An RNA vaccine drives expansion and efficacy of claudin-CAR-T cells against solid tumors.
Katharina ReinhardBenjamin RengstlPetra OehmKristina MichelArne BillmeierNina HaydukOliver KleinKathrin KunaYasmina OuchanStefan WöllElmar ChristDavid WeberMartin SuchanThomas BukurMatthias BirtelVeronika JahndelKarolina MrozKathleen HobohmLena KranzMustafa DikenKlaus KühlckeÖzlem TureciUğur ŞahinPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells have shown efficacy in patients with B cell malignancies. Yet, their application for solid tumors has challenges that include limited cancer-specific targets and nonpersistence of adoptively transferred CAR-T cells. Here, we introduce the developmentally regulated tight junction protein claudin 6 (CLDN6) as a CAR target in solid tumors and a strategy to overcome inefficient CAR-T cell stimulation in vivo. We demonstrate that a nanoparticulate RNA vaccine, designed for body-wide delivery of the CAR antigen into lymphoid compartments, stimulates adoptively transferred CAR-T cells. Presentation of the natively folded target on resident antigen-presenting cells promotes cognate and selective expansion of CAR-T cells. Improved engraftment of CAR-T cells and regression of large tumors in difficult-to-treat mouse models was achieved at subtherapeutic CAR-T cell doses.