Harnessing the CD2 axis to broaden and enhance the efficacy of CAR T cell therapies
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Patients with T-cell lymphomas and leukemias have overall poor outcomes due to the lack of targeted and effective treatments, particularly in the relapsed and refractory settings. Development of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells against T-cell neoplasms is limited by a lack of discriminating T-cell antigens that allow for effective anti-tumor responses while preventing CAR T-cell fratricide. We hypothesized that targeting CD2, a pan-T-cell antigen, using anti-CD2 CAR T-cells engineered without CD2 expression (CART2), would support CAR T-cell manufacturability and preclinical efficacy. Optimized CD2-knockout CART2, generated using CRISPR-Cas9, eradicated primary patient-derived CD2+ hematological neoplasms in vitro and in vivo, secreted effector cytokines, and exhibited adequate proliferative capacity. Nevertheless, CD2 has a key costimulatory function, and its deletion could lead to CAR T-cell dysfunction. Therefore, we tested the role of the CD2:CD58 axis in CAR T-cells, using the anti-CD19 CART models. We demonstrate that CD2 loss attenuates CART19 efficacy by reducing avidity for tumor antigen, co-stimulation, and ultimately in vivo activity. Analogously, we show that tumor CD58 loss reduces CART19 efficacy. To overcome this issue, we developed a novel PD-1:CD2 switch receptor that rescues intracellular CD2 signaling, particularly when PD-L1 is engaged, resulting in improved in vivo outcomes. Collectively, we studied the role of CD2 both as a target for CAR T cell therapy and as a critical costimulatory protein, whose signaling can be rescued using the PD-1:CD2 switch receptor. This receptor can be incorporated into CAR T-cells and provides an effective strategy to overcome CD2-signaling deficiencies.