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

Ashwathi Puravankara Menon
Helena Villanueva Ruiz
Daniel Hackbrett Meraviglia-Crivelli de Caso
Dr. Angelina Zheleva
Dr. Mercedes Hernández
Investigadora del Programa de Terapias Moleculares del Cima Universidad de Navarra
Dr. Beatriz Moreno Bruna