Chimeric Antigen Receptors Directed at Mutant KRAS Exhibit an Inverse Relationship Between Functional Potency and Neoantigen Selectivity

Author:

Tokatlian Talar1ORCID,Asuelime Grace E.1,Naradikian Martin S.1,Mock Jee-Young1,Daris Mark E.1,Martin Aaron D.1ORCID,Toledo Warshaviak Dora1,Kamb Alexander1,Hamburger Agnes E.1

Affiliation:

1. 1Research, A2 Biotherapeutics, Agoura Hills, California.

Abstract

Neoantigens are among the most intriguing potential immuno-oncology targets because, unlike many cancer targets that are expressed on normal tissues, they are by definition restricted to cancer cells. Medicines directed at common neoantigens such as mutant KRAS are especially interesting because they may offer the convenience and cost of an off-the-shelf therapy. However, all common KRAS mutations produce proteins that differ from the wild type at a single amino acid, creating challenges for molecular discrimination. We have undertaken an effort to optimize single-chain variable fragments (scFv) against peptide/major histocompatibility antigen complexes composed of HLA-A*11 and either G12V- or G12D-mutant KRAS peptides. These scFvs could in principle be used in chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies for selected patients whose tumors bear either of these mutations. Here we show that optimization of such CARs involves a trade-off between potency and selectivity. We further show that targeting this family without high selectivity engenders risks of cross-reactivity against other members of the G-protein family to which KRAS belongs.Significance:We report an effort to generate high potency, selective CARs directed at mutant KRAS peptides. Although the heavily optimized CARs maintain high selectivity against wild-type KRAS, they lose selectivity against other KRAS-related peptides derived from human proteins. To our knowledge, this work is the first to examine the trade-off between potency and selectivity with regard to KRAS pMHC-directed CARs, illustrating the challenge to achieve both sufficient potency and high selectivity.

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

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