학술논문

Structural surfaceomics reveals an AML-specific conformation of integrin β2 as a CAR T cellular therapy target
Document Type
article
Source
Nature Cancer. 4(11)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Immunology
Clinical Research
Rare Diseases
Orphan Drug
Vaccine Related
Hematology
Pediatric Cancer
Pediatric
Genetics
Childhood Leukemia
Cancer
Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions
5.2 Cellular and gene therapies
Humans
Receptors
Chimeric Antigen
T-Lymphocytes
Integrins
Immunotherapy
Adoptive
Leukemia
Myeloid
Acute
Oncology and carcinogenesis
Language
Abstract
Safely expanding indications for cellular therapies has been challenging given a lack of highly cancer-specific surface markers. Here we explore the hypothesis that tumor cells express cancer-specific surface protein conformations that are invisible to standard target discovery pipelines evaluating gene or protein expression, and these conformations can be identified and immunotherapeutically targeted. We term this strategy integrating cross-linking mass spectrometry with glycoprotein surface capture 'structural surfaceomics'. As a proof of principle, we apply this technology to acute myeloid leukemia (AML), a hematologic malignancy with dismal outcomes and no known optimal immunotherapy target. We identify the activated conformation of integrin β2 as a structurally defined, widely expressed AML-specific target. We develop and characterize recombinant antibodies to this protein conformation and show that chimeric antigen receptor T cells eliminate AML cells and patient-derived xenografts without notable toxicity toward normal hematopoietic cells. Our findings validate an AML conformation-specific target antigen and demonstrate a tool kit for applying these strategies more broadly.