Haematologica (Jan 2010)

Development of a Wilms’ tumor antigen-specific T-cell receptor for clinical trials: engineered patient’s T cells can eliminate autologous leukemia blasts in NOD/SCID mice

  • Shao-An Xue,
  • Liquan Gao,
  • Sharyn Thomas,
  • Daniel P. Hart,
  • John Zhao Xue,
  • Roopinder Gillmore,
  • Ralf-Holger Voss,
  • Emma Morris,
  • Hans J. Stauss

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2009.006486
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 95, no. 1

Abstract

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Background The Wilms’ tumor antigen (WT1) is an attractive target for immunotherapy of leukemia. In the past, we isolated and characterized the specificity and function of a WT1-specific T-cell receptor. The goal of this translational study was to develop a safe and efficient WT1-T-cell receptor retroviral vector for an adoptive immunotherapy trial with engineered T cells.Design and Methods We generated a panel of retroviral constructs containing unmodified or codon-optimized WT1-T-cell receptor α and β genes, linked via internal ribosome entry sites or 2A sequences, with or without an additional inter-chain disulfide bond in the T-cell receptor constant domains. These constructs were functionally analyzed in vitro, and the best one was tested in an autologous primary leukemia model in vivo.Results We identified a WT1-T-cell receptor construct that showed optimal tetramer staining, antigen-specific cytokine production and killing activity when introduced into primary human T cells. Fresh CD34+ cells purified from a patient with leukemia were engrafted into NOD/SCID mice, followed by adoptive immunotherapy with patient’s autologous T cells transduced with the WT1-T-cell receptor. This therapeutic treatment evidently decreased leukemia engraftment in mice and resulted in a substantial improvement of leukemia-free survival.Conclusions This is the first report that patient’s T cells, engineered to express the WT1-T-cell receptor, can eliminate autologous leukemia progenitor cells in an in vivo model. This study provides a firm basis for the planned WT1-T-cell receptor gene therapy trial in leukemia patients.