@phdthesis{Wallstabe2022, author = {Wallstabe, Lars}, title = {Development and preclinical evaluation of tumour-reactive T cells expressing a chemically programmable chimeric antigen receptor}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-17907}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-179071}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2022}, abstract = {The genetic modification of T cells for the expression a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) endows them with a new specificity for an antigen. Adoptive immunotherapy with CD19-CAR T cells has achieved high rates of sustained complete remissions in B cell malignancies. However, the downregulation or loss of the targeted antigen after mono-specific CAR T cell therapy, e.g. against CD19 or CD22, has been reported. Targeting multiple antigens on tumour cells, sequentially or simultaneously, could overcome this limitation. Additionally, targeting multiple antigens with CAR T cells could drive the translation from hematologic malignancies to prevalent solid cancers, which often express tumour-associated antigens heterogeneously. We hypothesised that expression of a universal CAR, which can be programmed with hapten-like molecules, could endow T cells with specificities for multiple antigens. In this study we introduce a novel chemically programmable CAR (cpCAR) based on monoclonal antibody h38C2. Our data show, that cpCARs form a reversible chemical bond to molecules containing a diketone-group and therefore can be programmed to acquire multiple specificities. We programmed cpCAR T cells with hapten-like compounds against integrins αvβ3 and α4β1 as well as the folate receptor. We observed tumour cell lysis, IFN ɣ and IL-2 production and proliferation of programmed cpCAR T cells against tumour cells expressing the respective target antigen in vitro. As a reference to cpCARs programmed against αvβ3, we further introduced novel conventional αvβ3-CARs. These CARs, based on humanised variants of monoclonal antibody LM609 (hLM609), directly bind to integrin αvβ3 via their scFv. The four αvβ3-CAR constructs comprised either an scFv with higher affinity (hLM609v7) or lower affinity (hLM609v11) against αvβ3 integrin and either a long (IgG4 hinge, CH2, CH3) or short (IgG4 hinge) extracellular spacer. We selected the hLM609v7-CAR with short spacer, which showed potent anti-tumour reactivity both in vitro and in a murine xenograft model, for comparison with the cpCAR programmed against αvβ3. Our data show specific lysis of αvβ3-positive tumour cells, cytokine production and proliferation of both hLM609-CAR T cells and cpCAR T cells in vitro. However, conventional hLM609-CAR T cells mediated stronger anti-tumour effects compared to cpCAR T cells in the same amount of time. In line with the in vitro data, complete destruction of tumour lesions in a murine melanoma xenograft model was only observed for mice treated with conventional αvβ3-CAR T cells. Collectively, we introduce a cpCAR, which can be programmed against multiple tumour antigens, and hLM609-CARs specific for the integrin αvβ3. The cpCAR technology bears the potential to counteract current limitations, e.g. antigen loss, of current monospecific CAR T cell therapy. Targeting αvβ3 integrin with CAR T cells could have clinical applications in the treatment of solid malignancies, because αvβ3 is not only expressed on a variety of solid malignancies, but also on tumour-associated vasculature and fibroblast.}, subject = {Tumorimmunologie}, language = {en} }