Enhancing antitumor response by efficiently generating large-scale TCR-T cells targeting a single epitope across multiple cancer antigens.
Obed Boadi AmissahRajesh BasnetWenfang ChenJean de Dieu HabimanaBelinda Edwina BaidenOsei Asibey OwusuBabangida Jabir SaeedZhiyuan LiPublished in: Cellular immunology (2024)
The need to contrive interventions to curb the rise in cancer incidence and mortality is critical for improving patients' prognoses. Adoptive cell therapy is challenged with quality large-scale production, heightening its production cost. Several cancer types have been associated with the expression of highly-immunogenic CTAG1 and CTAG2 antigens, which share common epitopes. Targeting two antigens on the same cancer could improve the antitumor response of TCR-T cells. In this study, we exploited an efficient way to generate large-fold quality TCR-T cells and also demonstrated that the common epitopes of CTAG1 and CTAG2 antigens provide an avenue for improved cancer-killing via dual-antigen-epitope targeting. Our study revealed that xeno/sera-free medium could expand TCR-T cells to over 500-fold, posing as a better replacement for FBS-supplemented media. Human AB serum was also shown to be a good alternative in the absence of xeno/sera-free media. Furthermore, TCR-T cells stimulated with beads-coated T-activator showed a better effector function than soluble T-activator stimulated TCR-T cells. Additionally, TCR-T cells that target multiple antigens in the same cancer yield better anticancer activity than those targeting a single antigen. This showed that targeting multiple antigens with a common epitope may enhance the antitumor response efficacy of T cell therapies.
Keyphrases
- papillary thyroid
- regulatory t cells
- cell therapy
- squamous cell
- dendritic cells
- cancer therapy
- stem cells
- type diabetes
- lymph node metastasis
- end stage renal disease
- coronary artery disease
- endothelial cells
- chronic kidney disease
- risk factors
- immune response
- poor prognosis
- bone marrow
- peritoneal dialysis
- cardiovascular events
- patient reported outcomes
- long non coding rna