • Arash Saeedi,
  • Irfan N Bandey,
  • Jay R T Adolacion,
  • Melisa Martinez Paniagua,
  • Xingyue An,
  • Zheng You,
  • Rasindu B Rajanayake,
  • Laurence JN Cooper

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/jitc-2020-001877
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3

Abstract

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Background Adoptive cell therapy based on the infusion of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells has shown remarkable efficacy for the treatment of hematologic malignancies. The primary mechanism of action of these infused T cells is the direct killing of tumor cells expressing the cognate antigen. However, understanding why only some T cells are capable of killing, and identifying mechanisms that can improve killing has remained elusive.Methods To identify molecular and cellular mechanisms that can improve T-cell killing, we utilized integrated high-throughput single-cell functional profiling by microscopy, followed by robotic retrieval and transcriptional profiling.Results With the aid of mathematical modeling we demonstrate that non-killer CAR T cells comprise a heterogeneous population that arise from failure in each of the discrete steps leading to the killing. Differential transcriptional single-cell profiling of killers and non-killers identified CD137 as an inducible costimulatory molecule upregulated on killer T cells. Our single-cell profiling results directly demonstrate that inducible CD137 is feature of killer (and serial killer) T cells and this marks a different subset compared with the CD107apos (degranulating) subset of CAR T cells. Ligation of the induced CD137 with CD137 ligand (CD137L) leads to younger CD19 CAR T cells with sustained killing and lower exhaustion. We genetically modified CAR T cells to co-express CD137L, in trans, and this lead to a profound improvement in anti-tumor efficacy in leukemia and refractory ovarian cancer models in mice.Conclusions Broadly, our results illustrate that while non-killer T cells are reflective of population heterogeneity, integrated single-cell profiling can enable identification of mechanisms that can enhance the function/proliferation of killer T cells leading to direct anti-tumor benefit.