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Targeting the T cell receptor β-chain constant region for immunotherapy of T cell malignancies.

Paul M MaciociaPatrycja A WawrzynieckaBrian PhilipIda RicciardelliAyse U AkarcaShimobi C OnuohaMateusz LegutDavid K ColeAndrew K SewellGiuseppe GrittiJoan SomjaMiguel A PirisKarl S PeggsDavid C LinchTeresa MarafiotiMartin A Pule
Published in: Nature medicine (2017)
Mature T cell cancers are typically aggressive, treatment resistant and associated with poor prognosis. Clinical application of immunotherapeutic approaches has been limited by a lack of target antigens that discriminate malignant from healthy (normal) T cells. Unlike B cell depletion, pan-T cell aplasia is prohibitively toxic. We report a new targeting strategy based on the mutually exclusive expression of T cell receptor β-chain constant domains 1 and 2 (TRBC1 and TRBC2). We identify an antibody with unique TRBC1 specificity and use it to demonstrate that normal and virus-specific T cell populations contain both TRBC1+ and TRBC2+ compartments, whereas malignancies are restricted to only one. As proof of concept for anti-TRBC immunotherapy, we developed anti-TRBC1 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells, which recognized and killed normal and malignant TRBC1+, but not TRBC2+, T cells in vitro and in a disseminated mouse model of leukemia. Unlike nonselective approaches targeting the entire T cell population, TRBC-targeted immunotherapy could eradicate a T cell malignancy while preserving sufficient normal T cells to maintain cellular immunity.
Keyphrases
  • poor prognosis
  • cancer therapy
  • long non coding rna
  • mouse model
  • bone marrow
  • dendritic cells
  • immune response
  • young adults