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Publication Detail
Anti-CCR9 Chimeric Antigen Receptor T cells for T Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.
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Publication Type:Journal article
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Publication Sub Type:Article
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Authors:Maciocia PM, Wawrzyniecka PA, Maciocia NC, Burley A, Karpanasamy T, Devereaux S, Hoekx M, O'Connor D, Leon TE, Rapoz-D'Silva T, Pocock R, Rahman S, Gritti G, Yánez DC, Ross S, Crompton T, Williams O, Lee LSH, Pule M, Mansour MR
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Publication date:04/05/2022
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Journal:Blood
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Status:Published online
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Country:United States
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PII:485152
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Language:eng
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Author URL:
Abstract
T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive malignancy of immature T lymphocytes, associated with higher rates of induction failure in comparison to B-ALL. The potent immunotherapeutic approaches applied in B-ALL, which have revolutionized the treatment paradigm, have proven more challenging in T-ALL, largely due to a lack of target antigens expressed on malignant but not healthy T cells. Unlike B cell depletion, T cell aplasia is highly toxic. Here, we demonstrate that the chemokine receptor CCR9 is expressed in >70% of cases of T-ALL, including >85% or relapsed/ refractory disease, and only on a small fraction (<5%) of normal T cells. Using cell line models and patient-derived xenografts, we show chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells targeting CCR9 are resistant to fratricide and have potent anti-leukemic activity both in vitro and in vivo, even at low target antigen density. We propose anti-CCR9 CAR-T cells could be a highly effective treatment strategy for T-ALL, avoiding T cell aplasia and the need for genome engineering that complicate other approaches.
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