European Journal of Medical Research (Mar 2023)

B7-H3 chimeric antigen receptor-modified T cell shows potential for targeted treatment of acute myeloid leukaemia

  • Shuangshuang Fan,
  • Tian Wang,
  • Fengtao You,
  • Tingting Zhang,
  • Yafen Li,
  • Cheng Ji,
  • Zhichao Han,
  • Binjie Sheng,
  • Xiaochen Zhai,
  • Gangli An,
  • Huimin Meng,
  • Lin Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40001-023-01049-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Background and aims Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell therapy is a novel type of immunotherapy. However, the use of CAR-T cells to treat acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) has limitations. B7-H3 is expressed in several malignancies, including some types of AML cells. However, its expression in normal tissues is low. Therefore, B7-H3 is ideal for targeted AML therapy. Materials and methods First, we constructed B7-H3 CAR that can target B7-H3, and then constructed B7-H3-CAR-T cells in vitro, which were co-incubated with six AML cell lines expressing different levels of B7-H3, respectively. The toxicity and cytokines were detected by flow cytometry. In vivo, AML model was established in B-NSG mice to study the toxicity of B7-H3-CAR T on AML cells. Results In vitro functional tests showed that B7-H3-CAR-T cells were cytotoxic to B7-H3-positive AML tumor cells and had good scavenging effect on B7-H3-expressing AML cell lines, and the cytokine results were consistent. In vivo, B7-H3-CAR-T cells significantly inhibited tumor cell growth in a mouse model of AML, prolonging mouse survival compared with controls. Conclusion B7-H3-CAR-T cells may serve as a novel therapeutic method for the targeted treatment of AML.

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