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Affinity-tuned mesothelin CAR T cells demonstrate enhanced targeting specificity and reduced off-tumor toxicity
Yanping Yang, … , Charles B. Shoemaker, Moonsoo M. Jin
Yanping Yang, … , Charles B. Shoemaker, Moonsoo M. Jin
Published November 22, 2024
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2024;9(22):e186268. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.186268.
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Research Article Oncology Therapeutics

Affinity-tuned mesothelin CAR T cells demonstrate enhanced targeting specificity and reduced off-tumor toxicity

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Abstract

The application of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy in solid tumors is hindered by life-threatening toxicities resulting from on-target, off-tumor killing of nonmalignant cells that express low levels of the target antigen. Mesothelin (MSLN) has been identified as a target antigen for CAR T cell treatment of mesothelioma, lung, ovarian, and other cancers because of its high expression on tumor cells and limited expression on mesothelial cells. However, fatal off-tumor toxicity of high-affinity MSLN-targeting CAR T cells has been reported in multiple clinical trials. In this study, we constructed CARs using mutant variants of a single-domain nanobody that bind both human and mouse MSLN with a wide range of affinities and examined tumor responses and their toxicities from on-target, off-tumor interactions in mouse models. CAR T cells with low nanomolar affinity (equilibrium dissociation constant, KD) exhibited profound systemic expansion with no apparent infiltration into the tumor. With a gradual reduction of CAR affinity toward the micromolar KD, the expansion of CAR T cells became more restricted to tumors. Our preclinical studies demonstrated that high-affinity MSLN CARs were associated with fatal on-target, off-tumor toxicity and that affinity-tuned CARs rendered T cells more selective for MSLN-high tumors.

Authors

Yanping Yang, Yogindra Vedvyas, Yago Alcaina, Sydney J. Trumper, Diella S. Babu, Irene M. Min, Jacqueline M. Tremblay, Charles B. Shoemaker, Moonsoo M. Jin

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