Selection of therapeutically effective T-cell receptors from the diverse tumor-bearing repertoire

Autor/innen

  • L. Rosenberger
  • L. Hansmann
  • V. Anastasopoulou
  • S.P. Wolf
  • K. Drousch
  • C. Moewes
  • X. Feng
  • G. Cao
  • J. Huang
  • P.Y. Yew
  • E. Strønen
  • T. Kato
  • N. Saligrama
  • J. Olweus
  • Y. Nakamura
  • G. Willimsky
  • T. Blankenstein
  • H. Schreiber
  • M. Leisegang

Journal

  • Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer

Quellenangabe

  • J Immunother Cancer 13 (5): e011351

Zusammenfassung

  • BACKGROUND: The development of T-cell receptor (TCR)-based T-cell therapies is hampered by the difficulties in identifying therapeutically effective tumor-specific TCRs from the natural repertoire of a patient's cancer-specific T cells. METHODS: Here, we mimic experimentally near-patient conditions to analyze the T-cell repertoire in euthymic tumor-bearing mice responding to the H-2K(b)-presented neoantigen p68(S551F) (mp68). We temporarily separated the time point of mp68 expression from that of cancer cell transplantation to exclude the influence of injection-induced inflammation on T-cell priming. Thus, the mp68-specific T-cell response could only develop after the acute inflammatory phase had subsided.Here, we mimic experimentally near-patient conditions to analyze the T-cell repertoire in euthymic tumor-bearing mice responding to the H-2K(b)-presented neoantigen p68(S551F) (mp68). We temporarily separated the time point of mp68 expression from that of cancer cell transplantation to exclude the influence of injection-induced inflammation on T-cell priming. Thus, the mp68-specific T-cell response could only develop after the acute inflammatory phase had subsided. RESULTS: We found that mp68-specific TCRs isolated from either tumor-infiltrating T cells or spleens of mice immunized with mp68-expressing cancer cells are diverse and not inherently therapeutic when introduced into peripheral T cells and used for adoptive therapy of established tumors. While measuring short-term T-cell responses in vitro was unreliable for some TCRs in predicting their therapeutic failure, assessing the persistence of cancer cell destruction by TCR-modified T cells in long-term cultures accurately predicted therapeutic outcomes. A tumor-derived TCR with optimal function was also correctly identified with this approach when analyzing human TCRs that recognize the HLA-A2-presented neoantigen CDK4(R24L). CONCLUSIONS: We show that a neoantigen-directed T-cell response in tumor-bearing hosts comprises a diverse repertoire. Infiltration and expansion of certain T-cell clonotypes in the tumor do not necessarily correlate with therapeutic efficacy of their TCRs in adoptive therapy. We propose that analysis of persistent rather than immediate responses of TCR-modified T cells in vitro serves as a reliable parameter to identify TCRs that are therapeutically effective in vivo.


DOI

doi:10.1136/jitc-2024-011351