4.6 Article

Coexpressed Catalase Protects Chimeric Antigen Receptor-Redirected T Cells as well as Bystander Cells from Oxidative Stress-Induced Loss of Antitumor Activity

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 196, Issue 2, Pages 759-766

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1401710

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Funding

  1. Swedish Medical Research Council [K2011-66X-15387-07-3 VR]
  2. Swedish Cancer Society Grant [12 0598]
  3. Cancer Society of Stockholm Grant [121103]
  4. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
  5. Stockholm City Council Project Grant [20140036]
  6. Else Kroner-Fresenius Stiftung
  7. Sander-Stiftung
  8. Deutsche Krebshilfe

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Treatment of cancer patients by adoptive T cell therapy has yielded promising results. In solid tumors, however, T cells encounter a hostile environment, in particular with increased inflammatory activity as a hallmark of the tumor milieu that goes along with abundant reactive oxygen species (ROS) that substantially impair antitumor activity. We present a strategy to render antitumor T cells more resilient toward ROS by coexpressing catalase along with a tumor specific chimeric Ag receptor (CAR) to increase their antioxidative capacity by metabolizing H2O2. In fact, T cells engineered with a bicistronic vector that concurrently expresses catalase, along with the CAR coexpressing catalase (CAR-CAT), performed superior over CAR T cells as they showed increased levels of intracellular catalase and had a reduced oxidative state with less ROS accumulation in both the basal state and upon activation while maintaining their antitumor activity despite high H2O2 levels. Moreover, CAR-CAT T cells exerted a substantial bystander protection of nontransfected immune effector cells as measured by CD3 zeta chain expression in bystander T cells even in the presence of high H2O2 concentrations. Bystander NK cells, otherwise ROS sensitive, efficiently eliminate their K562 target cells under H2O2-induced oxidative stress when admixed with CAR-CAT T cells. This approach represents a novel means for protecting tumor-infiltrating cells from tumor-associated oxidative stress-mediated repression.

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