iScience (Jun 2024)

NOT gated T cells that selectively target EGFR and other widely expressed tumor antigens

  • Julyun Oh,
  • Charles Kirsh,
  • Jing-Ping Hsin,
  • Kelly C. Radecki,
  • Alexandre Zampieri,
  • Diane Manry,
  • Yuta Ando,
  • Sara Miller,
  • Jamie Chan,
  • Ethan McLeod,
  • Kathleen M. Cunningham,
  • Lu Min Wong,
  • Han Xu,
  • Alexander Kamb

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 6
p. 109913

Abstract

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Summary: Here, we show that a NOT gated cell therapy (Tmod) can exploit antigens such as epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and human leukocyte antigen-E (HLA-E) which are widely expressed on cancer cells. Noncancerous cells—despite high expression of these antigens—are protected from cytotoxicity by the action of an inhibitory receptor (“blocker”) via a mechanism that involves blocker modulation of CAR surface expression. The blocker is triggered by the product of a polymorphic HLA allele (e.g., HLA-A∗02) deleted in a significant subset of solid tumors via loss of heterozygosity. Moreover, Tmod constructs that target mouse homologs of EGFR or HLA-E for activation, and a mouse-equivalent of HLA-A∗02 for inhibition, protect mice from toxicity caused by the CAR alone. The blocker also controls graft vs. host response in allogeneic T cells in vitro, consistent with the use of Tmod cells for off-the-shelf therapy without additional gene-editing.

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