Transient CAR T cells with specificity to oncofetal glycosaminoglycans in solid tumors
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ABSTRACT: Glycosaminoglycans are often deprioritized as targets for synthetic immunotherapy due to the complexity of glyco-epitopes and limited options for obtaining specific subtype-binding. Solid tumors express proteoglycans that are modified with oncofetal chondroitin sulfate (CS), a modification normally restricted to placenta. Here, we report the design and functionality of transient chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells with selectivity to oncofetal CS. Following expression in T cells, the CAR could be 'armed' with recombinant VAR2CSA lectins (rVAR2) to target tumor cells expressing oncofetal CS. While un-armed CAR T cells remained inactive in the presence of target cells, VAR2-armed CAR T cells displayed robust activation and the ability to eliminate diverse tumor cell types in vitro. Cytotoxicity of the CAR T cells was proportional to the concentration of rVAR2 available to the CAR, offering a potential molecular handle to finetune CAR T cell activity. In vivo, armed CAR T cells rapidly targeted bladder tumors and increased survival of tumor-bearing mice. Thus, our work indicates that cancer-restricted glycosaminoglycans May be exploited as potential targets for CAR T cell therapy.
SUBMITTER: Nastaran Khazamipour
PROVIDER: S-SCDT-10_1038-S44321-024-00153-8 | biostudies-other |
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other
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