Abstract

Abstract Our lab has developed a novel T cell engager (TCE) whereby a recombinant antibody fragment specific for a tumor-associated antigen (TAA) of choice is genetically fused to HLA-A2/peptide complex that presents a viral T cell epitope. The HLA-A2/peptide complex is designed to engage the TCR of a CD8+ T cell while the scFV or Fab redirects specificity towards a TAA, thus recruiting potent antiviral memory CTLs to attack tumor cells. We used the highly immunogenic cytomegalovirus (CMV) pp65-derived peptide as a target peptide for CTLs, taking into consideration the CMV prevalence of seropositive humans. Mesothelin was used as a TAA. We monitored the binding of TCEs to target cells demonstrating that their binding is dependent exclusively on the interaction of the targeting domain (scFv/Fab) of the fusion molecule with mesothelin, and is dose-dependent. Potency of TCEs was determined in vitro using co-cultures of CMV-specific CTLs and mesothelin-expressing human tumor cell lines. The TCEs specifically and potently mediated the killing of mesothelin-positive cells in TCE-dose-dependent matter. Moreover, a significant increase in CD25 expression and dose-dependent secretion of IL2 and IFNγ were observed in CTLs exposed to mesothelin-positive cells. The results represent a powerful new approach for immunotherapy. The MHC-based TCEs can mediate specific and efficient recruitment of viral-specific CTLs to kill tumor cells, adding an approach by which specific population of T cells can be engaged and recruited to the tumor site in a controllable manner in contrast to current CD3-based T cells engagers that cannot selectively target the specificity of interest. Such treatments can be very potent but with decreased toxicities involved.

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