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CAR T cells targeting tumor endothelial marker CLEC14A inhibit tumor growth
Xiaodong Zhuang, … , Roy Bicknell, Steven P. Lee
Xiaodong Zhuang, … , Roy Bicknell, Steven P. Lee
Published October 2, 2020
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2020;5(19):e138808. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.138808.
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Research Article Immunology Oncology

CAR T cells targeting tumor endothelial marker CLEC14A inhibit tumor growth

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Abstract

Engineering T cells to express chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) specific for antigens on hematological cancers has yielded remarkable clinical responses, but with solid tumors, benefit has been more limited. This may reflect lack of suitable target antigens, immune evasion mechanisms in malignant cells, and/or lack of T cell infiltration into tumors. An alternative approach, to circumvent these problems, is targeting the tumor vasculature rather than the malignant cells directly. CLEC14A is a glycoprotein selectively overexpressed on the vasculature of many solid human cancers and is, therefore, of considerable interest as a target antigen. Here, we generated CARs from 2 CLEC14A-specific antibodies and expressed them in T cells. In vitro studies demonstrated that, when exposed to their target antigen, these engineered T cells proliferate, release IFN-γ, and mediate cytotoxicity. Infusing CAR engineered T cells into healthy mice showed no signs of toxicity, yet these T cells targeted tumor tissue and significantly inhibited tumor growth in 3 mouse models of cancer (Rip-Tag2, mPDAC, and Lewis lung carcinoma). Reduced tumor burden also correlated with significant loss of CLEC14A expression and reduced vascular density within malignant tissues. These data suggest the tumor vasculature can be safely and effectively targeted with CLEC14A-specific CAR T cells, offering a potent and widely applicable therapy for cancer.

Authors

Xiaodong Zhuang, Federica Maione, Joseph Robinson, Michael Bentley, Baksho Kaul, Katharine Whitworth, Neeraj Jumbu, Elizabeth Jinks, Jonas Bystrom, Pietro Gabriele, Elisabetta Garibaldi, Elena Delmastro, Zsuzsanna Nagy, David Gilham, Enrico Giraudo, Roy Bicknell, Steven P. Lee

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Figure 7

Antitumor responses in PDAC mice.

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Antitumor responses in PDAC mice.
(A) CLEC14A expression in PDAC tumor t...
(A) CLEC14A expression in PDAC tumor tissue (green, MECA32 endothelial marker; red, CLEC14A). FVB/n mice were injected into the pancreas with PDAC tumor cells and then conditioned 1 week later with cyclophosphamide. The following day, mice were infused with CAR5.28z-expressing mouse T cells (n = 7) or mock-transduced mouse T cells (n = 8). Three weeks later, mice were culled and tumor sizes were measured. (B) Results show tumor size for individual mice. (C–E) Representative images of immunofluorescent staining of CAR- and mock-treated tumor tissue (red, MECA32 endothelial marker; green, CLEC14A; blue, DAPI; C) to determine vascular density (D) and density of CLEC14A+ vessels (E). All scatterplots show data from individual mice, with mean ± SEM. All P values shown were calculated using a 2-tailed Mann-Whitney U test.
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