4.5 Article

The establishment of polypeptide PSMA-targeted chimeric antigen receptor-engineered natural killer cells for castration-resistant prostate cancer and the induction of ferroptosis-related cell death

Journal

CANCER COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 42, Issue 8, Pages 768-783

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cac2.12321

Keywords

CAR-NK92MI; chimeric antigen receptors; immunotherapy; prostate-specific membrane antigen ferroptosis

Categories

Funding

  1. Capital Science and Technology Leading Talent Project [Z181100006318007]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81972400, 32100631]
  3. Beijing Excellent Talents Program-Youth Backbone Project [2018000032600G393]
  4. Young Elite Scientists Sponsorship Program by China Association for Science and Technology [YESS20210056]
  5. Beijing Hope Run Special Fund of Cancer Foundation of China [LC2019B02]

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A novel CAR-NK cell with a clinically significant tumoricidal effect on castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) was designed and verified to have anti-tumor effects in vitro and in vivo.
Background The mortality of castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) is high due to lack of an effective treatment. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-based therapy is a promising immunotherapeutic strategy. Here, we aimed to design a novel CAR-natural killer (NK) cells with a clinically significant tumoricidal effect on CRPC. Methods We constructed novel CAR-NK92MI cells with a CD244-based recombinant lentiviral vector. Different intracellular segments (CD244, NKG2D, or CD3 zeta) were screened to identify the best candidate according to cell lysis assay and CD107a expression levels. To enhance the affinity of the CAR to the tumor antigen, we compared an antibody specific for prostate-specific membrane antigen (anti-PSMA) with PSMA-targeted polypeptide (p-PSMA), which was screened by phage display combinatorial library. Then, CAR-NK92MI cells with both a high affinity for PSMA and a strong tumoricidal capacity were generated. In addition, we verified their tumor-killing effect in vitro and in vivo. The release of cytokine by NK92MI cells was compared with that by CAR-NK92MI cells through flow cytometry and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Moreover, ferroptosis-related cell death was explored as a possible underlying mechanism. Results Three different CAR intracellular regions CAR1 (CD244), CAR2 (CD244, NKG2D) and CAR3 (CD244, NKG2D, and CD3 zeta) were constructed. CAR2 was chosen to confer a stronger tumoricidal ability on CAR-NK92MI cells. Compared with anti-PSMA, p-PSMA exhibited enhanced affinity for the tumor antigen. Thus, p-PSMA-CAR-NK92MI cells, which expressed CAR with a polypeptide-based antigen-binding region, an intracellular CD244 and a NKG2D costimulatory domain, were generated. They could selectively and successfully kill PSMA(+) target cells and exhibited specific lysis rate of 73.19% for PSMA-positive C4-2 cells and 33.04% for PSMA-negative PC3 cells. Additionally, p-PSMA-CAR-NK92MI cells had significantly higher concentrations of IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha and granzyme B than NK92MI cells. In a CRPC cancer xenograft model, p-PSMA-CAR-NK92MI cells significantly inhibited tumor growth and exerted a more consistent killing effect than NK92MI cells. Moreover, ferroptosis is a potential mechanism through which CAR-NK92MI cells attack cancer cells, and is triggered by IFN-gamma. Conclusions p-PSMA-CAR-NK92MI cells can effectively kill CRPCPSMA+ cells in vitro and in vivo. This strategy may provide additional treatment options for patients with CRPC.

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