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. 2010 Oct:31 Suppl 2:215-20.
doi: 10.1007/s00292-010-1344-8.

[Adoptive T-cell therapy of rhabdomyosarcoma]

[Article in German]
Affiliations

[Adoptive T-cell therapy of rhabdomyosarcoma]

[Article in German]
K Simon-Keller et al. Pathologe. 2010 Oct.

Abstract

Aims: To improve survival of patients with advanced rhabdomyosarcomas (RMS), we aimed to adoptively transfer T-cells with redirected specificity for the fetal acetylcholine receptor (AChR), an RMS-specific cell surface antigen.

Methods: A "second generation" chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) with a combined CD28-CD3ζ signaling domain was derived from our previously described chimeric antigen receptor composed of an extracellular human anti-fAChR antibody fragment, an Fc hinge region, and the intracellular T-cell receptor zeta chain. Lymphocytes from the peripheral blood were modified by retroviral transduction and monitored by FACS analysis. Cytotoxicity of modified T-cells towards RMS cells was recorded by MTT-based viability tests; expression of co-stimulatory molecules and anti-apoptotic genes was studied by FACS and qRT-PCR analysis.

Results: Co-stimulatory molecules were expressed in low levels on RMS cells giving the rationale to generate a CD28-CD3ζ signalling CAR (chimeric antigen receptor) for redirecting T-cells. T-cells were successfully engineered with the "second generation" AChR-specific chimeric antigen receptor. Despite of high CAR expression engineered T-cells showed low killing efficiency towards RMS compared to redirected killing of CD20+ lymphoma or CEA-expressing adenocarcinoma cell lines when redirected by CD20- and/or CEA-specific CAR.

Conclusions: Data suggest that RMS cells exhibit resistance to a T-cell attack redirected by a fAChR-specific CAR. Inhibition of anti-apoptotic pathways in those cells may improve sensitivity to conventional as well as T-cell-based therapeutics.

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