Rational Protein Design Yields a CD20 CAR with Superior Antitumor Efficacy Compared with CD19 CAR

Author:

Chen Ximin1ORCID,Chen Laurence C.1ORCID,Khericha Mobina1ORCID,Meng Xiangzhi2ORCID,Salvestrini Emma1ORCID,Shafer Amanda2ORCID,Iyer Neha3ORCID,Alag Anya S.2ORCID,Ding Yunfeng1ORCID,Nicolaou Demetri M.1ORCID,Chen Yvonne Y.124ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California.

2. 2Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Molecular Genetics, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California.

3. 3Department of Bioengineering, University of California Los Angeles, California.

4. 4Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy at UCLA, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California.

Abstract

Abstract Chimeric antigen receptors (CAR) are fusion proteins whose functional domains are often connected in a plug-and-play manner to generate multiple CAR variants. However, CARs with highly similar sequences can exhibit dramatic differences in function. Thus, approaches to rationally optimize CAR proteins are critical to the development of effective CAR T-cell therapies. Here, we report that as few as two amino-acid changes in nonsignaling domains of a CAR were able to significantly enhance in vivo antitumor efficacy. We demonstrate juxtamembrane alanine insertion and single-chain variable fragment sequence hybridization as two strategies that could be combined to maximize CAR functionality, and describe a CD20 CAR that outperformed the CD19 CAR in antitumor efficacy in preclinical in vitro and in vivo assays. Precise changes in the CAR sequence drove dramatically different transcriptomic profiles upon antigen stimulation, with the most efficacious CAR inducing an enrichment in highly functional memory T cells upon antigen stimulation. These findings underscore the importance of sequence-level optimization to CAR T-cell function, and the protein-engineering strategy described here may be applied to the development of additional CARs against diverse antigens. See related Spotlight by Scheller and Hudecek, p. 142

Funder

Alliance for Cancer Gene Therapy

Cancer Research Institute

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Cancer Research,Immunology

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