4.7 Article

CTLA-4 tail fusion enhances CAR-T antitumor immunity

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NATURE IMMUNOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41590-023-01571-5

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By fusing the CTLA-4 cytoplasmic tail to a CAR, this study enhances the functionality of CAR-T cells and improves their therapeutic efficacy.
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells are powerful therapeutics; however, their efficacy is often hindered by critical hurdles. Here utilizing the endocytic feature of the cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated antigen-4 (CTLA-4) cytoplasmic tail, we reprogram CAR function and substantially enhance CAR-T efficacy in vivo. CAR-T cells with monomeric, duplex or triplex CTLA-4 cytoplasmic tails (CCTs) fused to the C terminus of CAR exhibit a progressive increase in cytotoxicity under repeated stimulation, accompanied by reduced activation and production of proinflammatory cytokines. Further characterization reveals that CARs with increasing CCT fusion show a progressively lower surface expression, regulated by their constant endocytosis, recycling and degradation under steady state. The molecular dynamics of reengineered CAR with CCT fusion results in reduced CAR-mediated trogocytosis, loss of tumor antigen and improved CAR-T survival. CARs with either monomeric (CAR-1CCT) or duplex CCTs (CAR-2CCT) have superior antitumor efficacy in a relapsed leukemia model. Single-cell RNA sequencing and flow cytometry analysis reveal that CAR-2CCT cells retain a stronger central memory phenotype and exhibit increased persistence. These findings illuminate a unique strategy for engineering therapeutic T cells and improving CAR-T function through synthetic CCT fusion, which is orthogonal to other cell engineering techniques. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells may become exhausted, non-functional or deplete their target cells of antigen, limiting their efficacy. Chen and colleagues fuse the CTLA-4 cytoplasmic tail to a CAR, which compromises trogocytosis and increases the functional capacity of CAR-T cells.

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