Selective bispecific T cell recruiting antibody and antitumor activity of adoptive T cell transfer.

J Natl Cancer Inst

Center of Integrated Protein Science Munich (CIPS-M) and Division of Clinical Pharmacology, Department of Internal Medicine IV, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Munich, Germany (SK, JS, MiC, SG, JH, YZ, JCS, MS, SR, CB, SE); Roche Pharmaceutical Research and Early Development, Oncology Discovery and Translational Area, Roche Innovation Center Penzberg, Penzberg, Germany (RC, CS, GN); Center for Molecular Medicine Cologne and Department I for Internal Medicine, University Hospital Cologne, Cologne, Germany (MaC, HA); Institute of Molecular Immunology, Helmholtz Zentrum München and Clinical Cooperation Group Immune Monitoring, Helmholtz Zentrum München, German Research Center for Environmental Health, Munich, Germany (DJS); Roche Pharmaceutical Research and Early Development, Oncology Discovery and Translational Area, Roche Innovation Center Zurich, Switzerland (CL); Chair of Pharmacology, Department of Medicine, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland (CB).

Published: January 2015

Background: One bottleneck for adoptive T cell therapy (ACT) is recruitment of T cells into tumors. We hypothesized that combining tumor-specific T cells, modified with a marker antigen and a bispecific antibody (BiAb) that selectively recognizes transduced T cells and tumor cells would improve T cell recruitment to tumors and enhance therapeutic efficacy.

Methods: SV40 T antigen-specific T cells from T cell receptor (TCR)-I-transgenic mice were transduced with a truncated human epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) as a marker protein. Targeting and killing by combined ACT and anti-EGFR-anti-EpCAM BiAb therapy was analyzed in C57Bl/6 mice (n = six to 12 per group) carrying subcutaneous tumors of the murine gastric cancer cell line GC8 (SV40(+) and EpCAM(+)). Anti-EGFR x anti-c-Met BiAb was used for targeting of human tumor-specific T cells to c-Met(+) human tumor cell lines. Differences between experimental conditions were analyzed using the Student's t test, and differences in tumor growth with two-way analysis of variance. Overall survival was analyzed by log-rank test. All statistical tests were two-sided.

Results: The BiAb linked EGFR-transduced T cells to tumor cells and enhanced tumor cell lysis. In vivo, the combination of ACT and Biab produced increased T cell infiltration of tumors, retarded tumor growth, and prolonged survival compared with ACT with a control antibody (median survival 95 vs 75 days, P < .001). In human cells, this strategy enhanced recruitment of human EGFR-transduced T cells to immobilized c-Met and recognition of tyrosinase(+) melanoma cells by TCR-, as well as of CEA(+) colon cancer cells by chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-modified T cells.

Conclusions: BiAb recruitment of tumor-specific T cells transduced with a marker antigen to tumor cells may enhance efficacy of ACT.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jnci/dju364DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cells
14
tumor-specific cells
12
tumor cells
12
cell
9
adoptive cell
8
marker antigen
8
cells tumor
8
tumor cell
8
tumor growth
8
egfr-transduced cells
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!