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A reengineered common chain cytokine augments CD8+ T cell–dependent immunotherapy
Anirban Banerjee, … , Eric R. Lazear, Alexander S. Krupnick
Anirban Banerjee, … , Eric R. Lazear, Alexander S. Krupnick
Published May 23, 2022
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2022;7(10):e158889. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.158889.
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Research Article Immunology Therapeutics

A reengineered common chain cytokine augments CD8+ T cell–dependent immunotherapy

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Abstract

Cytokine therapy is limited by undesirable off-target side effects as well as terminal differentiation and exhaustion of chronically stimulated T cells. Here, we describe the signaling properties of a potentially unique cytokine by design, where T cell surface binding and signaling are separated between 2 different families of receptors. This fusion protein cytokine, called OMCPmutIL-2, bound with high affinity to the cytotoxic lymphocyte-defining immunoreceptor NKG2D but signaled through the common γ chain cytokine receptor. In addition to precise activation of cytotoxic T cells due to redirected binding, OMCPmutIL-2 resulted in superior activation of both human and murine CD8+ T cells by improving their survival and memory cell generation and decreasing exhaustion. This functional improvement was the direct result of altered signal transduction based on the reorganization of surface membrane lipid rafts that led to Janus kinase-3–mediated phosphorylation of the T cell receptor rather than STAT/AKT signaling intermediates. This potentially novel signaling pathway increased CD8+ T cell response to low-affinity antigens, activated nuclear factor of activated T cells transcription factors, and promoted mitochondrial biogenesis. OMCPmutIL-2 thus outperformed other common γ chain cytokines as a catalyst for in vitro CD8+ T cell expansion and in vivo CD8+ T cell–based immunotherapy.

Authors

Anirban Banerjee, Dongge Li, Yizhan Guo, Zhongcheng Mei, Christine Lau, Kelly Chen, John Westwick, Jeffery B. Klauda, Adam Schrum, Eric R. Lazear, Alexander S. Krupnick

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Figure 9

Increased antitumor activity of OMCPmutIL-2–expanded CD8+ T cells provides significant improvement in tumor immunotherapy.

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Increased antitumor activity of OMCPmutIL-2–expanded CD8+ T cells provid...
(A) In vitro cytotoxicity of anti-CD19 CAR T cells, expanded in various cytokines, against NALM6 CD19-expressing tumors. (B) Experimental design, tumor growth, and survival of B16 melanoma–bearing mice treated with adoptive transfer of pmel anti-GP100 TCR-transgenic CD8+ T cells expanded in the presence of IL-2 (blue), IL-15 (green), or OMCPmutIL-2 (red). (C) Experimental design, tumor growth, and survival of mice bearing CT26 colon cancer tumors. (D) Tumor growth and survival percentage of mice bearing tumor antigen ovalbumin expressing Lewis lung carcinoma (LLCova) in combinatorial immunotherapy with cytokines and checkpoint inhibitors CTLA-4 and PD-1. (E) Tumor growth in surviving mice after rechallenge with LLCova. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ***P < 0.001; t test. s.q., subcutaneous.

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