Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy | 2021
PD-1 and TIGIT downregulation distinctly affect the effector and early memory phenotypes of CD19-targeting CAR T cells.
Abstract
CD19-targeting chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells have become an important therapeutic option for patients with relapsed and refractory B cell malignancies. However, a significant portion of patients still do not benefit from the therapy owing to various resistance mechanisms, including high expression of multiple inhibitory immune checkpoint receptors. Here, we report a lentiviral two-in-one CAR T approach in which two checkpoint receptors are downregulated simultaneously by a dual short-hairpin RNA cassette integrated into a CAR vector. Using this system, we evaluated CD19-targeting CAR T cells in the context of four different checkpoint combinations-PD-1/TIM-3, PD-1/LAG-3, PD-1/CTLA-4 and PD-1/TIGIT-and found that CAR T cells with PD-1/TIGIT downregulation uniquely exerted synergistic antitumor effects. Importantly, functional and phenotypic analyses suggested that downregulation of PD-1 enhances short-term effector function, whereas downregulation of TIGIT is primarily responsible for maintaining a less-differentiated/exhausted state, providing a potential mechanism for the observed synergy. The PD-1/TIGIT-downregulated CAR T cells generated from diffuse large B-cell lymphoma patient-derived T cells also showed robust antitumor activity and significantly improved persistence in vivo. The efficacy and safety of PD-1/TIGIT downregulated CD19-targeting CAR T cells are currently being evaluated in adult patients with relapsed or refractory large B cell lymphoma (NCT04836507).