Abstract

Abstract Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells, are created by extracting T cells from a cancer patient, engineering them to express a CAR targeting a tumor specific molecule, then reintroducing them back into the patient. A patient’s T cells contain their own endogenous T cell receptors (TCRs) however, which could potentially interact with the exogenous CAR inserted into the cell. In this study, we examine how TCR and CAR signals interact upon CAR-T activation. We show that weak TCR stimulation can reduce (antagonize) or increase overall CAR-T response, both in vitro and in vivo, across multiple tumor models, in both mouse and human T cells. We further show that the behavior of these TCR/CAR interactions can be manipulated by changing various characteristics of the TCR, CAR, and associated ligands. While this behavior is complex, we show that it can be described by a single mathematical model based on the adaptive kinetic proofreading scheme of ligand discrimination. We conclude by presenting potential applications for cancer immunotherapy. Intramural Research Program of the National Cancer Institute

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