Publications

CAR-T cells targeting CCR9 and CD1a for the treatment of T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Tirado N, Fidyt K, Mansilla MJ, Garcia-Perez A, Martínez-Moreno A, Vinyoles M, Alcain J, García-Peydró M, Roca-Ho H, Fernandez-Fuentes N, Guerrero-Murillo M, Falgàs A, Velasco-Hernandez T, Bueno C, Panelli P, Mulens-Arias V, Apostolov A, Engel P, González EA, Vick B, Jeremias I, Caye-Eude A, Baruchel A, Cavé H, Genescà E, Ribera J, Díaz-Beyá M, Martínez-Sánchez MV, Fuster JL, Escudero López A, Minguillón J, Pérez-Martínez A, Ramírez-Orellana M, Torrebadell M, Díaz VM, Toribio ML, Sánchez-Martínez D, Menéndez P.

J Hematol Oncol

T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive malignancy characterized by high rates of induction failure and relapse, and effective targeted immunotherapies are lacking. Despite promising clinical progress with genome-edited CD7-directed CAR-T cells, which present significant logistical and regulatory issues, CAR-T cell therapy in T-ALL remains challenging due to the shared antigen expression between malignant and healthy T cells. This can result in CAR-T cell fratricide, T cell aplasia, and the potential for blast contamination during CAR-T cell manufacturing. Recently described CAR-T cells target non-pan-T antigens, absent on healthy T cells but expressed on specific T-ALL subsets. These antigens include CD1a (NCT05679895), which is expressed in cortical T-ALL, and CCR9. We show that CCR9 is expressed on >70% of T-ALL patients (132/180) and is maintained at relapse, with a safe expression profile in healthy hematopoietic and non-hematopoietic tissues. Further analyses showed that dual targeting of CCR9 and CD1a could benefit T-ALL patients with a greater blast coverage than single CAR-T cell treatments. We therefore developed, characterized, and preclinically validated a novel humanized CCR9-specific CAR with robust and specific antileukemic activity as a monotherapy in vitro and in vivo against cell lines, primary T-ALL samples, and patient-derived xenografts. Importantly, CCR9/CD1a dual-targeting CAR-T cells showed higher efficacy than single-targeting CAR-T cells, particularly in T-ALL cases with phenotypically heterogeneous leukemic populations. Dual CD1a/CCR9 CAR-T therapy may prevent T cell aplasia and obviate the need for allogeneic transplantation and regulatory-challenging genome engineering approaches in T-ALL.

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