Molecular Therapy: Oncology (Dec 2024)

A novel mitochondrial pyruvate carrier inhibitor drives stem cell-like memory CAR T cell generation and enhances antitumor efficacy

  • Mathias Wenes,
  • Anouk Lepez,
  • Vladimir Arinkin,
  • Kinsey Maundrell,
  • Orsolya Barabas,
  • Federico Simonetta,
  • Valérie Dutoit,
  • Pedro Romero,
  • Jean-Claude Martinou,
  • Denis Migliorini

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 4
p. 200897

Abstract

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Adoptive cell transfer with chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-expressing T cells can induce remarkable complete responses in cancer patients. Therapeutic success has been correlated with central and stem cell-like memory T cell subsets in the infusion product, which are better able to drive efficient CAR T cell in vivo expansion and long-term persistence. We previously reported that inhibition of the mitochondrial pyruvate carrier (MPC) during mouse CAR T cell culture induces a memory phenotype and enhances antitumor efficacy against melanoma. Here, we use a novel MPC inhibitor, MITO-66, which robustly induces a stem cell-like memory phenotype in CD19-CAR T cells generated from healthy donors and patients with relapsed/refractory B cell malignancies. MITO-66-conditioned CAR T cells were superior in controlling human pre-B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia in mice. Following adoptive cell transfer, MITO-66-conditioned CAR T cells maintained a memory phenotype and protected cured mice against tumor rechallenge. Furthermore, in an in vivo B cell leukemia stress model, CD19-CAR T cells generated in the presence of MITO-66 largely outperformed clinical-stage AKT and PI-3Kδ inhibitors. Thus, we provide compelling preclinical evidence that MPC inhibition with MITO-66 during CAR T cell manufacturing dramatically enhances their antitumor efficacy, thereby paving the way to clinical translation.

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