4.7 Article

Chimeric TIM-4 receptor-modified T cells targeting phosphatidylserine mediates both cytotoxic anti-tumor responses and phagocytic uptake of tumor-associated antigen for T cell cross-presentation

Journal

MOLECULAR THERAPY
Volume 31, Issue 7, Pages 2132-2153

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2023.05.009

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In order to improve cancer cell removal, a novel cell engineering and therapeutic strategy was developed, combining phagocytic clearance and antigen presentation activity into T cells. This was achieved by engineering a chimeric receptor that enhances phagocytosis and T cell cytotoxic function. The engineered T cells demonstrated target-dependent phagocytic function and induced transcriptional signatures of key regulators responsible for phagocytic recognition and uptake. In pre-clinical models, these T cells were able to elicit immune responses and showed potential for achieving tumor control.
To leverage complementary mechanisms for cancer cell removal, we developed a novel cell engineering and therapeutic strategy co-opting phagocytic clearance and antigen presentation activity into T cells. We engineered a chimeric engulfment receptor (CER)-1236, which combines the extracellular domain of TIM-4, a phagocytic receptor recognizing the eat me signal phosphatidylserine, with intracellular signaling domains (TLR2/TIR, CD28, and CD3z) to enhance both TIM-4-mediated phagocytosis and T cell cytotoxic function. CER-1236 T cells demonstrate target-dependent phagocytic function and induce transcriptional signatures of key regulators responsible for phagocytic recognition and uptake, along with cytotoxic mediators. Pre-clinical models of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) and EGFR mutation-positive non-small cell lung cancer mor immune responses both in vitro and in vivo. Treatment with BTK (MCL) and EGFR (NSCLC) inhibitors increased target ligand, conditionally driving CER-1236 function to augment anti-tumor responses. We also show that activated CER-1236 T cells exhibit superior cross-presentation ability compared with conventional T cells, triggering E7-specific TCR T responses in an HLA class I- and TLR-2-dependent manner, thereby overcoming the limited antigen presentation capacity of conventional T cells. Therefore, CER-1236 T cells have the potential to achieve tumor control by eliciting both direct cytotoxic effects and indirect-mediated cross-priming.

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