4.8 Article

Cross-HLA targeting of intracellular oncoproteins with peptide-centric CARs

Journal

NATURE
Volume 599, Issue 7885, Pages 477-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04061-6

Keywords

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Funding

  1. St Baldrick's Foundation-Stand Up to Cancer Dream Team Translational Research Grant [SU2C-AACR-DT-27-17]
  2. NIH, Beau Biden Cancer Moonshot Program [U54 CA232568]
  3. NIH [R35 CA220500, R01 AI143997, R35 GM125034]
  4. Science Center Quod Erat Demonstrandum (QED) program at the Philadelphia Science Center
  5. Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Cell and Gene Therapy Collaborative
  6. Giulio D'Angio Endowed Chair
  7. Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  8. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]

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The majority of oncogenic drivers are intracellular proteins, thus limiting immunotherapeutic targeting. However, targeting non-immunogenic intracellular oncoproteins like PHOX2B using peptide-centric CARs shows promise in expanding immunotherapeutic targets and potentially benefiting a wider range of patients by breaking conventional HLA restriction.
The majority of oncogenic drivers are intracellular proteins, thus constraining their immunotherapeutic targeting to mutated peptides (neoantigens) presented by individual human leukocyte antigen (HLA) allotypes(1). However, most cancers have a modest mutational burden that is insufficient to generate responses using neoantigen-based therapies2,3. Neuroblastoma is a paediatric cancer that harbours few mutations and is instead driven by epigenetically deregulated transcriptional networks4. Here we show that the neuroblastoma immunopeptidome is enriched with peptides derived from proteins that are essential for tumourigenesis and focus on targeting the unmutated peptide QYNPIRTTF, discovered on HLA-A*24:02, which is derived from the neuroblastoma dependency gene and master transcriptional regulator PHOX2B. To target QYNPIRTTF, we developed peptide-centric chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) using a counter-panning strategy with predicted potentially cross-reactive peptides. We further hypothesized that peptide-centric CARs could recognize peptides on additional HLA allotypes when presented in a similar manner. Informed by computational modelling, we showed that PHOX2B peptide-centric CARs also recognize QYNPIRTTF presented by HLA-A*23:01 and the highly divergent HLA-B*14:02. Finally, we demonstrated potent and specific killing of neuroblastoma cells expressing these HLAs in vitro and complete tumour regression in mice. These data suggest that peptide-centric CARs have the potential to vastly expand the pool of immunotherapeutic targets to include non-immunogenic intracellular oncoproteins and widen the population of patients who would benefit from such therapy by breaking conventional HLA restriction.

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