Translational Oncology (Dec 2024)

Transient-resting culture after activation enhances the generation of CD8+ stem cell-like memory T cells from peripheral blood mononuclear cells

  • Guangyu Chen,
  • Long Yuan,
  • Yong Zhang,
  • Tiepeng Li,
  • Hongqin You,
  • Lu Han,
  • Peng Qin,
  • Yao Wang,
  • Xue Liu,
  • Jindong Guo,
  • Mengyu Zhang,
  • Kuang Zhang,
  • Linlin Li,
  • Peng Yuan,
  • Benling Xu,
  • Quanli Gao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 50
p. 102138

Abstract

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Adoptive cell therapy (ACT) has revolutionized the treatment of patients with cancer. The success of ACT depends largely on transferred T cell status, particularly their less-differentiated state with stem cell-like properties, which enhances ACT effectiveness. Stem cell-like memory T (TSCM) cells exhibit continuous self-renewal and multilineage differentiation similar to pluripotent stem cells. TSCM cells are promising candidates for cancer immunotherapies, whereas maintenance of a more stem-cell-like state before transfer is challenging. Here, we established a highly efficient protocol for generating CD8+ TSCM cells from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). The process involved activating PBMCs using anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody and RetroNectin, followed by a transient-resting culture period (24 h) and subsequent long-term expansion in vitro with interlukien-2. We report that this transient-resting culture after activation preserves CD8+ T cells in a stem memory phenotype (CD95+ CD45RA+ CCR7+) compared to the conventional culture method. Further, this approach reduces the expression of T cell immunoglobulin mucin-3, an exhaustion marker, and increases the expression of T cell factor-1, a master regulator of stemness even after long-term culture compared to the conventional culture method. In conclusion, our study presents a simplified and cost-effective method for generating and expanding CD8+ TSCM cells ex vivo. This approach streamlines the optimization of cancer immunotherapy using ACT.

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