Nature Communications (Sep 2024)

Histone marks identify novel transcription factors that parse CAR-T subset-of-origin, clinical potential and expansion

  • S. Fiorenza,
  • Y. Zheng,
  • J. Purushe,
  • T. J. Bock,
  • J. Sarthy,
  • D. H. Janssens,
  • A. S. Sheih,
  • E. L. Kimble,
  • D. Kirchmeier,
  • T. D. Phi,
  • J. Gauthier,
  • A. V. Hirayama,
  • S. R. Riddell,
  • Q. Wu,
  • R. Gottardo,
  • D. G. Maloney,
  • J. Y. H. Yang,
  • S. Henikoff,
  • C. J. Turtle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52503-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Chimeric antigen receptor-modified T cell (CAR-T) immunotherapy has revolutionised blood cancer treatment. Parsing the genetic underpinnings of T cell quality and CAR-T efficacy is challenging. Transcriptomics inform CAR-T state, but the nature of dynamic transcription during activation hinders identification of transiently or minimally expressed genes, such as transcription factors, and over-emphasises effector and metabolism genes. Here we explore whether analyses of transcriptionally repressive and permissive histone methylation marks describe CAR-T cell functional states and therapeutic potential beyond transcriptomic analyses. Histone mark analyses improve identification of differences between naïve, central memory, and effector memory CD8 + T cell subsets of human origin, and CAR-T derived from these subsets. We find important differences between CAR-T manufactured from central memory cells of healthy donors and of patients. By examining CAR-T products from a clinical trial in lymphoma (NCT01865617), we find a novel association between the activity of the transcription factor KLF7 with in vivo CAR-T accumulation in patients and demonstrate that over-expression of KLF7 increases in vitro CAR-T proliferation and IL-2 production. In conclusion, histone marks provide a rich dataset for identification of functionally relevant genes not apparent by transcriptomics.