Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy (Nov 2022)

A PD-L1-targeting chimeric switch receptor enhances efficacy of CAR-T cell for pleural and peritoneal metastasis

  • Qizhi Ma,
  • Xia He,
  • Benxia Zhang,
  • Fuchun Guo,
  • Xuejin Ou,
  • Qiyu Yang,
  • Pei Shu,
  • Yue Chen,
  • Kai Li,
  • Ge Gao,
  • Yajuan Zhu,
  • Diyuan Qin,
  • Jie Tang,
  • Xiaoyu Li,
  • Meng Jing,
  • Jian Zhao,
  • Zeming Mo,
  • Ning Liu,
  • Yao Zeng,
  • Kexun Zhou,
  • Mingyang Feng,
  • Weiting Liao,
  • Wanting Lei,
  • Qiu Li,
  • Dan Li,
  • Yongsheng Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41392-022-01198-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Pleural and peritoneal metastasis accompanied by malignant pleural effusion (MPE) or malignant ascites (MA) is frequent in patients with advanced solid tumors that originate from the lung, breast, gastrointestinal tract and ovary. Regional delivery of CAR-T cells represents a new strategy to control tumor dissemination in serous cavities. However, malignant effusions constitute an immune-suppressive environment that potentially induces CAR-T cell dysfunction. Here, we demonstrated that the anti-tumor cytotoxicity of conventional 2nd-generation CAR-T cells was significantly inhibited by both the cellular and non-cellular components of MPE/MA, which was primarily attributed to impaired CAR-T cell proliferation and cytokine production in MPE/MA environment. Interestingly, we found that PD-L1 was widely expressed on freshly-isolated MPE/MA cells. Based on this feature, a novel PD-L1-targeting chimeric switch receptor (PD-L1.BB CSR) was designed, which can bind to PD-L1, switching the inhibitory signal into an additional 4-1BB signal. When co-expressed with a 2nd-generation CAR, PD-L1.BB CSR-modified CAR-T cells displayed superior fitness and enhanced functions in both culture medium and MPE/MA environment, causing rapid and durable eradication of pleural and peritoneal metastatic tumors in xenograft models. Further investigations revealed elevated expressions of T-cell activation, proliferation, and cytotoxicity-related genes, and we confirmed that PD-L1 scFv and 4-1BB intracellular domain, the two important components of PD-L1.BB CSR, were both necessary for the functional improvements of CAR-T cells. Overall, our study shed light on the clinical application of PD-L1.BB CSR-modified dual-targeting CAR-T cells. Based on this study, a phase I clinical trial was initiated in patients with pleural or peritoneal metastasis (NCT04684459).