Scientific publications

CD3 aptamers promote expansion and persistence of tumor-reactive T cells for adoptive T cell therapy in cancer. Scientific Publication

Apr 23, 2024 | Magazine: Molecular Therapy Nucleic Acids

Ashwathi Puravankara Menon 1, Helena Villanueva 1, Daniel Meraviglia-Crivelli 1, Hisse M van Santen 2, Joschka Hellmeier 3, Angelina Zheleva 1, Francesca Nonateli 1, Timo Peters 4, Tassilo L A Wachsmann 5, Mercedes Hernandez-Rueda 1, Johannes B Huppa 4, Gerhard J Schütz 3, Eva Sevcsik 3, Beatriz Moreno 1, Fernando Pastor 1 6 7


Abstract

The CD3/T cell receptor (TCR) complex is responsible for antigen-specific pathogen recognition by T cells, and initiates the signaling cascade necessary for activation of effector functions. CD3 agonistic antibodies are commonly used to expand T lymphocytes in a wide range of clinical applications, including in adoptive T cell therapy for cancer patients. A major drawback of expanding T cell populations ex vivo using CD3 agonistic antibodies is that they expand and activate T cells independent of their TCR antigen specificity.

Therapeutic agents that facilitate expansion of T cells in an antigen-specific manner and reduce their threshold of T cell activation are therefore of great interest for adoptive T cell therapy protocols. To identify CD3-specific T cell agonists, several RNA aptamers were selected against CD3 using Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential enrichment combined with high-throughput sequencing. The extent and specificity of aptamer binding to target CD3 were assessed through surface plasma resonance, P32 double-filter assays, and flow cytometry. Aptamer-mediated modulation of the threshold of T cell activation was observed in vitro and in preclinical transgenic TCR mouse models. The aptamers improved efficacy and persistence of adoptive T cell therapy by low-affinity TCR-reactive T lymphocytes in melanoma-bearing mice. Thus, CD3-specific aptamers can be applied as therapeutic agents which facilitate the expansion of tumor-reactive T lymphocytes while conserving their tumor specificity. Furthermore, selected CD3 aptamers also exhibit cross-reactivity to human CD3, expanding their potential for clinical translation and application in the future.

CITATION Mol Ther Nucleic Acids. 2024 Apr 23;35(2):102198. doi: 10.1016/j.omtn.2024.102198. eCollection 2024 Jun 11.

Our authors

Helena Villanueva Ruiz
Dr. Angelina Zheleva
Mercedes Hernández
Investigadora del Programa de Terapias Moleculares del Cima Universidad de Navarra
Dr. Beatriz Moreno Bruna
Investigador Adscrito a Proyecto Plataforma de Aptámeros y Química Médica