Miao Hongsheng, Choi Bryan D, Suryadevara Carter M, Sanchez-Perez Luis, Yang Shicheng, De Leon Gabriel, Sayour Elias J, McLendon Roger, Herndon James E, Healy Patrick, Archer Gary E, Bigner Darell D, Johnson Laura A, Sampson John H
Duke Brain Tumor Immunotherapy Program, Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America.
Duke Brain Tumor Immunotherapy Program, Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America; Department of Pathology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Apr 10;9(4):e94281. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0094281. eCollection 2014.
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common primary malignant brain tumor in adults and is uniformly lethal. T-cell-based immunotherapy offers a promising platform for treatment given its potential to specifically target tumor tissue while sparing the normal brain. However, the diffuse and infiltrative nature of these tumors in the brain parenchyma may pose an exceptional hurdle to successful immunotherapy in patients. Areas of invasive tumor are thought to reside behind an intact blood brain barrier, isolating them from effective immunosurveillance and thereby predisposing the development of "immunologically silent" tumor peninsulas. Therefore, it remains unclear if adoptively transferred T cells can migrate to and mediate regression in areas of invasive GBM. One barrier has been the lack of a preclinical mouse model that accurately recapitulates the growth patterns of human GBM in vivo. Here, we demonstrate that D-270 MG xenografts exhibit the classical features of GBM and produce the diffuse and invasive tumors seen in patients. Using this model, we designed experiments to assess whether T cells expressing third-generation chimeric antigen receptors (CARs) targeting the tumor-specific mutation of the epidermal growth factor receptor, EGFRvIII, would localize to and treat invasive intracerebral GBM. EGFRvIII-targeted CAR (EGFRvIII+ CAR) T cells demonstrated in vitro EGFRvIII antigen-specific recognition and reactivity to the D-270 MG cell line, which naturally expresses EGFRvIII. Moreover, when administered systemically, EGFRvIII+ CAR T cells localized to areas of invasive tumor, suppressed tumor growth, and enhanced survival of mice with established intracranial D-270 MG tumors. Together, these data demonstrate that systemically administered T cells are capable of migrating to the invasive edges of GBM to mediate antitumor efficacy and tumor regression.
胶质母细胞瘤(GBM)是成人中最常见的原发性恶性脑肿瘤,且无一例外都是致命的。基于T细胞的免疫疗法为治疗提供了一个有前景的平台,因为它有潜力特异性地靶向肿瘤组织,同时 sparing the normal brain。然而,这些肿瘤在脑实质中的弥漫性和浸润性可能给患者成功进行免疫治疗带来特殊障碍。侵袭性肿瘤区域被认为位于完整的血脑屏障之后,使其与有效的免疫监视隔离,从而易导致“免疫沉默”肿瘤半岛的形成。因此,尚不清楚过继转移的T细胞是否能迁移到侵袭性GBM区域并介导肿瘤消退。一个障碍是缺乏一种能在体内准确重现人类GBM生长模式的临床前小鼠模型。在此,我们证明D - 270 MG异种移植物表现出GBM的经典特征,并产生患者中所见的弥漫性和侵袭性肿瘤。利用这个模型,我们设计实验来评估表达靶向表皮生长因子受体(EGFR)肿瘤特异性突变EGFRvIII的第三代嵌合抗原受体(CAR)的T细胞是否会定位于并治疗侵袭性脑内GBM。靶向EGFRvIII的CAR(EGFRvIII + CAR)T细胞在体外表现出对EGFRvIII抗原的特异性识别以及对天然表达EGFRvIII的D - 270 MG细胞系的反应性。此外,当全身给药时,EGFRvIII + CAR T细胞定位于侵袭性肿瘤区域,抑制肿瘤生长,并提高患有颅内D - 270 MG肿瘤小鼠的存活率。总之,这些数据表明全身给药的T细胞能够迁移到GBM的侵袭边缘以介导抗肿瘤功效和肿瘤消退。