A study of drug-resistant lymphomas with hypermorphic mutations in PRC2 has identified a ‘methylation index’ by which cancer cells maintain optimal H3K27me3 levels for survival, emphasizing the importance of understanding how tumors adapt to changes in chromatin and to drug-resistance mutations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have induced remarkable antitumor responses in B cell malignancies. Some patients do not respond because of T cell deficiencies that hamper the expansion, persistence, and effector function of these cells. We used longitudinal immune profiling to identify phenotypic and pharmacodynamic changes in CD19-directed CAR T cells in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a patient relapsing 9 months after CD19-targeted CAR T cell (CTL019) infusion with CD19 leukemia that aberrantly expressed the anti-CD19 CAR. The CAR gene was unintentionally introduced into a single leukemic B cell during T cell manufacturing, and its product bound in cis to the CD19 epitope on the surface of leukemic cells, masking it from recognition by and conferring resistance to CTL019.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer immunotherapy based on genetically redirecting T cells has been used successfully to treat B cell malignancies. In this strategy, the T cell genome is modified by integration of viral vectors or transposons encoding chimaeric antigen receptors (CARs) that direct tumour cell killing. However, this approach is often limited by the extent of expansion and persistence of CAR T cells.
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