4.7 Article

An effective mouse model for adoptive cancer immunotherapy targeting neoantigens

Journal

JCI INSIGHT
Volume 4, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.124405

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Funding

  1. Intramural Research Program
  2. Cancer Moonshot program for the Center for Cell-Based Therapy at the NCI, NIH
  3. Milstein Family Foundation
  4. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [ZIABC011855] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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The adoptive cell transfer (ACT) of T cells targeting mutated neoantigens can cause objective responses in varieties of metastatic cancers, but the development of new T cell-based treatments relies on accurate animal models. To investigate the therapeutic effect of targeting a neoantigen with ACT, we used T cells from pmel-1 T cell receptor-transgenic mice, known to recognize a WT peptide, gp100, and a mutated version of the peptide that has higher avidity. We gene-engineered B16 cells to express the WT or mutated gp100 epitopes and found that pmel-1-specific T cells targeting a neoantigen tumor target augmented recognition as measured by IFN-gamma production. Neoantigen expression by BIG also enhanced the capacity of pmel-1 T cells to trigger the complete and durable regression of large, established, vascularized tumor and required less lymphodepleting conditioning. Targeting neoantigen uncovered the possibility of using enforced expression of the IL-2R alpha chain (CO25) in mutation-reactive CD8(+) T cells to improve their antitumor functionality. These data reveal that targeting of mutated-self neoantigens may lead to improved efficacy and reduced toxicities of T cell-based cellular immunotherapies for patients with cancer.

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