AI Article Synopsis

  • - T-cell receptor-engineered therapies show promise for treating synovial sarcoma, but their effectiveness is limited by the need for human leukocyte antigen (HLA) matching, which chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) therapies can potentially bypass by targeting tumor-associated antigens directly.
  • - Researchers analyzed synovial sarcoma cell lines and found that ligands for NK cell-activating receptors like NKp44 and NKp30 were expressed, while others like NKp46 had no expression, suggesting potential for targeted therapy.
  • - The study indicated that NKp44-based CAR T cells could specifically recognize and suppress synovial sarcoma cell growth, making CAR therapies a viable option for this type of cancer treatment.

Article Abstract

Background: T-cell receptor-engineered T-cell therapies have achieved promising response rates against synovial sarcoma in clinical trials, but their applicability is limited owing to the HLA matching requirement. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) can redirect primary T cells to tumor-associated antigens without requiring HLA matching. However, various obstacles, including the paucity of targetable antigens, must be addressed for synovial sarcoma. Ligands for natural killer (NK) cell-activating receptors are highly expressed by tumor cells.

Methods: The surface expression of ligands for NK cell-activating receptors in synovial sarcoma cell lines was analyzed. We analyzed RNA sequencing data deposited in a public database to evaluate NKp44-ligand expression. Primary T cells retrovirally transduced with CAR targeting NKp44 ligands were evaluated for their functions in synovial sarcoma cells. Alterations induced by various stimuli, including a histone deacetylase inhibitor, a hypomethylating agent, inflammatory cytokines, and ionizing radiation, in the expression levels of NKp44 ligands were investigated.

Results: Ligands for NKp44 and NKp30 were expressed in all cell lines. NKG2D ligands were barely expressed in a single cell line. None of the cell lines expressed NKp46 ligand. Primary synovial sarcoma cells expressed the mRNA of the truncated isoform of MLL5, a known cellular ligand for NKp44. NKp44-based CAR T cells specifically recognize synovial sarcoma cells, secrete interferon-γ, and exert suppressive effects on tumor cell growth. No stimulus altered the expression of NKp44 ligands.

Conclusion: NKp44-based CAR T cells can redirect primary human T cells to synovial sarcoma cells. CAR-based cell therapies may be an option for treating synovial sarcomas.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9420389PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tranon.2022.101521DOI Listing

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