Projecten per jaar
Samenvatting
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.
Originele taal-2 | English |
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Artikelnummer | e009110 |
Aantal pagina's | 16 |
Tijdschrift | Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer |
Volume | 12 |
Nummer van het tijdschrift | 11 |
DOI's | |
Status | Published - 19 nov. 2024 |
Bibliografische nota
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.
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SRP84: SRP-Onderzoekszwaartepunt: PACT: multi-omics Profilering van T-cellen om Adoptieve Cel Therapie te verbeteren
Vanderkerken, K., Breckpot, K. & Menu, E.
1/11/22 → 31/10/27
Project: Fundamenteel
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SRP83: SRP-Onderzoekszwaartepunt: Immunoregulatoire cellen als doelwit voor moleculaire beeldvorming en therapie in inflammatoire ziekten en kanker
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: Fundamenteel
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