Journal of Extracellular Vesicles (Jul 2024)
Extracellular vesicle surface display of αPD‐L1 and αCD3 antibodies via engineered late domain‐based scaffold to activate T‐cell anti‐tumor immunity
Abstract
Abstract Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are emerging as promising carriers for the delivery of therapeutic biologics. Genetic engineering represents a robust strategy for loading proteins of interest into EVs. Identification of EV‐enriched proteins facilitates protein cargo loading efficiency. Many EV‐enriched proteins are sorted into EVs via an endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT)‐dependent pathway. In parallel, viruses hijack this EV biosynthesis machinery via conserved late domain motifs to promote egress from host cells. Inspired by the similarity of biogenesis between EVs and viruses, we developed a synthetic, Late domain‐based EV scaffold protein that enables the display of a set of single chain variable fragments (scFvs) on the EV surface. We named this scaffold the Late domain‐based exosomal antibody surface display platform (LEAP). We applied the LEAP scaffold to reprogramme HEK293T cell‐derived EVs to elicit T‐cell anti‐tumor immunity by simultaneously displaying αPD‐L1 and αCD3 scFvs on the EV surface (denoted as αPD‐L1×αCD3 bispecific T‐cell engaging exosomes, BiTExos). We demonstrated that αPD‐L1×αCD3 BiTExos actively redirected T cells to bind to PD‐L1+ tumor cells, promoting T‐cell activation, proliferation and tumoricidal cytokine production. Furthermore, the αPD‐L1×αCD3 BiTExos promoted T‐cell infiltration into the tumor microenvironment to mitigate the tumor burden in vivo. Our study suggested that the LEAP scaffold may serve as a platform for EV surface display and could be applied for a broad range of EV‐based biomedical applications.
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