4.5 Article

Combinatorial antigen targeting strategies for acute leukemia: application in myeloid malignancy

Journal

CYTOTHERAPY
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 282-290

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcyt.2021.10.007

Keywords

acute myeloid leukemia; CD33; CD123; chimeric antigen receptor; C-type lectin-like molecule 1

Funding

  1. Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Specialized Center of Research [7001-19]
  2. Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey 2219 grant

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This study demonstrates that combinatorial targeting of CD33 or CD123 and CLL-1 using CAR T cells can effectively control the growth of heterogeneous AML tumors and improve survival rates.
Background aims: Efforts to safely and effectively treat acute myeloid leukemia (AML) by targeting a single leukemia-associated antigen with chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have met with limited success, due in part to heterogeneous expression of myeloid antigens. The authors hypothesized that T cells expressing CARs directed toward two different AML-associated antigens would eradicate tumors and prevent relapse. Methods: For co-transduction with the authors' previously optimized CLL-1 CAR currently in clinical study (NCT04219163), the authors generated two CARs targeting either CD123 or CD33. The authors then tested the anti-tumor activity of T cells expressing each of the three CARs either alone or after co-transduction. The authors analyzed CAR T-cell phenotype, expansion and transduction efficacy and assessed function by in vitro and in vivo activity against AML cell lines expressing high (MOLM-13: CD123 high, CD33 high, CLL-1 intermediate), intermediate (HL-60: CD123 low, CD33 intermediate, CLL-1 intermediate/high) or low (KG-1a: CD123 low, CD33 low, CLL-1 low) levels of the target antigens. Results: The in vitro benefit of dual expression was most evident when the target cell line expressed low antigen levels (KG-1a). Mechanistically, dual expression was associated with higher pCD3z levels in T cells compared with single CAR T cells on exposure to KG-1a (P < 0.0001). In vivo, combinatorial targeting with CD123 or CD33 and CLL-1 CAR T cells improved tumor control and animal survival for all lines (KG-1a, MOLM-13 and HL-60); no antigen escape was detected in residual tumors. Conclusions: Overall, these findings demonstrate that combinatorial targeting of CD33 or CD123 and CLL-1 with CAR T cells can control growth of heterogeneous AML tumors. (c) 2021 International Society for Cell & Gene Therapy. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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