Publication | Open Access
Tuning T cell receptor sensitivity through catch bond engineering
143
Citations
37
References
2022
Year
T-regulatory CellImmunologyImmunoeditingImmune Cell TherapyImmunotherapySynthetic ImmunologyTcr-t Cell TherapyRadiation OncologyAdoptive Cell TherapyCell TransplantationCell SignalingTcr MutantsReceptor (Biochemistry)Non-peptide LigandTumor MicroenvironmentCatch Bond EngineeringCancer ImmunosurveillanceSignal TransductionMedicine
Adoptive cell therapy using engineered T cell receptors (TCRs) is a promising approach for targeting cancer antigens, but tumor-reactive TCRs are often weakly responsive to their target ligands, peptide-major histocompatibility complexes (pMHCs). Affinity-matured TCRs can enhance the efficacy of TCR-T cell therapy but can also cross-react with off-target antigens, resulting in organ immunopathology. We developed an alternative strategy to isolate TCR mutants that exhibited high activation signals coupled with low-affinity pMHC binding through the acquisition of catch bonds. Engineered analogs of a tumor antigen MAGE-A3-specific TCR maintained physiological affinities while exhibiting enhanced target killing potency and undetectable cross-reactivity, compared with a high-affinity clinically tested TCR that exhibited lethal cross-reactivity with a cardiac antigen. Catch bond engineering is a biophysically based strategy to tune high-sensitivity TCRs for T cell therapy with reduced potential for adverse cross-reactivity.
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