[HTML][HTML] Ex vivo Akt inhibition promotes the generation of potent CD19CAR T cells for adoptive immunotherapy

R Urak, M Walter, L Lim, CLW Wong, LE Budde… - … for immunotherapy of …, 2017 - Springer
R Urak, M Walter, L Lim, CLW Wong, LE Budde, S Thomas, SJ Forman, X Wang
Journal for immunotherapy of cancer, 2017Springer
Background Insufficient persistence and effector function of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-
redirected T cells have been challenging issues for adoptive T cell therapy. Generating
potent CAR T cells is of increasing importance in the field. Studies have demonstrated the
importance of the Akt pathway in the regulation of T cell differentiation and memory
formation. We now investigate whether inhibition of Akt signaling during ex vivo expansion
of CAR T cells can promote the generation of CAR T cells with enhanced antitumor activity …
Background
Insufficient persistence and effector function of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-redirected T cells have been challenging issues for adoptive T cell therapy. Generating potent CAR T cells is of increasing importance in the field. Studies have demonstrated the importance of the Akt pathway in the regulation of T cell differentiation and memory formation. We now investigate whether inhibition of Akt signaling during ex vivo expansion of CAR T cells can promote the generation of CAR T cells with enhanced antitumor activity following adoptive therapy in a murine leukemia xenograft model.
Methods
Various T cell subsets including CD8+ T cells, bulk T cells, central memory T cells and naïve/memory T cells were isolated from PBMC of healthy donors, activated with CD3/CD28 beads, and transduced with a lentiviral vector encoding a second-generation CD19CAR containing a CD28 co-stimulatory domain. The transduced CD19CAR T cells were expanded in the presence of IL-2 (50U/mL) and Akt inhibitor (Akti) (1 μM) that were supplemented every other day. Proliferative/expansion potential, phenotypical characteristics and functionality of the propagated CD19CAR T cells were analyzed in vitro and in vivo after 17-21 day ex vivo expansion. Anti-tumor activity was evaluated after adoptive transfer of the CD19CAR T cells into CD19+ tumor-bearing immunodeficient mice. Tumor signals were monitored with biophotonic imaging, and survival rates were analyzed by the end of the experiments.
Results
We found that Akt inhibition did not compromise CD19CAR T cell proliferation and expansion in vitro, independent of the T cell subsets, as comparable CD19CAR T cell expansion was observed after culturing in the presence or absence of Akt inhibitor. Functionally, Akt inhibition did not dampen cell-mediated effector function, while Th1 cytokine production increased. With respect to phenotype, Akti-treated CD19CAR T cells expressed higher levels of CD62L and CD28 as compared to untreated CD19CAR T cells. Once adoptively transferred into CD19+ tumor-bearing mice, Akti treated CD19CAR T cells exhibited more antitumor activity than did untreated CD19CAR T cells.
Conclusions
Inhibition of Akt signaling during ex vivo priming and expansion gives rise to CD19CAR T cell populations that display comparatively higher antitumor activity.
Springer