Enhancement of PSMA-directed CAR adoptive immunotherapy by PD-1/PD-L1 blockade Journal Article


Authors: Serganova, I.; Moroz, E.; Cohen, I.; Moroz, M.; Mane, M.; Zurita, J.; Shenker, L.; Ponomarev, V.; Blasberg, R.
Article Title: Enhancement of PSMA-directed CAR adoptive immunotherapy by PD-1/PD-L1 blockade
Abstract: Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy in hematologic malignancies has shown remarkable responses, but the same level of success has not been observed in solid tumors. A new prostate cancer model (Myc-CaP:PSMA(+)) and a second-generation anti-hPSMA human CAR T cells expressing a Click Beetle Red luciferase reporter) were used to study hPSMA targeting and assess CAR T cell trafficking and persistence by bioluminescence imaging (BLI). We investigated the antitumor efficacy of human CAR T cells targeting human prostate-specific membrane antigen (hPSMA), in the presence and absence of the target antigen; first alone and then combined with a monoclonal antibody targeting the human programmed death receptor 1 (anti-hPD1 mAb). PDL-1 expression was detected in Myc-CaP murine prostate tumors growing in immune competent FVB/N and immune-deficient SCID mice. Endogenous CD3+ T cells were restricted from the centers of Myc-CaP tumor nodules growing in FVB/N mice. Following anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) treatment, the restriction of CD3+ T cells was reversed, and a tumor-treatment response was observed. Adoptive hPSMA-CAR T cell immunotherapy was enhanced when combined with PD-1 blockade, but the treatment response was of comparatively short duration, suggesting other immune modulation mechanisms exist and restrict CAR T cell targeting, function, and persistence in hPSMA expressing Myc-CaP tumors. Interestingly, an “inverse pattern” of CAR T cell BLI intensity was observed in control and test tumors, which suggests CAR T cells undergo changes leading to a loss of signal and/or number following hPSMA-specific activation. The lower BLI signal intensity in the hPSMA test tumors (compared with controls) is due in part to a decrease in T cell mitochondrial function following T cell activation, which may limit the intensity of the ATP-dependent Luciferin-luciferase bioluminescence signal. © 2016 The Author(s)
Keywords: prostate cancer; bioluminescence imaging; bli; car t cells; anti-pd1; human psma; luciferase reporters
Journal Title: Molecular Therapy - Oncolytics
Volume: 4
ISSN: 2372-7705
Publisher: Cell Press  
Date Published: 2017-03-17
Start Page: 41
End Page: 54
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.omto.2016.11.005
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC5363727
PUBMED: 28345023
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 3 July 2017 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Ronald G Blasberg
    272 Blasberg
  2. Vladimir Ponomarev
    123 Ponomarev
  3. Larissa Shenker
    18 Shenker
  4. Ekaterina Moroz
    15 Moroz
  5. Maxim A Moroz
    30 Moroz
  6. Juan Zurita
    11 Zurita
  7. Ivan Jose Cohen
    16 Cohen
  8. Mayuresh M Mane
    11 Mane