Infusion of T lymphocytes expressing chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) can produce extraordinary antitumor activity in patients with leukemia, lymphoma, and myeloma. The signaling mechanisms activating T cells and provoking tumor cell killing also trigger cytokine secretion and macrophage activation, leading to cytokine release syndrome (CRS). CRS is a serious side effect of CAR-T cells, and proinflammatory interleukin-6 (IL-6) is central to its pathogenesis. To endow T cells with anti-CRS activity, we designed a nonsignaling membrane-bound IL-6 receptor (mbaIL6) constituted by a single chain variable fragment derived from an anti-IL-6 antibody linked to a transmembrane anchoring peptide. We found that mbaIL6 expressed on the surface of T cells could rapidly remove IL-6 from the culture supernatant. IL-6 removal was proportional to the number of mbaIL61 cells, increased with T-cell proliferation, and neutralized IL-6 signaling and function. A construct encoding for mbaIL6 and an anti-CD19-41BB-CD3z CAR allowed simultaneous expression of both receptors. T cells with mbaIL6 and CAR neutralized macrophage-derived IL-6 while exerting powerful antitumor activity. Cytotoxicity and proliferation were identical to those of cells expressing CAR alone in vitro, and CAR-T cells were effective in xenograft models regardless of mbaIL6 expression. Levels of human IL-6 in mice, however, were greatly reduced if T cells expressed both receptors instead of CAR alone. Thus, CAR-T cells with onboard capacity to extinguish IL-6 represent a new approach to prevent CRS and suppress its severity without affecting the antitumor potential of CAR-T cells.
CITATION STYLE
Tan, A. H. J., Vinanica, N., & Campana, D. (2020). Chimeric antigen receptor-T cells with cytokine neutralizing capacity. Blood Advances, 4(7), 1419–1431. https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2019001287
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