Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
changes occurring in T-cells expressing low-affinity vs high-affinity CD19 CARs following stimulation with CD19-expressing cells. Our results show that CAT CAR T-cells exhibit enhanced activation to CD19 stimulation and a distinct transcriptomic and protein profile, with increased activation and cytokine polyfunctionality compared to FMC63 CAR T-cells. We demonstrate that the enhanced functionality of low-affinity CAT CAR T-cells is a consequence of an antigen-dependent priming induced by residual CD19-expressing B-cells present in the manufacture.
We have recently described a low-affinity second-generation anti-CD19 Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) (CAT), characterized by faster antigen dissociation rate which showed enhanced expansion, cytotoxicity and anti-tumour efficacy compared with the high affinity (FMC63 based) CAR used in Tisagenlecleucel in pre-clinical models. Furthermore, CAT CAR T cells showed an excellent toxicity profile, enhanced in vivo expansion and long-term persistence in a Phase I clinical study (Ghorashian et al Nature Med 2019). However the molecular mechanisms behind the improved properties of CAT CAR T cells remain unknown. Herein, we performed a systematic in vitro characterization of the transcriptomic (bulk RNA-seq) and protein (CyTOF) changes occurring in CAR T cells expressing a low-affinity (CAT) vs high affinity (FMC63) anti-CD19 CARs following stimulation with CD19 expressing targets. Untransduced (UT) controls and T cells lentivirally transduced to express CAT or FMC63 CD19 CARs were compared both at baseline and following stimulation with CD19+ Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia cell line NALM6. In Principal Component Analysis for both RNA-seq and protein results, we found that the major variance across conditions was explained by CD19-mediated CAR T activation. Strikingly, unstimulated CAT CAR T cells showed an intermediate degree of activation between UT T cells and antigen stimulated CAR T cells. Indeed, when comparing RNA-seq results of unstimulated CAT vs FMC63, we found enhanced expression (FDR <0.1) of genes involved in cytotoxicity (GNLY, GZMK) and T cell activation (HLA-DRA and HLA-DPA1) (Figure 1a), confirmed at protein level by CyTOF. This "activation priming" observed in CAT CAR T cells was associated with and may be driven by residual CD19-expressing B-cells present in the manufacture product, preferentially inducing a T Central Memory (TCM) phenotype in CAT vs FMC63, in both CD4 and CD8 T cells. Such priming is likely to be instrumental to CAT CAR T cells more potent cytotoxic response upon NALM6 stimulation, when they displayed further increase in the expression of immune stimulatory cytokines (IFNG, CSF2), chemokines (CCL3L1, CCL4, CXCL8) and IFNg responsive genes (CIITA) by RNA-seq, as well as augmented T cell activation (CD25, NFAT1) and proliferation (pRB) markers by CyTOF. To identify the mechanisms underlying the stronger basal activation of CAT CAR T cells, we analysed cytokine expression at the single cell level by mass cytometry. Interestingly, rather than an increment in the expression of individual cytokines, we found that the distinctive feature of CAT CAR T cells was a shift toward a cytokine polyfunctional phenotype, with a marked increase in the proportion of cells co-expressing 3 or more cytokines (17.50% CAT vs 7.33% FMC63) (Figure 1b). Of note, cytokine polyfunctionality (expression of more than 1 cytokine/cell) in pre-infusion CAR T cell products has been associated to improved clinical efficacy. The functional phenotype observed in CAT CAR T cells was linked to the preferential activation of the p38 MAPK phospo-signalling, which is activated downstream of TCR CD3ζ chain (present in the CARs) but is also central to cytokine-dependent T cell activation in memory T cells. Interestingly, cytokine polyfunctional CAT CAR T cells were enriched in the CD3+CD19+ trogocytic (trog+) population, found at higher proportion in CAT vs FMC63 at 24h post antigen stimulation. Although trogocytosis has been associated to CAR T cell fratricide killing, trog+ CAT CAR T cells displayed higher levels of proliferation (pRB), activation (CD25, NFAT1) and cytotoxic (Granzyme B, Perforin B) markers, pointing at a stimulatory role of trogocytosis over fratricide killing, potentially due to the low-affinity CAR T cells distinctive property of better discriminating between low (trog+ CAR T cells) and high (tumour cells) target expression levels. In conclusion, we described the molecular mechanisms underlying the low affinity CAT CAR T cells functional phenotype. Our results show that the potent and long-term anti-tumour responses observed with CAT may be sustained by the establishment of CAR T cells self-reinforcing circuits activated through polyfunctional cytokine crosstalk. This work may inform the future design of versatile CAR T cells, capable of balancing safety, efficacy and long-term persistence. Disclosures Ghorashian: Amgen: Honoraria; UCLB: Patents & Royalties; Novartis: Honoraria. Pule:Autolus: Current Employment, Other: owns stock in and receives royalties, Patents & Royalties; UCLB: Patents & Royalties; Mana Therapeutics: Other: entitled to share of revenue from patents filed by UCL.
BackgroundMapping the genetic component of molecular mechanisms responsible for the reduced penetrance (RP) of rare disorders constitutes one of the most challenging problems in human genetics. Heritable pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is one such disorder characterised by rare mutations mostly occurring in the bone morphogenetic protein receptor type 2 (BMPR2) gene and a wide heterogeneity of penetrance modifier mechanisms. Here, we analyse 32 genotyped individuals from a large Iberian family of 65 members, including 22 carriers of the pathogenic BMPR2 mutation c.1472G>A (p.Arg491Gln), 8 of them diagnosed with PAH by right-heart catheterisation, leading to an RP rate of 36.4%.MethodsWe performed a linkage analysis on the genotyping data to search for genetic modifiers of penetrance. Using functional genomics data, we characterised the candidate region identified by linkage analysis. We also predicted the haplotype segregation within the family.ResultsWe identified a candidate chromosome region in 2q24.3, 38 Mb upstream from BMPR2, with significant linkage (LOD=4.09) under a PAH susceptibility model. This region contains common variants associated with vascular aetiology and shows functional evidence that the putative genetic modifier is located in the upstream distal promoter of the fidgetin (FIGN) gene.ConclusionOur results suggest that the genetic modifier acts through FIGN transcriptional regulation, whose expression variability would contribute to modulating heritable PAH. This finding may help to advance our understanding of RP in PAH across families sharing the p.Arg491Gln pathogenic mutation in BMPR2.
The use of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) as models for development and human disease has enabled the study of otherwise inaccessible tissues. A remaining challenge in developing reliable models is our limited understanding of the factors driving irregular in vitro differentiation of iPSCs, particularly the impact of acquired somatic mutations. We leveraged data from a pooled dopaminergic neuron differentiation experiment of 238 iPSC lines profiled with single-cell and whole-exome sequencing to study how somatic mutations affect differentiation outcomes. Differentiation was tracked at three time points corresponding to neural progenitors, early neurons and mature neurons. We found that deleterious somatic mutations in key developmental genes, notably the BCOR gene, are strongly associated with failure in dopaminergic neuron differentiation, with lines carrying such mutations also showing larger proliferation rate in culture. We further identified broad differences in cell type composition between failed and successfully differentiating lines, as well as significant changes in gene expression contributing to the inhibition of neurogenesis, a functional process also targeted by deleterious mutations in failed lines. Our work highlights the need to routinely measure the burden of deleterious mutations in iPSC lines and calls for caution in interpreting differentiation-related phenotypes in disease-modelling experiments.
We recently described a low-affinity second-generation CD19 chimeric antigen receptor (CAR, CAT) that showed enhanced expansion, cytotoxicity, and anti-tumour efficacy compared to the high-affinity (FMC63 based) CAR used in tisagenlecleucel, in pre-clinical models. Furthermore, CAT demonstrated an excellent toxicity profile, enhanced in vivo expansion, and long-term persistence in a Phase I clinical study. To understand the molecular mechanisms behind the improved properties of CAT CAR T-cells, we performed a systematic in vitro characterization of the transcriptomic (RNA-seq) and protein (CyTOF) changes occurring in T-cells expressing low-affinity vs high-affinity CD19 CARs following stimulation with CD19-expressing cells. We demonstrate that CAT CAR T-cells show enhanced activation to CD19 stimulation and a distinct transcriptomic/protein profile with increased cytokine polyfunctionality post-stimulation compared with FMC63 CAR T-cells. Our results suggest that the enhanced functionality of low-affinity CAR T-cells may be sustained by the establishment of a self-reinforcing circuit activated through cytokines polyfunctional crosstalk.
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