Publications
Molecular Therapy: OncologyMar 2024 |
32
(
1
),
200775
DOI:
10.1016/j.omton.2024.200775

Discovery and preclinical development of a therapeutically active nanobody-based chimeric antigen receptor targeting human CD22

McComb, Scott; Arbabi-Ghahroudi, Mehdi; Hay, Kevin A.; Keller, Brian A.; Faulkes, Sharlene; Rutherford, Michael; Nguyen, Tina; Shepherd, Alex; Wu, Cunle; Marcil, Anne; Aubry, Annie; Hussack, Greg; Pinto, Devanand M.; Ryan, Shannon; Raphael, Shalini; van Faassen, Henk; Zafer, Ahmed; Zhu, Qin; Maclean, Susanne; Chattopadhyay, Anindita; Gurnani, Komal; Gilbert, Rénald; Gadoury, Christine; Iqbal, Umar; Fatehi, Dorothy; Jezierski, Anna; Huang, Jez; Pon, Robert A.; Sigrist, Mhairi; Holt, Robert A.; Nelson, Brad H.; Atkins, Harold; Kekre, Natasha; Yung, Eric; Webb, John; Nielsen, Julie S.; Weeratna, Risini D.
Product Used
Genes
Abstract
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapies targeting B cell-restricted antigens CD19, CD20, or CD22 can produce potent clinical responses for some B cell malignancies, but relapse remains common. Camelid single-domain antibodies (sdAbs or nanobodies) are smaller, simpler, and easier to recombine than single-chain variable fragments (scFvs) used in most CARs, but fewer sdAb-CARs have been reported. Thus, we sought to identify a therapeutically active sdAb-CAR targeting human CD22. Immunization of an adult Llama glama with CD22 protein, sdAb-cDNA library construction, and phage panning yielded >20 sdAbs with diverse epitope and binding properties. Expressing CD22-sdAb-CAR in Jurkat cells drove varying CD22-specific reactivity not correlated with antibody affinity. Changing CD28- to CD8-transmembrane design increased CAR persistence and expression in vitro. CD22-sdAb-CAR candidates showed similar CD22-dependent CAR-T expansion in vitro, although only membrane-proximal epitope targeting CD22-sdAb-CARs activated direct cytolytic killing and extended survival in a lymphoma xenograft model. Based on enhanced survival in blinded xenograft studies, a lead CD22sdCAR-T was selected, achieving comparable complete responses to a benchmark short linker m971-scFv CAR-T in high-dose experiments. Finally, immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry confirm tissue and cellular-level specificity of the lead CD22-sdAb. This presents a complete report on preclinical development of a novel CD22sdCAR therapeutic.
Product Used
Genes

Related Publications