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Engineered bacteria direct the tumor-specificity of CAR-T cells to enable antigen-agonistic tumor targeting

Synthetic biology enables the engineering of interactions between living medicines to overcome the specific limitations of monotherapies. A major challenge facing tumor-antigen targeting therapies like chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells is the identification of suitable targets that are specifically and uniformly expressed on heterogeneous solid tumors. In contrast, certain strains of bacteria are gaining recognition as a new class of antigen-agnostic cell therapy due to their selective growth within the immunosuppressive niche of the solid tumor microenvironment (TME). In response, this dissertation aims to pair the cytotoxicity of CAR-T cells with the antigen-independent specificity of tumor-colonizing bacteria to create a new strategy for solid tumor recognition.

Here, we reprogram the probiotic strain of E. coli Nissle 1917 to release synthetic CAR targets and human chemokines directly within the solid tumor core. To enable universal targeting, we design synthetic targets to bind ubiquitous components of the TME and broadly tag tumor tissue for CAR-mediated lysis. We demonstrate that these targets robustly coat the surface of cancer cell lines and lead to effective killing by CAR-T cells across various cancer types. We additionally show that injected probiotics selectively grow within the tumor core and maintain target production ¬ in situ – leading to therapeutic efficacy across multiple genetically distinct tumor models.

Within this dissertation, we also reveal that intratumoral bacteria provide natural adjuvant effects that serve to activate and increase the effector functions of CAR-T cells in vivo. However, we discover that this can lead to early T cell exhaustion and terminal effector differentiation. To mitigate the counterproductive effects of overstimulation, we generate a new probiotic strain with reduced inflammatory properties that significantly improves CAR-T cell phenotype – leading to enhanced therapeutic benefit in a human model of leukemia.

We conclude by discussing the numerous avenues available to optimize cross-Kingdom signaling and to ultimately leverage the full therapeutic benefit of combined cell therapies for future translation. Altogether, this dissertation highlights the potential of the probiotic-guided CAR-T cell (ProCAR) platform to address the critical roadblock of identifying suitable CAR targets by providing an antigen in situ that is orthogonal to both healthy tissue and tumor genetics – and, in turn, aims to establish the foundation for engineered communities of living medicines.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:columbia.edu/oai:academiccommons.columbia.edu:10.7916/vr5x-w763
Date January 2024
CreatorsVincent, Rosa Louise
Source SetsColumbia University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeTheses

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