Translational Oncology (May 2020)

Efficacy of B7-H3-Redirected BiTE and CAR-T Immunotherapies Against Extranodal Nasal Natural Killer/T Cell Lymphoma

  • Meijun Zheng,
  • Lingyu Yu,
  • Juanjuan Hu,
  • Zongliang Zhang,
  • Haiyang Wang,
  • Dan Lu,
  • Xin Tang,
  • Jianhan Huang,
  • Kunhong Zhong,
  • Zeng Wang,
  • Yisong Li,
  • Gang Guo,
  • Shixi Liu,
  • Aiping Tong,
  • Hui Yang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5

Abstract

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Extranodal nasal natural killer (NK)/T cell lymphoma (ENKTCL) is a rare but highly aggressive subtype of non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). Nevertheless, despite extensive research, the estimated 5-year overall survival of affected patients remains low. Therefore, new treatment strategies are needed urgently. Recent advances in immunotherapy have the potential to broaden the applications of chimeric antigen receptor-modified T (CAR-T) cells and the bispecific T-cell engaging (BiTE) antibody. Here, we screened a panel of biomarkers including the B7-H3, CD70, TIM-3, VISTA, ICAM-1, and PD-1 in NKTCL cell lines. As a result, we found for the first time that B7-H3 was highly and homogeneously expressed in these cells. Consequently, we constructed a novel anti-B7-H3/CD3 BiTE antibody and B7-H3-redirected CAR-T cells, and evaluated their efficacy against NKTCL cel lines both in vitro and in vivo. Notably, we found that both anti-B7-H3/CD3 BiTE and B7-H3-redirected CAR-T cells effectively targeted and killed NKTCL cells in vitro, and suppressed the growth of NKTCL tumors in NSG mouse models. Thus, B7-H3 might be a promising therapeutic target for treating patients with NKTCL tumors.