Molecular Therapy: Oncolytics (Mar 2021)

The antitumor capacity of mesothelin-CAR-T cells in targeting solid tumors in mice

  • Qian Zhang,
  • Guoping Liu,
  • Jibin Liu,
  • Mu Yang,
  • Juan Fu,
  • Guodi Liu,
  • Dehua Li,
  • Zhangjie Gu,
  • Linsong Zhang,
  • Yingjiao Pan,
  • Xingbing Cui,
  • Lu Wang,
  • Lixin Zhang,
  • Xiaoli Tian

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20
pp. 556 – 568

Abstract

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Since the approval of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy targeting CD19 by the FDA, CAR-T cell therapy has received increasing attention as a new method for targeting tumors. Although CAR-T cell therapy has a good effect against hematological malignancies, it has been less effective against solid tumors. In the present study, we selected mesothelin (MSLN/MESO) as a target for CAR-T cells because it is highly expressed by solid tumors but only expressed at low levels by normal tissues. We engineered a third generation MSLN-CAR comprising a single-chain variable fragment (scFv) targeting MSLN (MSLN-scFv), a CD8 transmembrane domain, the costimulatory domains from CD28 and 4-1BB, and the activating domain CD3ζ. In vitro, MSLN-CAR-T cells killed various solid tumor cell lines, demonstrating that it could specifically kill MSLN-positive cells and release cytokines. In vivo, we investigated the effects of MSLN-CAR-T cell therapy against ovarian, breast, and colorectal cancer cell-line-derived xenografts (CDX) and MSLN-positive colorectal and gastric cancer patient-derived xenografts (PDX). MSLN-CAR decreased the growth of MSLN-positive tumors concomitant with significantly increased T cells and cytokine levels compared to the control group. These results indicated that modified MSLN-CAR-T cells could be a promising therapeutic approach for solid tumors.

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