Activation-dependent lentiviruses enable antigen-specific T cell expansion and transduction

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Abstract

Cancer immunotherapies rely on tumor-specific T cells, which arise endogenously in most patients with cancer, but can be low frequency and poorly functional. Methods to specifically identify, expand, and manipulate tumor-specific T cells at the rare frequencies found in peripheral blood would enable new immunotherapeutic strategies. Here, we demonstrate an approach to virally transduce polyclonal tumor-reactive T cells across any MHC haplotype and in the absence of knowing the cognate antigen. By generating lentiviral vectors that selectively transduce cells expressing 4-1BB (CD137), a marker of T cell activation, we can transduce antigen-specific T cells with user-defined genetic cargoes that can selectively expand and track individual clonotypes via single-cell sequencing. Anti-4-1BB lentiviruses (4-1BB LVs) encoding therapeutic cargoes can also enhance antigen-specific T cells to extend survival in a xenograft model of human melanoma and transduce tumor-infiltrating T cells from patients with ovarian cancer. Overall, the 4-1BB LV platform targets antigen-specific T cells in a manner agnostic to both the antigen and presenting MHC, with potential applications in adoptive cell therapy manufacturing and TCR identification.

One Sentence Summary

Engineered lentiviral vectors targeting 4-1BB selectively activate, expand, and transduce antigen-specific T cells with immunomodulatory cargo.

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