TCR-engaging scaffolds selectively expand antigen-specific T-cells with a favorable phenotype for adoptive cell therapy Journal Article


Authors: Tvingsholm, S. A.; Frej, M. S.; Rafa, V. M.; Hansen, U. K.; Ormhøj, M.; Tyron, A.; Jensen, A. W. P.; Kadivar, M.; Bentzen, A. K.; Munk, K. K.; Aasbjerg, G. N.; Ternander, J. S. H.; Heeke, C.; Tamhane, T.; Schmess, C.; Funt, S. A.; Kjeldsen, J. W.; Kverneland, A. H.; Met, Ö; Draghi, A.; Jakobsen, S. N.; Donia, M.; Marie Svane, I.; Hadrup, S. R.
Article Title: TCR-engaging scaffolds selectively expand antigen-specific T-cells with a favorable phenotype for adoptive cell therapy
Abstract: Background Adoptive cell therapy (ACT) has shown promising results for the treatment of cancer and viral infections. Successful ACT relies on ex vivo expansion of large numbers of desired T-cells with strong cytotoxic capacity and in vivo persistence, which constitutes the greatest challenge to current ACT strategies. Here, in this study, we present a novel technology for ex vivo expansion of antigen-specific T-cells; artificial antigen-presenting scaffolds (Ag-scaffolds) consisting of a dextran-polysaccharide backbone, decorated with combinations of peptide-Major Histocompatibility Complex (pMHC), cytokines and co-stimulatory molecules, enabling coordinated stimulation of antigen-specific T-cells. Methods The capacity of Ag-scaffolds to expand antigen-specific T-cells was explored in ex vivo cultures with peripheral blood mononuclear cells from healthy donors and patients with metastatic melanoma. The resulting T-cell products were assessed for phenotypic and functional characteristics. Results We identified an optimal Ag-scaffold for expansion of T-cells for ACT, carrying pMHC and interleukin-2 (IL-2) and IL-21, with which we efficiently expanded both virus-specific and tumor-specific CD8+ T cells from peripheral blood of healthy donors and patients, respectively. The resulting T-cell products were characterized by a high frequency of antigen-specific cells with high self-renewal capacity, low exhaustion, a multifunctional cytokine profile upon antigen-challenge and superior tumor killing capacity. This demonstrates that the coordinated stimuli provided by an optimized stoichiometry of TCR engaging (pMHC) and stimulatory (cytokine) moieties is essential to obtain desired T-cell characteristics. To generate an 'off-the-shelf' multitargeting Ag-scaffold product of relevance to patients with metastatic melanoma, we identified the 30 most frequently recognized shared HLA-A0201-restricted melanoma epitopes in a cohort of 87 patients. By combining these in an Ag-scaffold product, we were able to expand tumor-specific T-cells from 60-70% of patients with melanoma, yielding a multitargeted T-cell product with up to 25% specific and phenotypically and functionally improved T cells. Conclusions Taken together, the Ag-scaffold represents a promising new technology for selective expansion of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells directly from blood, yielding a highly specific and functionally enhanced T-cell product for ACT. © 2023 Author(s). Published by BMJ.
Keywords: melanoma; cytokine; antigen presentation; cytokines; immunotherapy; mononuclear cell; leukocytes, mononuclear; receptors, antigen, t-cell; neoplasms, second primary; adoptive immunotherapy; immunotherapy, adoptive; lymphocyte antigen receptor; antigens, tumor-associated, carbohydrate; humans; human; second primary neoplasm; clonal selection, antigen-mediated
Journal Title: Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer
Volume: 11
Issue: 8
ISSN: 2051-1426
Publisher: Biomed Central Ltd  
Date Published: 2023-08-01
Start Page: e006847
Language: English
DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2023-006847
PUBMED: 37586765
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC10432666
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Samuel Aaron Funt
    135 Funt