Q1 · BIOLOGY
ArticleOA
Author: Takise, Yoshiaki ; Katoh, Yuki ; Nakagawa, Takayuki ; Serada, Satoshi ; Yaguchi, Tomonori ; Iwata, Takashi ; Kawakami, Yutaka ; Tsubota, Kinya ; Morii, Kenji ; Naka, Tetsuji ; Tsumoto, Kouhei ; Akiba, Hiroki ; Kamada, Haruhiko ; Nishimura, Ryohei ; Kato, Daiki ; Tamiya, Masaki
Current xenogeneic mouse models cannot evaluate on-target off-tumor adverse effect, hindering the development of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapies for solid tumors, due to limited human/mouse cross-reactivity of antibodies used in CAR and sever graft-versus-host disease induced by administered human T cells. We have evaluated safety and antitumor efficacy of CAR-T cells targeting glypican-1 (GPC1) overexpressed in various solid tumors. GPC1-specific human and murine CAR-T cells generated from our original anti-human/mouse GPC1 antibody showed strong antitumor effects in xenogeneic and syngeneic mouse models, respectively. Importantly, the murine CAR-T cells enhanced endogenous T cell responses against a non-GPC1 tumor antigen through the mechanism of antigen-spreading and showed synergistic antitumor effects with anti-PD-1 antibody without any adverse effects in syngeneic models. Our study shows the potential of GPC1 as a CAR-T cell target for solid tumors and the importance of syngeneic and xenogeneic models for evaluating their safety and efficacy.