Abstract
AbstractChimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have limited efficacy against solid tumors due to the hostile microenvironment. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are essential to metastasis, which is the cause of most of cancer-related death. Here, we generated GrB-CAR T cells targeting membrane-bound HSP70 (mHSP70), a highly tumor-specific antigen detected in numerous cancers. GrB-CAR T cells exhibited potent cytotoxicity against a broad spectrum of cancer cell lines and stem-like cancer cellsin vitroand effectively inhibited xenograft tumor growthin vivo. Importantly, GrB-CAR T cells markedly decreased the number of CTCs and, therefore, hindered cancer metastasis in spontaneous metastasis models with uncontrollable primary tumor growth, a scenario commonly encountered in clinical trials of CAR T therapies for solid tumors. Furthermore, despite the 100% homology between human and macaque HSP70 protein, the autotransplantation of macaque T cells expressing human GrB-CAR did not cause any obvious toxic effects. These results not only demonstrate GrB-CAR T cells as a safe and effective tactic with broad-spectrum anticancer activity, but also offer strong experimental evidence and proof-of-concept validation for CAR T cell-mediated metastasis inhibition by targeting CTCs.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory