Molecular Therapy: Oncolytics (Mar 2019)

Two-Dimensional Regulation of CAR-T Cell Therapy with Orthogonal Switches

  • MyLinh T. Duong,
  • Matthew R. Collinson-Pautz,
  • Eva Morschl,
  • An Lu,
  • Slawomir P. Szymanski,
  • Ming Zhang,
  • Mary E. Brandt,
  • Wei-Chun Chang,
  • Kelly L. Sharp,
  • Steven M. Toler,
  • Kevin M. Slawin,
  • Aaron E. Foster,
  • David M. Spencer,
  • J. Henri Bayle

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
pp. 124 – 137

Abstract

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Use of chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) as the basis of targeted adoptive T cell therapies has enabled dramatic efficacy against multiple hematopoietic malignancies, but potency against bulky and solid tumors has lagged, potentially due to insufficient CAR-T cell expansion and persistence. To improve CAR-T cell efficacy, we utilized a potent activation switch based on rimiducid-inducible MyD88 and CD40 (iMC)-signaling elements. To offset potential toxicity risks by this enhanced CAR, an orthogonally regulated, rapamycin-induced, caspase-9-based safety switch (iRC9) was developed to allow in vivo elimination of CAR-T cells. iMC costimulation induced by systemic rimiducid administration enhanced CAR-T cell proliferation, cytokine secretion, and antitumor efficacy in both in vitro assays and xenograft tumor models. Conversely, rapamycin-mediated iRC9 dimerization rapidly induced apoptosis in a dose-dependent fashion as an approach to mitigate therapy-related toxicity. This novel, regulatable dual-switch system may promote greater CAR-T cell expansion and prolonged persistence in a drug-dependent manner while providing a safety switch to mitigate toxicity concerns. Keywords: CAR-T, dimerizer, cell therapy, costimulation switch, apoptosis, rapamycin, rimiducid, iMC, iRC9, safety switch