Breaking Bottlenecks for the TCR Therapy of Cancer.
Lena GaissmaierMariam ElshiatyPetros ChristopoulosPublished in: Cells (2020)
Immune checkpoint inhibitors have redefined the treatment of cancer, but their efficacy depends critically on the presence of sufficient tumor-specific lymphocytes, and cellular immunotherapies develop rapidly to fill this gap. The paucity of suitable extracellular and tumor-associated antigens in solid cancers necessitates the use of neoantigen-directed T-cell-receptor (TCR)-engineered cells, while prevention of tumor evasion requires combined targeting of multiple neoepitopes. These can be currently identified within 2 weeks by combining cutting-edge next-generation sequencing with bioinformatic pipelines and used to select tumor-reactive TCRs in a high-throughput manner for expeditious scalable non-viral gene editing of autologous or allogeneic lymphocytes. "Young" cells with a naive, memory stem or central memory phenotype can be additionally armored with "next-generation" features against exhaustion and the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, where they wander after reinfusion to attack heavily pretreated and hitherto hopeless neoplasms. Facilitated by major technological breakthroughs in critical manufacturing steps, based on a solid preclinical rationale, and backed by rapidly accumulating evidence, TCR therapies break one bottleneck after the other and hold the promise to become the next immuno-oncological revolution.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- high throughput
- papillary thyroid
- regulatory t cells
- cell cycle arrest
- bone marrow
- squamous cell
- working memory
- peripheral blood
- stem cell transplantation
- cell therapy
- sars cov
- clinical trial
- stem cells
- hiv infected
- squamous cell carcinoma
- oxidative stress
- childhood cancer
- low dose
- dendritic cells
- middle aged
- mesenchymal stem cells
- artificial intelligence
- cancer therapy
- cell death
- cell proliferation
- high dose
- machine learning
- drug delivery
- platelet rich plasma