Abstract

Abstract T Cell-mediated immunity is driven by activation of T cell which results in long-term, antigen-specific, effector and memory responses. In recent years, a variety of immunotherapy strategies aimed at inducing, strengthening or engineering T cell responses have emerged as promising approaches for the treatment of diseases such as cancer and autoimmunity. Current methods used to measure TCR-mediated T cell proliferation and cytokine production rely on primary PBMCs as a source of T cells, which must be stimulated via co-culture with APCs or anti-TCR/CD3 antibodies. These assays are laborious and highly variable due to their reliance on donor primary cells, complex assay protocols and unqualified assay reagents. As a result, these assays are difficult to establish in quality-controlled drug development settings. To overcome this barrier, we developed two reporter-based bioluminescent T cell activation bioassays that can be used for the development of bispecific antibodies and engineered T cell immunotherapies. The assays consist of Jurkat T cells genetically engineered to express luciferase downstream of either NFAT or IL-2 response elements. The T cell activation bioassays reflect the mechanisms of action of biologics designed to induce TCR and/or CD28-mediated T cell activation, as demonstrated using anti-CD3 and/or anti-CD28 antibodies as well as blinatumomab, a bispecific antibody that simultaneously binds CD3 expressed on T cells and CD19 expressed on malignant B cells. The bioassays are pre-qualified according to ICH guidelines and show assay specificity, precision, accuracy and linearity required for routine use in potency and stability studies. Finally, our data illustrate the use of reporter-based T cell activation bioassays for characterizing and measuring the activity of engineered chimeric antigen receptor T cells. Citation Format: Pete Stecha, Denise Garvin, Jim Hartnett, Brad Swanson, Frank Fan, Mei Cong, Zhi-jie Jey Cheng. Improved T cell activation bioassays for development of bispecific antibodies and engineered T cell immunotherapies [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 1215.

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