4.7 Article

Targeting FLT3-specific chimeric antigen receptor T cells for acute lymphoblastic leukemia with KMT2A rearrangement

Journal

CANCER IMMUNOLOGY IMMUNOTHERAPY
Volume 72, Issue 4, Pages 957-968

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00262-022-03303-4

Keywords

CAR T cell therapy; FLT3; piggyBac transposon; KMT2A gene rearrangement; Lineage switch

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CD19-specific CAR T cell therapy is used for treating B-cell malignancies. However, relapse caused by antigen-escape has become a major concern. This study found that FLT3-specific CAR T cells showed antitumor efficacy against CD19-negative relapsed cases of KMT2A-r B-ALL, suggesting a promising treatment strategy.
CD19-specific chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR T) immunotherapy is used to treat B-cell malignancies. However, antigen-escape mediated relapse following CAR T therapy has emerged as a major concern. In some relapsed cases, especially KMT2A rearrangement-positive B-acute lymphoblastic leukemia (KMT2A-r B-ALL), most of the B-cell antigens are lost via lineage conversion to the myeloid phenotype, rendering multi-B-cell-antigen-targeted CAR T cell therapy ineffective. Fms-related tyrosine kinase-3 (FLT3) is highly expressed in KMT2A-r B-ALL; therefore, in this study, we aimed to evaluate the antitumor efficacy of CAR T cells targeting both CD19 and FLT3 in KMT2A-r B-ALL cells. We developed piggyBac transposon-mediated CAR T cells targeting CD19, FLT3, or both (dual) and generated CD19-negative KMT2A-r B-ALL models through CRISPR-induced CD19 gene-knockout (KO). FLT3 CAR T cells showed antitumor efficacy against CD19-KO KMT2A-r B-ALL cells both in vitro and in vivo; dual-targeted CAR T cells showed cytotoxicity against wild-type (WT) and CD19-KO KMT2A-r B-ALL cells, whereas CD19 CAR T cells demonstrated cytotoxicity only against WT KMT2A-r B-ALL cells in vitro. Therefore, targeting FLT3-specific CAR T cells would be a promising strategy for KMT2A-r B-ALL cells even with CD19-negative relapsed cases.

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