Chimeric antigen receptor T cells derived from CD7 nanobody exhibit robust antitumor potential against CD7-positive malignancies

Am J Cancer Res. 2021 Nov 15;11(11):5263-5281. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

The great success of chimeric antigen receptor T (CAR-T)-cell therapy in B-cell malignancies has significantly promoted its rapid expansion to other targets and indications, including T-cell malignancies and acute myeloid leukemia. However, owing to the life-threatening T-cell hypoplasia caused by CD7-CAR-T cells specific cytotoxic against normal T cells, as well as CAR-T cell-fratricide caused by the shared CD7 antigen on the T-cell surface, the clinical application of CD7 as a potential target for CD7+ malignancies is lagging. Here, we generated CD7ΔT cells using an anti-CD7 nanobody fragment coupled with an endoplasmic reticulum/Golgi retention domain and demonstrated that these cells transduced with CD7-CAR could prevent fratricide and achieve expansion. Additionally, CD7ΔCD7-CAR-T cells exhibited robust antitumor potiential against CD7+ tumors in vitro as well as in cell-line and patient-derived xenograft models of CD7-positive malignancies. Furthermore, we confirmed that the antitumor activity of CD7-CAR-T cells was positively correlated with the antigen density of tumor cells. This strategy adapts well with current clinical-grade CAR-T-cell manufacturing processes and can be rapidly applied for the therapy of patients with CD7+ malignancies.

Keywords: ER/Golgi CD7 retention; Humanized CD7 nanobody; adoptive immunotherapy; fratricide-resistant CD7 CAR-T.