Targeting an alternate Wilms' tumor antigen 1 peptide bypasses immunoproteasome dependency.
Miranda C LahmanThomas M SchmittKelly G PaulsonNathalie VigneronDenise BuenrostroFelecia D WagenerValentin VoilletLauren MartinRaphaël GottardoJason BielasM Juliana McElrathDerek L StirewaltEra L Pogosova-AgadjanyanCecilia C S YeungRobert H PierceDaniel N EganMerav BarPaul C HendrieSinéad KinsellaAesha VakilJonah ButlerMary ChaffeeJonathan LintonMegan S McAfeeDaniel S HunterMarie BleakleyAnthony RongvauxBenoit J Van den EyndeAude G ChapuisPhilip D GreenbergPublished in: Science translational medicine (2022)
Designing effective antileukemic immunotherapy will require understanding mechanisms underlying tumor control or resistance. Here, we report a mechanism of escape from immunologic targeting in an acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patient, who relapsed 1 year after immunotherapy with engineered T cells expressing a human leukocyte antigen A*02 (HLA-A2)-restricted T cell receptor (TCR) specific for a Wilms' tumor antigen 1 epitope, WT1 126-134 (T TCR-C4 ). Resistance occurred despite persistence of functional therapeutic T cells and continuous expression of WT1 and HLA-A2 by the patient's AML cells. Analysis of the recurrent AML revealed expression of the standard proteasome, but limited expression of the immunoproteasome, specifically the beta subunit 1i (β1i), which is required for presentation of WT1 126-134 . An analysis of a second patient treated with T TCR-C4 demonstrated specific loss of AML cells coexpressing β1i and WT1. To determine whether the WT1 protein continued to be processed and presented in the absence of immunoproteasome processing, we identified and tested a TCR targeting an alternative, HLA-A2-restricted WT1 37-45 epitope that was generated by immunoproteasome-deficient cells, including WT1-expressing solid tumor lines. T cells expressing this TCR (T TCR37-45 ) killed the first patients' relapsed AML resistant to WT1 126-134 targeting, as well as other primary AML, in vitro. T TCR37-45 controlled solid tumor lines lacking immunoproteasome subunits both in vitro and in an NSG mouse model. As proteasome composition can vary in AML, defining and preferentially targeting these proteasome-independent epitopes may maximize therapeutic efficacy and potentially circumvent AML immune evasion by proteasome-related immunoediting.
Keyphrases
- acute myeloid leukemia
- regulatory t cells
- allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
- induced apoptosis
- cancer therapy
- poor prognosis
- cell cycle arrest
- case report
- mouse model
- binding protein
- end stage renal disease
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- newly diagnosed
- endothelial cells
- dendritic cells
- chronic kidney disease
- single cell
- small molecule
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- cell death
- prognostic factors
- long non coding rna
- protein protein
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- protein kinase