0000000001043265
AUTHOR
Angela M. Krackhardt
T cells engineered to express a T-cell receptor specific for glypican-3 to recognize and kill hepatoma cells in vitro and in mice
Background & Aims Cancer therapies are being developed based on our ability to direct T cells against tumor antigens. Glypican-3 (GPC3) is expressed by 75% of all hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC), but not in healthy liver tissue or other organs. We aimed to generate T cells with GPC3-specific receptors that recognize HCC and used them to eliminate GPC3-expressing xenograft tumors grown from human HCC cells in mice. Methods We used mass spectrometry to obtain a comprehensive peptidome from GPC3-expressing hepatoma cells after immune-affinity purification of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-A2 and bioinformatics to identify immunodominant peptides. To circumvent GPC3 tolerance resulting from feta…
TCR-Ligand koff rate correlates with the protective capacity of antigen-specific CD8+ T cells for adoptive transfer.
Adoptive immunotherapy is a promising therapeutic approach for the treatment of chronic infections and cancer. Thereby, T cells within a certain range of high avidity for their cognate ligand are believed to be most effective. T cell receptor (TCR) transfer experiments indicate that a major part of avidity is hard-wired within the structure of the TCR. Unfortunately, rapid measurement of structural avidity of TCRs is difficult on living T cells. We developed a technology, where dissociation (koff-rate) of truly monomeric peptide major histocompatibility complex (pMHC) molecules bound to surface expressed TCRs can be monitored by real-time microscopy in a highly reliable manner. A first eval…