Abstract

Polyclonal T-cells can be directed against cancer using transmembrane fusion molecules known as chimeric antigen receptors (CARs). Although preclinical studies have provided encouragement, pioneering clinical trials using CAR-based immunotherapy have been disappointing. Key obstacles are the need for robust expansion ex vivo followed by sustained survival of infused T-cells in patients. To address this, we have developed a system to achieve selective proliferation of CAR(+) T-cells using IL-4, a cytokine with several pathophysiologic and therapeutic links to cancer. A chimeric cytokine receptor (4alphabeta) was engineered by fusion of the IL-4 receptor alpha (IL-4Ralpha) ectodomain to the beta(c) subunit, used by IL-2 and IL-15. Addition of IL-4 to T-cells that express 4alphabeta resulted in STAT3/STAT5/ERK phosphorylation and exponential proliferation, mimicking the actions of IL-2. Using receptor-selective IL-4 muteins, partnering of 4alphabeta with gamma(c) was implicated in signal delivery. Next, human T-cells were engineered to co-express 4alphabeta with a CAR specific for tumor-associated MUC1. These T-cells exhibited an unprecedented capacity to elicit repeated destruction of MUC1-expressing tumor cultures and expanded through several logs in vitro. Despite prolonged culture in IL-4, T-cells retained specificity for target antigen, type 1 polarity, and cytokine dependence. Similar findings were observed using CARs directed against two additional tumor-associated targets, demonstrating generality of application. Furthermore, this system allows rapid ex vivo expansion and enrichment of engineered T-cells from small blood volumes, under GMP-compliant conditions. Together, these findings provide proof of principle for the development of IL-4-enhanced T-cell immunotherapy of cancer.

Highlights

  • Adoptive T-cell immunotherapy is an exciting platform technology pioneered to treat hematologic malignancies and metastatic melanoma

  • T-cell specificity may be targeted against diverse cancers using genetically delivered chimeric antigen receptors (CARs)

  • IL-2 is licensed for administration to patients with some selected tumor types

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Summary

Introduction

Adoptive T-cell immunotherapy is an exciting platform technology pioneered to treat hematologic malignancies and metastatic melanoma. Activated T-cells express the type 1 receptor, allowing IL-4 to support their survival and promote limited proliferation [13]. We show that IL-4 can be used to drive the selective expansion and sustained antitumor activity of T-cells in which a tumor-specific CAR is co-expressed with 4␣␤.

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