Rachel C. Lynn
University of Pennsylvania
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rachel C. Lynn.
Cancer Research | 2012
Katarzyna Urbanska; Evripidis Lanitis; Mathilde Poussin; Rachel C. Lynn; Brian P. Gavin; Sander Kelderman; Jason Yu; Nathalie Scholler; Daniel J. Powell
Adoptive immunotherapies composed of T cells engineered to express a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) offer an attractive strategy for treatment of human cancer. However, CARs have a fixed antigen specificity such that only one tumor-associated antigen (TAA) can be targeted, limiting the efficacy that can be achieved because of heterogeneous TAA expression. For this reason, a more generalized and effective application of CAR therapy would benefit from the capability to produce large panels of CARs against many known TAAs. In this study, we show a novel strategy to extend the recognition specificity potential of a bioengineered lymphocyte population, allowing flexible approaches to redirect T cells against various TAAs. Our strategy employs a biotin-binding immune receptor (BBIR) composed of an extracellular-modified avidin linked to an intracellular T-cell signaling domain. BBIR T cells recognized and bound exclusively to cancer cells pretargeted with specific biotinylated molecules. The versatility afforded by BBIRs permitted sequential or simultaneous targeting of a combination of distinct antigens. Together, our findings show that a platform of universal T-cell specificity can significantly extend conventional CAR approaches, permitting the tailored generation of T cells of unlimited antigen specificity for improving the effectiveness of adoptive T-cell immunotherapies for cancer.
Blood | 2015
Rachel C. Lynn; Mathilde Poussin; Anna Kalota; Yang Feng; Philip S. Low; Dimiter S. Dimitrov; Daniel J. Powell
T cells expressing a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) can produce dramatic results in lymphocytic leukemia patients; however, therapeutic strategies for myeloid leukemia remain limited. Folate receptor β (FRβ) is a myeloid-lineage antigen expressed on 70% of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patient samples. Here, we describe the development and evaluation of the first CARs specific for human FRβ (m909) in vitro and in vivo. m909 CAR T cells exhibited selective activation and lytic function against engineered C30-FRβ as well as endogenous FRβ(+) AML cell lines in vitro. In mouse models of human AML, m909 CAR T cells mediated the regression of engrafted FRβ(+) THP1 AML in vivo. In addition, we demonstrated that treatment of AML with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) enhanced FRβ expression, resulting in improved immune recognition by m909 CAR T cells. Because many cell surface markers are shared between AML blasts and healthy hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSCs), we evaluated FRβ expression and recognition of HSCs by CAR T cells. m909 CAR T cells were not toxic against healthy human CD34(+) HSCs in vitro. Our results indicate that FRβ is a promising target for CAR T-cell therapy of AML, which may be augmented by combination with ATRA.
Molecular Therapy | 2012
Liang-Chuan S. Wang; Rachel C. Lynn; Guanjun Cheng; Edward Alexander; Veena Kapoor; Edmund Moon; Jing Sun; Zvi G. Fridlender; Stuart N. Isaacs; Stephen H. Thorne; Steven M. Albelda
Since previous work using a nonreplicating adenovirus-expressing mouse interferon-β (Ad.mIFNβ) showed promising preclinical activity, we postulated that a vector-expressing IFNβ at high levels that could also replicate would be even more beneficial. Accordingly a replication competent, recombinant vaccinia viral vector-expressing mIFNβ (VV.mIFNβ) was tested. VV.mIFNβ-induced antitumor responses in two syngeneic mouse flank models of lung cancer. Although VV.mIFNβ had equivalent in vivo efficacy in both murine tumor models, the mechanisms of tumor killing were completely different. In LKRM2 tumors, viral replication was minimal and the tumor killing mechanism was due to activation of immune responses through induction of a local inflammatory response and production of antitumor CD8 T-cells. In contrast, in TC-1 tumors, the vector replicated well, induced an innate immune response, but antitumor activity was primarily due to a direct oncolytic effect. However, the VV.mIFNβ vector was able to augment the efficacy of an antitumor vaccine in the TC-1 tumor model in association with increased numbers of infiltrating CD8 T-cells. These data show the complex relationships between oncolytic viruses and the immune system which, if understood and harnessed correctly, could potentially be used to enhance the efficacy of immunotherapy.Since previous work using a nonreplicating adenovirus-expressing mouse interferon-β (Ad.mIFNβ) showed promising preclinical activity, we postulated that a vector-expressing IFNβ at high levels that could also replicate would be even more beneficial. Accordingly a replication competent, recombinant vaccinia viral vector-expressing mIFNβ (VV.mIFNβ) was tested. VV.mIFNβ-induced antitumor responses in two syngeneic mouse flank models of lung cancer. Although VV.mIFNβ had equivalent in vivo efficacy in both murine tumor models, the mechanisms of tumor killing were completely different. In LKRM2 tumors, viral replication was minimal and the tumor killing mechanism was due to activation of immune responses through induction of a local inflammatory response and production of antitumor CD8 T-cells. In contrast, in TC-1 tumors, the vector replicated well, induced an innate immune response, but antitumor activity was primarily due to a direct oncolytic effect. However, the VV.mIFNβ vector was able to augment the efficacy of an antitumor vaccine in the TC-1 tumor model in association with increased numbers of infiltrating CD8 T-cells. These data show the complex relationships between oncolytic viruses and the immune system which, if understood and harnessed correctly, could potentially be used to enhance the efficacy of immunotherapy.
Leukemia | 2016
Rachel C. Lynn; Yang Feng; Keith Schutsky; Mathilde Poussin; Anna Kalota; Dimiter S Dimitrov; Daniel J. Powell
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is an aggressive malignancy, and development of new treatments to prolong remissions is warranted. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapies appear promising but on-target, off-tumor recognition of antigen in healthy tissues remains a concern. Here we isolated a high-affinity (HA) folate receptor beta (FRβ)-specific single-chain variable fragment (2.48 nm KD) for optimization of FRβ-redirected CAR T-cell therapy for AML. T cells stably expressing the HA-FRβ CAR exhibited greatly enhanced antitumor activity against FRβ+ AML in vitro and in vivo compared with a low-affinity FRβ CAR (54.3 nm KD). Using the HA-FRβ immunoglobulin G, FRβ expression was detectable in myeloid-lineage hematopoietic cells; however, expression in CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) was nearly undetectable. Accordingly, HA-FRβ CAR T cells lysed mature CD14+ monocytes, while HSC colony formation was unaffected. Because of the potential for elimination of mature myeloid lineage, mRNA CAR electroporation for transient CAR expression was evaluated. mRNA-electroporated HA-FRβ CAR T cells retained effective antitumor activity in vitro and in vivo. Together, our results highlight the importance of antibody affinity in target protein detection and CAR development and suggest that transient delivery of potent HA-FRβ CAR T cells is highly effective against AML and reduces the risk for long-term myeloid toxicity.
Journal of Virology | 2012
Silke Jennrich; Mike Lee; Rachel C. Lynn; Kristofer Dewberry; Gudrun F. Debes
ABSTRACT Memory/effector T cells efficiently migrate into extralymphoid tissues and sites of infection, providing immunosurveillance and a first line of defense against invading pathogens. Even though it is a potential means to regulate the size, quality, and duration of a tissue infiltrate, T cell egress from infected tissues is poorly understood. Using a mouse model of influenza A virus infection, we found that CD8 effector T cells egressed from the infected lung in a CCR7-dependent manner. In contrast, following antigen recognition, effector CD8 T cell egress decreased and CCR7 function was reduced in vivo and in vitro, indicating that the exit of CD8 T cells from infected tissues is tightly regulated. Our data suggest that the regulation of T cell egress is a mechanism to retain antigen-specific effectors at the site of infection to promote viral clearance, while decreasing the numbers of bystander T cells and preventing overt inflammation.
Oncotarget | 2015
Keith Schutsky; De Gang Song; Rachel C. Lynn; Jenessa B. Smith; Mathilde Poussin; Mariangela Figini; Yangbing Zhao; Daniel J. Powell
Using lentiviral technology, we recently demonstrated that incorporation of CD27 costimulation into CARs greatly improves antitumor activity and T cell persistence. Still, virus-mediated gene transfer is expensive, laborious and enables long-term persistence, creating therapies which cannot be easily discontinued if toxic. To address these concerns, we utilized a non-integrating RNA platform to engineer human T cells to express FRα-specific, CD27 CARs and tested their capacity to eliminate human FRα+ cancer. Novel CARs comprised of human components were constructed, C4-27z and C4opt-27z, a codon-optimized variant created for efficient expression. Following RNA electroporation, C4-27z and C4opt-27z CAR expression is initially ubiquitous but progressively declines across T cell populations. In addition, C4-27z and C4opt-27z RNA CAR T cells secrete high levels of Th-1 cytokines and display strong cytolytic function against human FRα+ cancers in a time- and antigen-dependent manner. Further, C4-27z and C4opt-27z CAR T cells exhibit significant proliferation in vivo, facilitate the complete regression of fully disseminated human ovarian cancer xenografts in mice and reduce the progression of solid ovarian cancer. These results advocate for rapid progression of C4opt-27z RNA CAR to the clinic and establish a new paradigm for preclinical optimization and validation of RNA CAR candidates destined for clinical translation.
Journal of Translational Medicine | 2014
Katarzyna Urbanska; Rachel C. Lynn; Caitlin Stashwick; Archana Thakur; Lawrence G. Lum; Daniel J. Powell
BackgroundRedirection of T lymphocytes against tumor antigens can induce dramatic regression of advanced stage malignancy. The use of bispecific antibodies (BsAbs) that bind both the T-cell receptor (TCR) and a target antigen is one promising approach to T-cell redirection. However, BsAbs indiscriminately bind all CD3+ T-cells and trigger TCR activation in the absence of parallel costimulatory signals required to overcome T-cell unresponsiveness or anergy.MethodsTo address these limitations, a combination platform was designed wherein a unique BsAb referred to as frBsAb exclusively engages T-cells engineered to express a novel chimeric receptor comprised of extracellular folate receptor fused to intracellular TCR and CD28 costimulatory signaling domains in tandem; a BsAb-binding immune receptor (BsAb-IR). As a surrogate TCR, the BsAb-IR allows for concomitant TCR and costimulatory signaling exclusively in transduced T-cells upon engagement with specific frBsAbs, and can therefore redirect T-cells on command to desired antigen. Human primary T-cells were transduced with lentiviral vector and expanded for 14–18 days. BsAb-IRs were harvested and armed with frBsAbs to test for redirected cytotoxicity against CD20 positive cancer cell lines.ResultsUsing frBsAbs specific for CD20 or HER2, the lytic activity of primary human T-cells expressing the BsAb-IR was specifically redirected against CD20+ leukemic cells or HER2+ epithelial cancer cells, respectively, while non-engineered T-cells were not activated. Notably, elimination of the CD28 costimulatory domain from the BsAb-IR construct significantly reduced frBsAb-redirected antitumor responses, confirming that frBsAbs are capable of delivering simultaneous TCR activation and costimulatory signals to BsAb-IR T-cells.ConclusionIn summary, our results establish the proof of concept that the combination of BsAbs with optimized gene-engineered T-cells provides the opportunity to specify and augment tumor antigen-specific T-cell activation and may improve upon the early success of conventional BsAbs in cancer immunotherapy.
Molecular Therapy | 2015
Rachel C. Lynn; Daniel J. Powell
Ligands for NKG2D, the NK cell–activating receptor, have been explored as targets for chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CART) therapy of cancer in preclinical mouse models for over a decade, and a phase I clinical trial is currently recruiting patients to test this platform. In this issue of Molecular Therapy, VanSeggelen and colleagues report on the observation of lethal toxicity in mice following administration of chimeric NKG2D (chNKG2D) CART therapy for targeting NKG2D ligands.1 CART-mediated toxicities were mouse strain-dependent, highlighting the influence of intraspecies differences that are often overlooked when using genetically inbred mice for preclinical studies. These findings warrant careful consideration as chNKG2D CART therapeutic regimens move into the clinic and raise broader questions regarding the variability in, and prognostic value of, syngeneic mouse models for preclinical validation of CART therapy.
OncoImmunology | 2018
Edmund Moon; Liang-Chuan S. Wang; Kheng Bekdache; Rachel C. Lynn; Albert C. Lo; Stephen H. Thorne; Steven M. Albelda
ABSTRACT T cell trafficking into tumors depends on a “match” between chemokine receptors on effector cells (e.g., CXCR3 and CCR5) and tumor-secreted chemokines. There is often a chemokine/chemokine receptor “mismatch”, with tumors producing minute amounts of chemokines, resulting in inefficient targeting of effectors to tumors. We aimed to alter tumors to produce higher levels of CXCL11, a CXCR3 ligand, to attract more effector cells following immunotherapy. Mice bearing established subcutaneous tumors were studied. In our first approach, we used modified chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-transduced human T cells to deliver CXCL11 (CAR/CXCL11) into tumors. In our second approach, we intravenously (iv) administered a modified oncolytic vaccinia virus (VV) engineered to produce CXCL11 (VV.CXCL11). The effect of these treatments on T cell trafficking into the tumors and anti-tumor efficacy after subsequent CAR T cell injections or anti-tumor vaccines was determined. CAR/CXCL11 and VV.CXCL11 significantly increased CXCL11 protein levels within tumors. For CAR/CXCL11, injection of a subsequent dose of CAR T cells did not result in increased intra-tumoral trafficking, and appeared to decrease the function of the injected CAR T cells. In contrast, VV.CXCL11 increased the number of total and antigen-specific T cells within tumors after CAR T cell injection or vaccination and significantly enhanced anti-tumor efficacy. Both approaches were successful in increasing CXCL11 levels within the tumors; however, only the vaccinia approach was successful in recruiting T cells and augmenting anti-tumor efficacy. VV.CXCL11 should be considered as a potential approach to augment adoptive T cell transfer or vaccine immunotherapy.
Molecular Therapy | 2015
Rachel C. Lynn; Mathilde Poussin; Yang Feng; Keith Schutsky; Anna Kalota; Philip S. Low; Dimiter S. Dimitrov; Daniel J. Powell
On-target, off-tumor recognition of antigen in normal tissues is one of the largest safety concerns in chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapy. Careful assessment of target protein expression by flow cytometry or IHC can provide helpful data for prediction of potential toxicity. However, high affinity reagents should be carefully chosen in order to assure the most sensitive and thorough investigation of target antigen levels, which may be low in normal tissues. We are currently optimizing our folate receptor beta (FRβ)-directed CAR T cell platform for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and have isolated a high affinity antibody single-chain-variable fragment (scFv) for production of CAR T cells. The high affinity (m923, 2.48nM KD) CAR T cells exhibited greatly enhanced reactivity against FRβ(+) AML in vitro and in vivo compared to previously generated lower affinity (m909, 54.3nM KD) FRβ-specific CAR T cells. However, higher affinity reagents pose the potential for increased risk of toxicity directed against normal tissues. To most accurately predict m923 CAR T cell toxicity, we utilized high affinity m923 IgG for analysis of FRβ expression in normal hematopoietic tissues by flow cytometry. We were able to detect high levels of FRβ in peripheral blood monocytes as well as low levels in myeloid-lineage bone marrow progenitor cells which were non-detectable using m909 IgG. Notably, CD34(+) bone marrow hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) displayed very low expression of FRβ and m923 CAR T cells did not inhibit HSC colony formation in classic CFU assays. We next examined the ability of m923 CAR T cells to target whole bone marrow populations. Upon co-culture, m923 CAR T cells were able to eliminate FRβ(+) myeloid progenitors while sparing neighboring FRβ(-) bone marrow cells. We hypothesized that, because high affinity FRβ-specific CAR T cells did not impact bone marrow HSCs and non-myeloid-committed progenitors, short-term treatment with CAR T cells may allow for tumor clearance, following which any affected myeloid populations could be reconstituted from healthy HSCs. Therefore, we investigated transient expression via mRNA electroporation of the m923 CAR platform. mRNA-CAR T cells retained effective anti-tumor activity. Our results highlight the importance of antibody affinity for assessment of target protein during CAR development. In addition, we report a highly potent, high affinity FRβ-specific CAR T cell platform that does not target HSCs, and, when delivered transiently through mRNA electroporation, could allow for AML tumor destruction while providing a decreased risk for long-term myeloid toxicity.