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A Multidrug-resistant Engineered CAR T Cell for Allogeneic Combination Immunotherapy.


ABSTRACT: The adoptive transfer of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell represents a highly promising strategy to fight against multiple cancers. The clinical outcome of such therapies is intimately linked to the ability of effector cells to engraft, proliferate, and specifically kill tumor cells within patients. When allogeneic CAR T-cell infusion is considered, host versus graft and graft versus host reactions must be avoided to prevent rejection of adoptively transferred cells, host tissue damages and to elicit significant antitumoral outcome. This work proposes to address these three requirements through the development of multidrug-resistant T cell receptor ??-deficient CAR T cells. We demonstrate that these engineered T cells displayed efficient antitumor activity and proliferated in the presence of purine and pyrimidine nucleoside analogues, currently used in clinic as preconditioning lymphodepleting regimens. The absence of TCR?? at their cell surface along with their purine nucleotide analogues-resistance properties could prevent their alloreactivity and enable them to resist to lymphodepleting regimens that may be required to avoid their ablation via HvG reaction. By providing a basic framework to develop a universal T cell compatible with allogeneic adoptive transfer, this work is laying the foundation stone of the large-scale utilization of CAR T-cell immunotherapies.

SUBMITTER: Valton J 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4817890 | biostudies-other | 2015 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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A Multidrug-resistant Engineered CAR T Cell for Allogeneic Combination Immunotherapy.

Valton Julien J   Guyot Valérie V   Marechal Alan A   Filhol Jean-Marie JM   Juillerat Alexandre A   Duclert Aymeric A   Duchateau Philippe P   Poirot Laurent L  

Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy 20150610 9


The adoptive transfer of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell represents a highly promising strategy to fight against multiple cancers. The clinical outcome of such therapies is intimately linked to the ability of effector cells to engraft, proliferate, and specifically kill tumor cells within patients. When allogeneic CAR T-cell infusion is considered, host versus graft and graft versus host reactions must be avoided to prevent rejection of adoptively transferred cells, host tissue damages an  ...[more]

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