PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

Selection, engineering, and in vivo testing of a human leukocyte antigen-independent T-cell receptor recognizing human mesothelin.

  • Martyn J Hiscox,
  • Alexandra Wasmuth,
  • Chris L Williams,
  • Jaelle N Foot,
  • Guy E Wiedermann,
  • Valeria Fadda,
  • Sara Boiani,
  • Terri V Cornforth,
  • Karolina A Wikiert,
  • Shaun Bruton,
  • Neil Cartwright,
  • Victoria Elizabeth Anderson,
  • Christopher S Barnes,
  • Joao V Vieira,
  • Ian Birch-Machin,
  • Andrew B Gerry,
  • Karen Miller,
  • Nicholas J Pumphrey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0301175
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 4
p. e0301175

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundCanonical α/β T-cell receptors (TCRs) bind to human leukocyte antigen (HLA) displaying antigenic peptides to elicit T cell-mediated cytotoxicity. TCR-engineered T-cell immunotherapies targeting cancer-specific peptide-HLA complexes (pHLA) are generating exciting clinical responses, but owing to HLA restriction they are only able to target a subset of antigen-positive patients. More recently, evidence has been published indicating that naturally occurring α/β TCRs can target cell surface proteins other than pHLA, which would address the challenges of HLA restriction. In this proof-of-concept study, we sought to identify and engineer so-called HLA-independent TCRs (HiTs) against the tumor-associated antigen mesothelin.MethodsUsing phage display, we identified a HiT that bound well to mesothelin, which when expressed in primary T cells, caused activation and cytotoxicity. We subsequently engineered this HiT to modulate the T-cell response to varying levels of mesothelin on the cell surface.ResultsThe isolated HiT shows cytotoxic activity and demonstrates killing of both mesothelin-expressing cell lines and patient-derived xenograft models. Additionally, we demonstrated that HiT-transduced T cells do not require CD4 or CD8 co-receptors and, unlike a TCR fusion construct, are not inhibited by soluble mesothelin. Finally, we showed that HiT-transduced T cells are highly efficacious in vivo, completely eradicating xenografted human solid tumors.ConclusionHiTs can be isolated from fully human TCR-displaying phage libraries against cell surface-expressed antigens. HiTs are able to fully activate primary T cells both in vivo and in vitro. HiTs may enable the efficacy seen with pHLA-targeting TCRs in solid tumors to be translated to cell surface antigens.