PXD054059
PXD054059 is an original dataset announced via ProteomeXchange.
Dataset Summary
Title | Enhancing anti-EGFRvIII CAR T cell therapy against glioblastoma with a paracrine SIRPgamma-derived CD47 blocker |
Description | A significant challenge for chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy against glioblastoma (GBM) is its immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment (TME), which is densely populated and supported by protumoral glioma-associated microglia and macrophages (GAMs). Targeting CD47, a don't-eat-me signal overexpressed by tumor cells, disrupts the CD47-SIRPalpha axis and induces GAM phagocytic function. However, antibody-mediated CD47 blockade monotherapy is associated with toxicity and low bioavailability in solid tumors. To overcome these limitations, we combined local CAR T cell therapy with paracrine GAM modulation to effectively eliminate GBM. To this end, we engineered a new CAR T cell against epidermal growth factor receptor variant III (EGFRvIII) that constitutively secretes a signal regulatory protein gamma (SIRPgamma)-related protein (SGRP) with high affinity to CD47. Anti-EGFRvIII-SGRP CAR T cells eliminated EGFRvIII+ GBM in a dose-dependent manner in vitro and eradicated orthotopically xenografted EGFRvIII-mosaic GBM by locoregional application in vivo. This resulted in significant tumor-free long-term survival, followed by partial tumor control upon tumor re-challenge. Combining anti-CD47 antibodies with anti-EGFRvIII CAR T cells failed to achieve a similar therapeutic effect, underscoring the importance of sustained paracrine GAM modulation. Multidimensional brain immunofluorescence microscopy and in-depth spectral flow cytometry on GBM-xenografted brains showed that anti-EGFRvIII-SGRP CAR T cells accelerated GBM clearance, increased CD68+ cell trafficking to tumor scar sites and promoted GAM-mediated tumor cell uptake. In a peripheral lymphoma mouse xenograft model, anti-CD19-SGRP CAR T cells had superior efficacy to conventional anti-CD19 CAR T cells. Validation on human GBM explants revealed that anti-EGFRvIII-SGRP CAR T cells had a similar tumor-killing capacity to anti-EGFRvIII CAR monotherapy but showed a slight improvement in the maintenance of tumor-infiltrated CD14+ cells. Thus, local anti-EGFRvIII-SGRP CAR T cell therapy combines the potent antitumor effect of engineered T cells with the modulation of the surrounding innate immune TME. This results in the additive elimination of bystander EGFRvIII- tumor cells in a manner that overcomes the main mechanisms of CAR T cell therapy resistance, including tumor innate immune suppression and antigen escape. |
HostingRepository | MassIVE |
AnnounceDate | 2024-09-16 |
AnnouncementXML | Submission_2024-09-16_08:02:45.804.xml |
DigitalObjectIdentifier | |
ReviewLevel | Non peer-reviewed dataset |
DatasetOrigin | Original dataset |
RepositorySupport | Unsupported dataset by repository |
PrimarySubmitter | Katarzyna Buczak |
SpeciesList | scientific name: Homo sapiens; common name: human; NCBI TaxID: 9606; |
ModificationList | Carbamidomethyl |
Instrument | Q Exactive Plus |
Dataset History
Revision | Datetime | Status | ChangeLog Entry |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 2024-07-19 01:36:23 | ID requested | |
⏵ 1 | 2024-09-16 08:02:46 | announced |
Publication List
no publication |
Keyword List
submitter keyword: glioblastoma, EGFRvIII, CAR T cell therapy, CD47, microglia modulation, SGRP |
Contact List
Gregor Hutter | |
---|---|
contact affiliation | Department of Biomedicine, University of Basel |
contact email | g.hutter@unibas.ch |
lab head | |
Katarzyna Buczak | |
contact affiliation | Biozentrum, University of Basel |
contact email | katarzyna.buczak@unibas.ch |
dataset submitter |
Full Dataset Link List
MassIVE dataset URI |
Dataset FTP location NOTE: Most web browsers have now discontinued native support for FTP access within the browser window. But you can usually install another FTP app (we recommend FileZilla) and configure your browser to launch the external application when you click on this FTP link. Or otherwise, launch an app that supports FTP (like FileZilla) and use this address: ftp://massive.ucsd.edu/v08/MSV000095386/ |