Product Citations: 71

Capivasertib enhances chimeric antigen receptor T cell activity in preclinical models of B cell lymphoma.

In Molecular Therapy. Methods Clinical Development on 13 March 2025 by Hsieh, H. J., Urak, R., et al.

Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/protein kinase B (AKT) signaling is involved in the growth of normal and cancer cells and is crucial for T cell activation. Previously, we have shown that AKT Inhibitor VIII, a selective AKT-1/2 inhibitor, during chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell manufacturing, improves CAR T cell function in preclinical models. Although AKT Inhibitor VIII could enhance CAR T cell function, AKT Inhibitor VIII is not a clinical-grade compound. However, pan-AKT inhibitors have been applied against cancers with PIK3CA/AKT/PTEN alterations in clinical trials. We evaluated ex vivo and in vivo strategies of enhancing CAR T cell therapeutic effect using the pan-AKT inhibitor capivasertib. We found that ex vivo 0.25 μM capivasertib treatment during the period of T cell stimulation during manufacture enhanced the antitumor activity of CAR T cells in B cell lymphoma mouse models. Mechanistically, capivasertib changed gene and protein expression patterns related to the functions of memory and effector CAR T cells. Furthermore, in vivo combination therapy of capivasertib and CD19-specific CAR T cells led to improved early response to and persistence of functional CAR T cells in mice bearing PTEN-deficient lymphoma cells compared to CAR T cells alone. Capivasertib exerts a similar function to AKT Inhibitor VIII in modulating CAR T cells, and combining CAR T cell therapy with capivasertib both ex vivo and in vivo offers the potential to improve patient outcomes. Since PTEN deficiency is common in cancer and is the main mechanism for capivasertib function, combination therapy may provide an alternative solution for the challenges of CAR T cell therapy.
© 2025 The Author(s).

  • Cancer Research
  • Immunology and Microbiology

A biomaterial platform for T cell-specific gene delivery.

In Acta Biomaterialia on 15 March 2024 by Pandit, S., Smith, B. E., et al.

Efficient T cell engineering is central to the success of CAR T cell therapy but involves multiple time-consuming manipulations, including T cell isolation, activation, and transduction. These steps add complexity and delay CAR T cell manufacturing, which takes a mean time of 4 weeks. To streamline T cell engineering, we strategically combine two critical engineering solutions - T cell-specific lentiviral vectors and macroporous scaffolds - that enable T cell activation and transduction in a simple, single step. The T cell-specific lentiviral vectors (referred to as STAT virus) target T cells through the display of an anti-CD3 antibody and the CD80 extracellular domain on their surface and provide robust T cell activation. Biocompatible macroporous scaffolds (referred to as Drydux) mediate robust transduction by providing effective interaction between naïve T cells and viral vectors. We show that when unstimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) are seeded together with STAT lentivirus on Drydux scaffolds, T cells are activated, selectively transduced, and reprogrammed in a single step. Further, we show that the Drydux platform seeded with PBMCs and STAT lentivirus generates tumor-specific functional CAR T cells. This potent combination of engineered lentivirus and biomaterial scaffold holds promise for an effective, simple, and safe avenue for in vitro and in vivo T cell engineering. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: Manufacturing T cell therapies involves lengthy and labor-intensive steps, including T cell selection, activation, and transduction. These steps add complexity to current CAR T cell manufacturing protocols and limit widespread patient access to this revolutionary therapy. In this work, we demonstrate the combination of engineered virus and biomaterial platform that, together, enables selective T cell activation and transduction in a single step, eliminating multistep T cell engineering protocols and significantly simplifying the manufacturing process.
Copyright © 2024 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

  • FC/FACS
  • Biochemistry and Molecular biology
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Isolation and expansion of pure and functional γδ T cells.

In Frontiers in Immunology on 1 March 2024 by Verkerk, T., Pappot, A. T., et al.

γδ T cells are important components of the immune system due to their ability to elicit a fast and strong response against infected and transformed cells. Because they can specifically and effectively kill target cells in an MHC independent fashion, there is great interest to utilize these cells in anti-tumor therapies where antigen presentation may be hampered. Since only a small fraction of T cells in the blood or tumor tissue are γδ T cells, they require extensive expansion to allow for fundamental, preclinical and ex vivo research. Although expansion protocols can be successful, most are based on depletion of other cell types rather than γδ T cell specific isolation, resulting in unpredictable purity of the isolated fraction. Moreover, the primary focus only lies with expansion of Vδ2+ T cells, while Vδ1+ T cells likewise have anti-tumor potential. Here, we investigated whether γδ T cells directly isolated from blood could be efficiently expanded while maintaining function. γδ T cell subsets were isolated using MACS separation, followed by FACS sorting, yielding >99% pure γδ T cells. Isolated Vδ1+ and Vδ2+ T cells could effectively expand immediately after isolation or upon freeze/thawing and reached expansion ratios between 200 to 2000-fold starting from varying numbers using cytokine supported feeder stimulations. MACS/FACS isolated and PHA stimulated γδ T cells expanded as good as immobilized antibody mediated stimulated cells in PBMCs, but delivered purer cells. After expansion, potential effector functions of γδ T cells were demonstrated by IFN-γ, TNF-α and granzyme B production upon PMA/ionomycin stimulation and effective killing capacity of multiple tumor cell lines was confirmed in killing assays. In conclusion, pure γδ T cells can productively be expanded while maintaining their anti-tumor effector functions against tumor cells. Moreover, γδ T cells could be expanded from low starting numbers suggesting that this protocol may even allow for expansion of cells extracted from tumor biopsies.
Copyright © 2024 Verkerk, Pappot, Jorritsma, King, Duurland, Spaapen and van Ham.

  • Immunology and Microbiology

The developmental cartography of human lymphopoiesis remains incompletely understood. Here, we establish a multimodal map demonstrating that lymphoid specification follows independent direct or stepwise hierarchic routes converging toward the emergence of newly characterized CD117lo multi-lymphoid progenitors (MLPs) that undergo a proliferation arrest before entering the CD127- (NK/ILC/T) or CD127+ (B) lymphoid pathways. While the differentiation of CD127- early lymphoid progenitors is mainly driven by Flt3 signaling, emergence of their CD127+ counterparts is regulated cell-intrinsically and depends exclusively on the divisional history of their upstream precursors, including hematopoietic stem cells. Further, transcriptional mapping of differentiation trajectories reveals that whereas myeloid granulomonocytic lineages follow continuous differentiation pathways, lymphoid trajectories are intrinsically discontinuous and characterized by sequential waves of cell proliferation allowing pre-commitment amplification of lymphoid progenitor pools. Besides identifying new lymphoid specification pathways and regulatory checkpoints, our results demonstrate that NK/ILC/T and B lineages are under fundamentally distinct modes of regulation. (149 words).
© 2023 The Author(s).

Third-party cytomegalovirus-specific T cells improved survival in refractory cytomegalovirus viremia after hematopoietic transplant.

In The Journal of Clinical Investigation on 15 May 2023 by Prockop, S. E., Hasan, A., et al.

BackgroundRefractory CMV viremia and disease are associated with significant morbidity and mortality in recipients of hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HCT).MethodsIn phase I/II trials, we treated 67 subjects for CMV viremia or disease arising after HCT with adoptive transfer of banked, third-party, CMVpp65-sensitized T cells (CMVpp65-VSTs). All were evaluable for toxicity and 59 for response. Evaluable subjects had CMV disease or persisting viremia that had failed at least 2 weeks of induction therapy with a median of 3 antiviral drugs; 84.7% had more than 3 of 11 high-risk features. CMVpp65-VSTs were specific for 1 to 3 CMVpp65 epitopes, presented by a limited set of HLA class I or II alleles, and were selected based on high-resolution HLA matching at 2 of 10 HLA alleles and matching for subject and subject's HCT donor for 1 or more alleles through which the CMVpp65-VSTs were restricted.ResultsT cell infusions were well tolerated. Of 59 subjects evaluable for response, 38 (64%) achieved complete or durable partial responses.ConclusionsRecipients responding to CMVpp65VSTs experienced an improved overall survival. Of the risk factors evaluated, transplant type, recipient CD4+ and CD8+ T cell levels prior to adoptive therapy, and the HLA restriction of CMVpp65-VSTs infused each significantly affected responses. In addition, CMVpp65-specific T cells of HCT donor or recipient origin contributed to the durability of both complete and partial responses.Trial RegistrationNCT00674648; NCT01646645; NCT02136797 (NIH).FundingNIH (P01 CA23766, R21 CA162002 and P30 CA008748); Aubrey Fund; Claire Tow Foundation; Major Family Foundation; "Rick" Eisemann Pediatric Research Fund; Banbury Foundation; Edith Robertson Foundation; Larry Smead Foundation.

  • Homo sapiens (Human)
  • Immunology and Microbiology
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