Projects per year
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Glioblastoma is the most common lethal primary brain tumor, urging evaluation of new treatment options. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells targeting B7 homolog 3 (B7-H3) are promising because of the overexpression of B7-H3 on glioblastoma cells but not on healthy brain tissue. Nanobody-based (nano)CARs are gaining increasing attention as promising alternatives to classical single-chain variable fragment-based (scFv)CARs, because of their single-domain nature and low immunogenicity. Still, B7-H3 nanoCAR-T cells have not been extensively studied in glioblastoma.
METHODS: B7-H3 nanoCAR- and scFvCAR-T cells were developed and evaluated in human glioblastoma models. NanoCAR-T cells targeting an irrelevant antigen served as control. T cell activation, cytokine secretion and killing capacity were evaluated in vitro using ELISA, live cell imaging and flow cytometry. Antigen-specific killing was assessed by generating B7-H3 knock-out cells using Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR)/Cas9-genome editing. The tumor tracing capacity of the B7-H3 nanobody was first evaluated in vivo using nuclear imaging. Then, the therapeutic potential of the nanoCAR-T cells was evaluated in a xenograft glioblastoma model.
RESULTS: We showed that B7-H3 nanoCAR-T cells were most efficient in lysing B7-H3pos glioblastoma cells in vitro. Lack of glioblastoma killing by control nanoCAR-T cells and lack of B7-H3neg glioblastoma killing by B7-H3 nanoCAR-T cells showed antigen-specificity. We showed in vivo tumor targeting capacity of the B7-H3 nanobody-used for the nanoCAR design-in nuclear imaging experiments. Evaluation of the nanoCAR-T cells in vivo showed tumor control in mice treated with B7-H3 nanoCAR-T cells in contrast to progressive disease in mice treated with control nanoCAR-T cells. However, we observed limiting toxicity in mice treated with B7-H3 nanoCAR-T cells and showed that the B7-H3 nanoCAR-T cells are activated even by low levels of mouse B7-H3 expression.
CONCLUSIONS: B7-H3 nanoCAR-T cells showed promise for glioblastoma therapy following in vitro characterization, but limiting in vivo toxicity was observed. Off-tumor recognition of healthy mouse tissue by the cross-reactive B7-H3 nanoCAR-T cells was identified as a potential cause for this toxicity, warranting caution when using highly sensitive nanoCAR-T cells, recognizing the low-level expression of B7-H3 on healthy tissue.
Original language | English |
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Article number | e009110 |
Number of pages <span style="color:red"p> <font size="1.5"> ✽ </span> </font> | 16 |
Journal | Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer |
Volume | 12 |
Issue number | 11 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 19 Nov 2024 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
Keywords
- Glioblastoma/immunology
- Humans
- B7 Antigens/immunology
- Animals
- Mice
- Single-Domain Antibodies/immunology
- Receptors, Chimeric Antigen/immunology
- Immunotherapy, Adoptive/methods
- Cell Line, Tumor
- Brain Neoplasms/immunology
- T-Lymphocytes/immunology
- Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
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SRP83: SRP-Onderzoekszwaartepunt: ITAREG: Molecular Imaging and TArgeting of immunoREGulatory cells in Inflammatory diseases and cancer
Van Ginderachter, J., Lahoutte, T., Lahoutte, T., Van Ginderachter, J., Devoogdt, N., Raes, G., Stijlemans, B., Vincke, C. & De Groof, T.
1/11/22 → 31/10/27
Project: Fundamental
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SRP84: SRP-Onderzoekszwaartepunt: PACT: multi-omics Profiling of T cells to improve Adoptive Cell Therapy
Vanderkerken, K., Breckpot, K. & Menu, E.
1/11/22 → 31/10/27
Project: Fundamental
Datasets
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B7-H3-targeting nanobody-based CAR-T cells
Breckpot, K. (Creator) & Meeus, F. (Creator), VUB Institutional Data Repository, 20 Jan 2025
Dataset