Fully murine CD105-targeted CAR-T cells provide an immunocompetent model for CAR-T cell biology

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Abstract

The modeling of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapies has been mostly focused on immunodeficient models. However, there are many advantages in studying CAR-T cell biology in an immunocompetent setting. We generated a fully murine CAR targeting CD105 (endoglin), a component of the TGFβ receptor expressed on the surface of certain solid tumors and acute leukemias. CD105-targeted CAR-T cells can be grown from various murine backgrounds, tracked in vivo by congenic marks, and be activated by CD105 in isolation or expressed by tumor cells. CD105-targeted CAR-T cells were toxic at higher doses but proved safe in lower doses and modestly effective in treating wild-type B16 melanoma-bearing mice. CAR-T cells infiltrating the tumor expressed high levels of exhaustion markers and exhibited metabolic insufficiencies. We also generated a human CD105 CAR, which was efficacious in treating human melanoma and acute myeloid leukemia in vivo. Our work details a new murine model of CAR-T cell therapy that can be used from immunologists to further our understanding of CAR-T cell biology. We also set the foundation for further exploration of CD105 as a possible human CAR-T cell target.

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Lontos, K., Wang, Y., Colbert, M., Kumar, A., Joshi, S., Philbin, M., … Delgoffe, G. M. (2022). Fully murine CD105-targeted CAR-T cells provide an immunocompetent model for CAR-T cell biology. OncoImmunology, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1080/2162402X.2022.2131229

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