Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy (Dec 2023)

Antigen-induced chimeric antigen receptor multimerization amplifies on-tumor cytotoxicity

  • Yan Sun,
  • Xiu-Na Yang,
  • Shuang-Shuang Yang,
  • Yi-Zhu Lyu,
  • Bing Zhang,
  • Kai-Wen Liu,
  • Na Li,
  • Jia-Chen Cui,
  • Guang-Xiang Huang,
  • Cheng-Lin Liu,
  • Jie Xu,
  • Jian-Qing Mi,
  • Zhu Chen,
  • Xiao-Hu Fan,
  • Sai-Juan Chen,
  • Shuo Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41392-023-01686-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Ligand-induced receptor dimerization or oligomerization is a widespread mechanism for ensuring communication specificity, safeguarding receptor activation, and facilitating amplification of signal transduction across the cellular membrane. However, cell-surface antigen-induced multimerization (dubbed AIM herein) has not yet been consciously leveraged in chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) engineering for enriching T cell-based therapies. We co-developed ciltacabtagene autoleucel (cilta-cel), whose CAR incorporates two B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA)-targeted nanobodies in tandem, for treating multiple myeloma. Here we elucidated a structural and functional model in which BCMA-induced cilta-cel CAR multimerization amplifies myeloma-targeted T cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Crystallographic analysis of BCMA–nanobody complexes revealed atomic details of antigen–antibody hetero-multimerization whilst analytical ultracentrifugation and small-angle X-ray scattering characterized interdependent BCMA apposition and CAR juxtaposition in solution. BCMA-induced nanobody CAR multimerization enhanced cytotoxicity, alongside elevated immune synapse formation and cytotoxicity-mediating cytokine release, towards myeloma-derived cells. Our results provide a framework for contemplating the AIM approach in designing next-generation CARs.