PLAP-CAR-effector cells
12030957 ยท 2024-07-09
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C07K14/705
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
A61K35/17
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C07K2319/33
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C07K2319/30
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C07K2317/73
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
A61K2300/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K2300/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K2239/38
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61P35/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K39/4611
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61K2039/507
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C07K2317/24
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C07K2317/76
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C07K16/28
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
A61K35/17
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61P35/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C07K14/705
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C07K16/28
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
The present invention is directed to a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) fusion protein comprising from N-terminus to C-terminus: (i) a single-chain variable fragment (scFv) comprising V.sub.H and V.sub.L, wherein scFv binds to human PLAP (placental alkaline phosphatase), (ii) a transmembrane domain, (iii) a co-stimulatory domain of CD28, OX-40, GITR, or 4-1BB, and (iv) CD3 an activating domain. The present invention is also directed to T cells, natural killer (NK) cells, or macrophages, modified to express the CAR of the present invention. The present invention is further directed to a method for treating PLAP-positive cancer cells by administering PLAP-CAR-T cells, PLAP-CAR-NK cells, or PLAP-CAR-macrophages to the patients.
Claims
1. A chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) comprising from N-terminus to C-terminus: (i) a single-chain variable fragment (scFv) comprising VH and VL, wherein scFv binds to PLAP (placental alkaline phosphatase), VH has the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 21, and VL has the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 22, (ii) a transmembrane domain, (iii) a co-stimulatory domain of CD28, OX-40, GITR, or 4-1BB, and (iv) an activating domain.
2. The CAR of claim 1, wherein the scFv comprises SEQ ID NO: 23.
3. The CAR of claim 1, wherein the activating domain is CD3 zeta.
4. The CAR of claim 1, wherein the co-stimulatory domain is CD28.
5. The CAR of claim 1, having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 20.
6. A nucleic acid sequence encoding the CAR of claim 1.
7. An antibody or antigen-binding fragment thereof comprising VL having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 22, and VH having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 21.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Definitions
(10) As used herein, adoptive cell therapy (ACT) is a treatment that uses a cancer patient's own T lymphocytes, or NK cells, or other hematopoietic cells such as macrophages, induced pluripotent cells, with anti-tumor activity, expanded in vitro and reinfused into the patient with cancer.
(11) As used herein, affinity is the strength of binding of a single molecule to its ligand. Affinity is typically measured and reported by the equilibrium dissociation constant (K.sub.D or Kd), which is used to evaluate and rank order strengths of bimolecular interactions.
(12) As used herein, a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) means a fused protein comprising an extracellular domain capable of binding to an antigen, a transmembrane domain derived from a polypeptide different from a polypeptide from which the extracellular domain is derived, and at least one intracellular domain. The chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) is sometimes called a chimeric receptor, a T-body, or a chimeric immune receptor (CIR). The extracellular domain capable of binding to an antigen means any oligopeptide or polypeptide that can bind to a certain antigen. The intracellular domain means any oligopeptide or polypeptide known to function as a domain that transmits a signal to cause activation or inhibition of a biological process in a cell.
(13) As used herein, a domain means one region in a polypeptide which is folded into a particular structure independently of other regions.
(14) As used herein, a single chain variable fragment (scFv) means a single chain polypeptide derived from an antibody which retains the ability to bind to an antigen. An example of the scFv includes an antibody polypeptide which is formed by a recombinant DNA technique and in which Fv regions of immunoglobulin heavy chain (H chain) and light chain (L chain) fragments are linked via a spacer sequence. Various methods for preparing an scFv are known to a person skilled in the art.
(15) As used herein, a tumor antigen means a biological molecule having antigenicity, expression of which causes cancer.
(16) The inventors have discovered that PLAP is a unique tumor marker and that PLAP can be advantageously used to prepare PLAP-CAR T cells or PLAP-NK cells, which can be used for CAR-T cell therapy or CAR-NK cell therapy, because PLAP is not expressed in normal tissues. Unlike other tumor markers that are expressed in low levels in normal tissues, the advantage of PLAP target not expressed in most normal tissues but only in placenta and testis is that PLAP-CAR-T cells/PLAP-NK cells do not react against normal tissues and thus they are safe and have low toxicity.
(17) The present invention provides CAR-T cells and NK cells that target PLAP tumor antigen which is highly overexpressed in many types of cancer such as ovarian, seminoma, and colon cancer. The PLAP-CAR-T cells and PLAP-NK cells of the present invention have high cytotoxic activity against several cancer cells: colon and ovarian cancer cell lines.
(18) The present invention is directed to a chimeric antigen receptor fusion protein comprising from N-terminus to C-terminus: (i) a single-chain variable fragment (scFv) comprising V.sub.H and V.sub.L, wherein scFv binds to human PLAP, (ii) a transmembrane domain, (iii) a co-stimulatory domain of CD28, and (iv) an activating domain.
(19) In one embodiment, the PLAP antibody is a mouse antibody, and V.sub.H has the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 5 and V.sub.L has the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 6.
(20) In one embodiment, the PLAP antibody is a humanized antibody, and V.sub.H has the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 16, 21, 26, 30, or 34, and V.sub.L has the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 22.
(21) In one embodiment, the scFv comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 8, 18, 23, 27, 31, or 35; or an amino acid sequence having at least 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, or 99% sequence identity thereof, provided that the sequence variation is in the non-CDR framework regions.
(22) In one embodiment, the CAR comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 5, 15, 20, 25, 29, or 33; or an amino acid sequence having at least 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, or 99% sequence identity thereof, provided that the sequence variation is not in the CDR regions.
(23) The sequence variation, i.e., the amino acid changes are preferably of a minor amino acid change such as a conservative amino acid substitution. A conservative amino acid substitution is well-known to a person skilled in the art.
(24) The present invention is directed to an adoptive cell therapy method for treating cancer, comprising the step of administering PLAP CAR-T cells, PLAP CAR-NK cells, or PLAP CAR-macrophages to a subject suffering from cancer, wherein the cancer is selected from the group consisting of colon cancer, lung cancer, pancreatic cancer, stomach cancer, testicular cancer, teratoma, seminoma, ovarian cancer, and cervical cancer, and the cancer is PLAP-positive.
(25) Suitable antibody useful for PLAP CAR includes mouse PLAP antibody against PLAP and humanized PLAP antibody against PLAP. In one embodiment, the antibody has a high affinity against PLAP.
(26) The CAR of the present invention comprises a single chain variable fragment (scFv) that binds specifically to PLAP. The heavy chain (H chain) and light chain (L chain) fragments of an anti-PLAP antibody are linked via a linker sequence. For example, a linker can be 5-20 amino acids. The scFv structure can be VL-linker-VH, or VH-linker-VL, from N-terminus to C-terminus.
(27) The CAR of the present invention comprises a transmembrane domain which spans the membrane. The transmembrane domain may be derived from a natural polypeptide, or may be artificially designed. The transmembrane domain derived from a natural polypeptide can be obtained from any membrane-binding or transmembrane protein. For example, a transmembrane domain of a T cell receptor ? or ? chain, a CD3 zeta chain, CD28, CD3-epsilon, CD45, CD4, CD5, CD8, CD9, CD16, CD22, CD33, CD37, CD64, CD80, CD86, CD134, CD137, ICOS, CD154, or a GITR can be used. The artificially designed transmembrane domain is a polypeptide mainly comprising hydrophobic residues such as leucine and valine. It is preferable that a triplet of phenylalanine, tryptophan and valine is found at each end of the synthetic transmembrane domain. In preferred embodiments, the transmembrane domain is derived from CD28 or CD8, which give good receptor stability.
(28) In the present invention, the co-stimulatory domain is selected from the group consisting of human CD28, 4-1BB (CD137), ICOS-1, CD27, OX 40 (CD137), DAP10, and GITR (AITR).
(29) The endodomain (the activating domain) is the signal-transmission portion of the CAR. After antigen recognition, receptors cluster and a signal is transmitted to the cell. The most commonly used endodomain component is that of CD3-zeta (CD3 Z or CD3?), which contains 3 ITAMs. This transmits an activation signal to the T cell after antigen is bound. CD3-zeta may not provide a fully competent activation signal and additional co-stimulatory signaling may be needed. For example, one or more co-stimulating domains can be used with CD3-Zeta to transmit a proliferative/survival signal.
(30) The CAR of the present invention may comprise a signal peptide N-terminal to the ScFv so that when the CAR is expressed inside a cell, such as a T-cell, NK cells, or macrophages, the nascent protein is directed to the endoplasmic reticulum and subsequently to the cell surface, where it is expressed. The core of the signal peptide may contain a long stretch of hydrophobic amino acids that has a tendency to form a single alpha-helix. The signal peptide may begin with a short positively charged stretch of amino acids, which helps to enforce proper topology of the polypeptide during translocation. At the end of the signal peptide there is typically a stretch of amino acids that is recognized and cleaved by signal peptidase. Signal peptidase may cleave either during or after completion of translocation to generate a free signal peptide and a mature protein. The free signal peptides are then digested by specific proteases. As an example, the signal peptide may derive from human CD8 or GM-CSF, or a variant thereof having 1 or 2 amino acid mutations provided that the signal peptide still functions to cause cell surface expression of the CAR.
(31) The CAR of the present invention may comprise a spacer sequence as a hinge to connect scFv with the transmembrane domain and spatially separate antigen binding domain from the endodomain. A flexible spacer allows to the binding domain to orient in different directions to enable its binding to a tumor antigen. The spacer sequence may, for example, comprise an IgG1 Fc region, an IgG1 hinge or a CD8 stalk, or a combination thereof. A human CD28 or CD8 stalk is preferred.
(32) The present invention provides a nucleic acid encoding the CAR described above. The nucleic acid encoding the CAR can be prepared from an amino acid sequence of the specified CAR by a conventional method. A base sequence encoding an amino acid sequence can be obtained from the aforementioned NCBI RefSeq IDs or accession numbers of GenBenk for an amino acid sequence of each domain, and the nucleic acid of the present invention can be prepared using a standard molecular biological and/or chemical procedure. For example, based on the base sequence, a nucleic acid can be synthesized, and the nucleic acid of the present invention can be prepared by combining DNA fragments which are obtained from a cDNA library using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR).
(33) The nucleic acid encoding the CAR of the present invention can be inserted into a vector, and the vector can be introduced into a cell. For example, a virus vector such as a retrovirus vector (including an oncoretrovirus vector, a lentivirus vector, and a pseudo type vector), an adenovirus vector, an adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector, a simian virus vector, a vaccinia virus vector or a Sendai virus vector, an Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) vector, and a HSV vector can be used. As the virus vector, a virus vector lacking the replicating ability so as not to self-replicate in an infected cell is preferably used.
(34) For example, when a retrovirus vector is used, the process of the present invention can be carried out by selecting a suitable packaging cell based on a LTR sequence and a packaging signal sequence possessed by the vector and preparing a retrovirus particle using the packaging cell. Examples of the packaging cell include PG13 (ATCC CRL-10686), PA317 (ATCC CRL-9078), GP+E-86 and GP+envAm-12, and Psi-Crip. A retrovirus particle can also be prepared using a 293 cell or a 293T cell having high transfection efficiency. Many kinds of retrovirus vectors produced based on retroviruses and packaging cells that can be used for packaging of the retrovirus vectors are widely commercially available from many companies.
(35) The present invention provides T cells, or NK cells, or macrophages, modified to express the chimeric antigen receptor fusion protein as described above. CAR-T cells, CAR-NK cells, or CAR-macrophages of the present invention bind to a specific antigen via the CAR, thereby a signal is transmitted into the cell, and as a result, the cell is activated. The activation of the cell expressing the CAR is varied depending on the kind of a host cell and an intracellular domain of the CAR, and can be confirmed based on, for example, release of a cytokine, improvement of a cell proliferation rate, change in a cell surface molecule, or the like as an index.
(36) T cells, or NK cells, or macrophages, modified to express the CAR can be used as a therapeutic agent for a disease. The therapeutic agent comprises the T cells expressing the CAR as an active ingredient, and may further comprise a suitable excipient. Examples of the excipient include pharmaceutically acceptable excipients known to a person skilled in the art.
(37) This application demonstrates the efficacy of CAR-T cells targeting PLAP antigen that is overexpressed in colon cancer tumors. This application demonstrates that PLAP-CAR-T cells specifically decreases viability of PLAP-positive colon cancer cells but not PLAP-negative cancer cells. PLAP-CAR-T cells secrets significant level of IFN-gamma after co-incubation with PLAP-positive colon cancer cells but not after co-incubation with PLAP-negative cancer cells. This application demonstrates that PLAP-CAR-T cells significantly decreases Lovo (positive PLAP-colon cancer cells) xenograft tumor growth in vivo. There are no increase of AST, ALT or amylase enzyme levels in mouse blood and no decrease of mouse body weight after treating mice with hPLAP-CAR-T cells demonstrating no toxic effect of hPLAP-CAR-T cells in vivo. In addition, combination of hPLAP-CAR-T cells with PD-1 or LAG-3 antibodies increased efficacy of CAR-T cells against colon cancer cells.
(38) The inventors found that PLAP-CAR-T cells significantly killed all PLAP-positive cancer cells, and did not kill PLAP-negative colon cancers. This implies high specificity of PLAP-CAR-T cells. In addition, Lovo and Caco-2 colon cancer cells differed in up-regulation of PDL-1 by CAR-T cells. Lovo colon cancer cell induced PDL-1 in response to PLAP-CAR-T cells, while Caco-2 cells did not. Both of cell lines were effectively killed by hPLAP-CAR-T cells independently of induction of PDL-1 expression. The humanized PLAP-CAR-T cells killed faster Lovo cells than Caco-2 cells and secreted more IFN-gamma against Lovo colon cancer cells than against Caco-2 cells. In addition, T cells and Mock CAR-T cells had more activity in Lovo cells that in Caco-2 cells. This show that hPLAP-CAR-T cells can overcome PDL-1 up-regulation in Lovo cells. This was shown when Lovo cells were pretreated with IFN-gamma to up-regulate PDL-1, PLAP-CAR-T cells effectively killed Lovo cells. Colon cancer with Kras mutations were shown to be resistant to therapies such as Cetuximab (ERBITUX?, monoclonal antibody) [40], while hPLAP-CAR-T cells effectively killed two different colon cancer cell lines: Lovo (codon 13 mutation: G13D) and LS123 (codon 12 mutation: G12D). This is another advantage of hPLAP-CAR-T cells against solid tumors with Kras mutations responsible for resistance to other therapies.
(39) PLAP-CAR-T cells up-regulated PD-1 and LAG-3 after co-culturing with PLAP-positive colon cancer cell lines but did not increase with PLAP-negative colon cancer cell lines. The inventors have found dose-dependent up-regulation of PDL-1 in response to PLAP-CAR-T cells in Lovo colon cancer cell lines. PD-1, PDL-1 or LAG-3 antibody in combination with PLAP-CAR-T cells significantly increased CAR-T induced cytotoxicity and IFN-gamma secretion against Lovo cancer cells. Thus, checkpoint inhibitors can decrease exhaustion of CAR-T cells and provide basis for combination therapy.
(40) PLAP scFv-(CD28, OX-40, 4-1BB, or GITR)-CD3 zeta CAR-T cells, CAR-NK cells, or CAR-macrophages can be used in combination with different chemotherapy: checkpoint inhibitors; targeted therapies, small molecule inhibitors, and antibodies.
(41) Tags (Flag tag or other tags) conjugated PLAP scFv can be used for CAR generation.
(42) Third generation CAR-T or other co-activation signaling domains can be used for the PLAP-scFv inside CAR.
(43) Bispecific PLAP- and other antigens (EGFR, HER-2, VEGFR, NGFR) CAR-T cells, CAR-NK cells, or CAR-macrophages can be used for immunotherapy. The construct of the bispecific CAR-T cells contain a first scFv against PLAP, and a second scFv against a second tumor antigen. CAR-T cells with bispecific antibody can target cancer cells that overexpress two tumor antigens more effectively and specifically.
(44) Combination of PLAP-CAR-T cells, CAR-NK cells, or CAR-macrophages with CAR-T cells, CAR-NK cells, or CAR-macrophages targeting other tumor antigens or tumor microenvironment (e.g. VEGFR-1-3), i.e., dual CAR-T cells, CAR-NK cells, or CAR-macrophages, can be used to enhance activity of monotherapy PLAP-CAR.
(45) PLAP-CAR-T cells, CAR-NK cells, or CAR-macrophages can be used to activate phagocytosis and block don't eat signaling.
(46) PLAP-CAR-NK cells are safe effector cells, as they may avoid the potentially lethal complications of cytokine storms, tumor lysis syndrome, and on-target, off-tumor effects.
(47) Anti-PLAP antibody h2, h4 and h5 VH and VL sequences can be used as one arm of a bi-specific antibody.
(48) Both PLAP-CAR-T cells and bi-specific antibodies containing anti-PLAP VH and VL can be used in combination with checkpoint inhibitors (PDL-1 antibody, PD-1 antibody, LAG-3 antibody, TIM-3 antibody, TIGIT antibody, and other antibodies), and with chemotherapies to improve efficacy against cancer cells.
(49) The following examples further illustrate the present invention. These examples are intended merely to be illustrative of the present invention and are not to be construed as being limiting.
EXAMPLES
Example 1. Materials and Methods
(50) Cells and Culture Medium
(51) HEK293FT cells from AlStem (Richmond, CA) were cultured in Dulbeceo's Modified Eagle's Medium (DMEM) plus 10% FBS and 1% penicillin/streptomycin. Human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were isolated from whole blood obtained from the Stanford Hospital Blood Center, Stanford, CA according to IRB-approved protocol using FICOLL-PAQUE? (in vitro isolation of lymphocytes) solution (GE Healthcare). Colon cancer cell lines: PLAP-negative: SW620, HT29, HCT116 and PLAP-positive: Lovo, Caco-2, LS123 were obtained from Dr. Walter Bodmer (Oxford, UK), whose laboratory authenticated cell lines using SNPs, Sequenom MassARRAY iPLEX and HumanOmniExpress-24 BeadChip arrays, and tested for the absence of Mycoplasma as described [28-29]. The cell lines were cultured in DMEM plus 10% FBS and penicillin/streptomycin. The list of 117 colon cancer cell lines from W. Bodmer laboratory which were used for PLAP mRNA level detection is shown in supplementary
(52) The cell lines were additionally authenticated by FACS using cell-specific surface markers and cultured in a humidified 5% CO2 incubator.
(53) Antibodies
(54) Monoclonal PD-1 (EH122H7), PDL-1 (clone 29E2A3), TIGIT (clone A15152G), LAG3 (clone 7H2C65), CD62L (clone DREG-56), CD45RO (clone UCHL1), CD4 (clone RPA-T4) and CD8 (clone RPA-T8) antibodies antibodies were from Biolegend. PLAP antibody (clone H17E2) was obtained from Thermo Fisher. Other antibodies were described in [30].
(55) CAR Constructs
(56) The second generation CAR with CD8 alpha signaling peptide, PLAP Ab ScFv [21], CD8 hinge, CD28 co-stimulatory domain and CD3 activation domain was cloned down-stream of EF1 promoter into modified lentiviral vector pCD510 (Systems Bioscience). The same construct was generated with humanized PLAP ScFv (called humanized PLAP or PLAPh2, h4 (clone 2 or 4), and Mock control with either ScFv of intracellular protein or Mock control with 45 amino-acid sequence containing three epitopes of transferrin antibody, called (Mock-CAR). The mouse PLAP-CAR was generated by Synbio. The humanized PLAP ScFv sequences was synthesized by IDT as GBLOCK? nucleic acid sequence with Nhe I and Xho I restriction sites flanking ScFv, and sub-cloned into these sites in lentiviral vector between CD8 alpha signaling peptide and CD8 hinge sequences.
(57) Humanization of PLAP
(58) Humanization of PLAP was performed as described in [31]. The human frames from human antibody clones with highest homology were used for humanized pairs using bioinformatics in silico methods as described [32,33]. Mouse CDR were inserted into these clones and different humanized ScFv variants were used for generating CAR constructs and performing CAR-T cell functional tests.
(59) Lentivirus Preparation in 293FT Cells
(60) The lentiviral CAR constructs were used for generation of lentivirus by transfecting 293 FT cells using transfection agent (Alstem) and Lentivirus Packaging Mix as described [34]. The lentiviral titers in pfu/ml were detected by RT-PCR using the Lenti-X qRT-PCR kit (Takara) according to the manufacturer's protocol and the 7900HT thermal cycler (Thermo Fisher).
(61) Transduction with CAR Lentivirus and CAR-T Cell Expansion
(62) AIM V? (serum-free medium) ALBUMAX? (bovine serum albumin)
(63) PBMC were resuspended at 1?10.sup.6 cells/ml in AIM V? (serum-free medium) ALBUMAX? (bovine serum albumin medium) (Thermo Fisher) containing 10% FBS with 300 U/ml IL-2 (Thermo Fisher). PBMC were activated with CD3/CD28 DYNABEADS? (microspheres, Invitrogen), and cultured in 24-well plates. CAR lentivirus was added to the PBMC cultures at 24 and 48 hours using TransPlus transduction enhancer (AlStem), as described [30,31,34]. The CAR-T cells were cultured and expanded for 14 days by adding fresh medium to maintain the cell density at 1?10.sup.6 cells/ml.
(64) Fluorescence-Activated Cell Sorting (FACS) Analysis
(65) To detect CAR expression, 5?10.sup.5 cells were suspended in 1?PBS plus 0.5% BSA buffer and incubated on ice with human serum (Jackson Immunoresearch, West Grove, PA) for 10 min. Then allophycocyanin (APC)-labeled anti-CD3 (eBioscience, San Diego, CA), 7-aminoactinomycin D (7-AAD, BioLegend, San Diego, CA), anti-F(ab)2 or its isotype control were added, and the cells were incubated on ice for 30 min. Then cells were rinsed with buffer, and analyzed on a FACSCalibur (BD Biosciences) first for light scatter versus 7-AAD staining, then the 7-AAD-negative live gated cells were plotted for CD3 staining versus F(ab)2 staining or isotype control staining. For FACS with colon cancer cell lines to detect PLAP levels mouse monoclonal PLAP antibody (H17E2) from Ximbio (London, UK) was used, and analysis was performed on FACSCalibur.
(66) Blitz ForteBio Binding Assay
(67) The binding of PLAP antibody with recombinant PLAP extracellular domain protein from Sino Biological was performed using Blitz ForteBio system as described [30]. In brief, anti-mouse-capture (AMC) biosensors were soaked in kinetics buffer (PBS, 0.1% Tween, 0.05% BSA) for 10 min and then with mouse anti-PLAP antibody at 0.1 mg/mL in same buffer for 30 min. After washing, biosensors were used to bind the PLAP antigen at different concentrations. The Kd was detected with Blitz system software.
(68) Real-Time Cytotoxicity Assay (RTCA)
(69) Adherent colon cancer target cells (10,000 cells per well) were seeded into 96-well E-plates (Acea Biosciences, San Diego, CA) and cultured overnight using the impedance-based real-time cell analysis (RTCA) iCELLigence system (Acea Biosciences). After 20-24 hours, the medium was replaced with 1?105 effector cells (CAR-T cells, Mock CAR-T cells or non-transduced T cells) in AIM V? ALBUMAX? medium containing 10% FBS, in triplicate. In some experiments checkpoint protein antibodies PD-1, LAG-3 or isotype at 10 ?g/ml were added to the effector cells either alone or in combination with CAR-T cells. In some series of experiments target cells were pre-treated with 20 ng/ml of IFN-? for 24 h. The cells were monitored for 1-2 days with the RTCA system, and impedance (proportional to cell index) was plotted over time. Cytotoxicity was calculated as (impedance of target cells without effector cellsimpedance of target cells with effector cells)?100/impedance of target cells without effector cells.
(70) ELISA Assay for Cytokine Secretion
(71) The target cells were cultured with the effector cells (CAR-T cells or non-transduced T cells) at in U-bottom 96-well plates with AIM V? ALBUMAX? medium plus 10% FBS, in triplicate. After 16 h the supernatant was removed and centrifuged to remove residual cells. In some experiments, supernatant after RTCA assay was used for ELISA cytokine assays. The supernatant was transferred to a new 96-well plate and analyzed by ELISA for human cytokines using kits from Thermo Fisher according to the manufacturer's protocol.
(72) Mouse In Vivo Xenograft Study
(73) Six-week old male NSG mice (Jackson Laboratories, Bar Harbor, ME) were housed in accordance with the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) protocol. Each mouse was injected subcutaneously with 2?10.sup.6 colon cancer cells in sterile 1?PBS. The CAR-T cells (1?10.sup.7 CAR-T cells/mice) were injected intravenously into mice at days 1, 7 and 13. Tumor sizes were measured with calipers twice-weekly and tumor volume (in mm.sup.3) was determined using the formula W.sup.2L/2, where W is tumor width and L is tumor length. At the end 0.1 ml of blood was collected and used for analysis of toxicology markers.
(74) Toxicology Markers.
(75) Mouse serum samples were processed with clinical chemistry analyzer (Beckman-Coulter AU680) by IDEX Bioanalytics (West Sacramento, CA) for detection levels of toxicology markers: ALT (alanine aminotransferase), AST (aspartate aminotransferase), amylase in U/ml.
(76) Primary Tumor Samples
(77) Samples with different types of normal tissues or tumor tissues were obtained from archived slides of Promab (Richmond, CA). The TMA slide with 106 primary colon cancer adenocarcinoma was obtained from Biomax (Rockville, MD) and used for IHC with PLAP antibody.
(78) Immunohistochemistry (IHC) Staining
(79) The primary tumor tissue or normal tissue section slides or primary TMA slides were incubated in xylene twice for 10 min, then hydrated in alcohol and rinsed in 1xPBS. Heat-induced antigen retrieval was performed using a pressure cooker for 20 min in 10 mM citrate buffer, pH 6.0. The slides were rinsed with PBS, incubated in a 3% H.sub.2O.sub.2 solution for 10 min, then rinsed again with 1xPBS, and incubated in goat serum for 20 min. The tissue section slides were incubated with mouse monoclonal PLAP (H17E2) primary antibody overnight at 4? C. or 1.5 hours at 37? C. The slides were rinsed 3 times with PBS, incubated with biotin-conjugated secondary antibody for 10 min, rinsed with PBS, incubated with streptavidin-conjugated peroxidase for 10 min, and rinsed 3 times with 1xPBS buffer. The slides were incubated in DAB substrate solution for 2-5 min under the microscope. The reaction was stopped by washing in water, counterstained with hematoxylin, rinsed with water, and dehydrated in 75%, 80%, 95% and 100% ethanol and xylene. For negative control isotype antibody was used, and for positive control placenta samples were used. Images were acquired on the Motic DMB5-2231PL microscope using Images Plus 2.0. software (Motic, Xiamen, China). PLAP expression correlation with survival free prognosis was performed using R2 Genomics Analysis and Visualization platform (2platform.com/r2.amc.nl).
Example 2. The Sequence of Mouse PLAP-CD28-CD3Zeta CAR
(80) The CAR structures were: Human CD8 signaling peptide, mouse scFv or humanized derived from antibody H17E2 (V.sub.H-Linker-3x(GGGGS)-V.sub.L), CD8 hinge, CD28 transmembrane, co-activation domain, CD3 zeta activation domain (
(81) TABLE-US-00002 SEQIDNO:2,tctagagccgccacc-flankingvector sequencestartingwithXbaIsite(italics):
(82) SEQ ID NO: 3 (Mouse PLAP CAR, called PMC262), starting with ATG and ending with a stop codon TAA (underlined), signaling peptide is in bold, VH with CDRs 1, 2, 3, bold underlined; linker in italics, VL with CDR 1,2,3 in bold, underlined); ScFV is flanked by 5 Nhe and 3 Xho sites, small font
(83) TABLE-US-00003 ATGGCCTTACCAGTGACCGCCTTGCTCCTGCCGCTGGCCTTGCTGCTCCA CGCCGCCAGGCCGgctagcCAGGTGCAGCTGAAGGAGTCAGGACCTGGCC TGGTGGCGCCCTCACAGAGCCTGTCCATCACATGCACTGTCTCAGGGTTC TCATTAACCAGTTATGGTGTAAGCTGGGTTCGCCAGCCTCCAAGAAAGGG TCTGGAGTGGCTGGGAGTAATATGGGAAGACGGGAGCACAAATTATCATT CAGCTCTCATATCCAGACTGAGCATCAACAAGGATAACTCCAAGAGCCAA GTTTTCTTAAAACTGAACAGTCTGCAAACTGATGACACAGCCACGTACTA CTGTGCCAAACCCCACTACGGTAGCAGCTACGTGGGGGCTATGGAATACT GGGGTCAAGGAACCTCAGTCACCGTCTCCTCA
GACATCCAGATGACTCAGTCTCCAGCCTCCCTAACT GCATCTGTGGGAGAAACTGTCACCATCACCTGTCGA GCAAGTGAAAATATTTACAGTTATGTAGCATGGTAT CAGCAGAAACAGGGAAAATCTCCTCAGTTCCTGGTC TATAATGCAAAATCCTTAGCAGAGGGTGTGCCA TCAAGGTTCAGTGGCAGYGGATCAGGCACACAGTTT TCTCTGAAGATCAACAGCCTGCAGCCTGAAGATTTT GGGAATTATTACTGTCAACATCATTATGTTAGTCCG TGGACGTTCGGTGGAGGCACCAAGCTGGAAATCAGA CGGctcgagAAGCCCACCACGACGCCAGCGCCGCGACCACCAACACCGG CGCCCACCATCGCGTCGCAGCCCCTGTCCCTGCGCCCAGAGGCGAGCCGG CCAGCGGCGGGGGGCGCAGTGCACACGAGGGGGCTGGACTTCGCCAGTGA Taagcccttttgggtgctggtggtggttggtggagtcctggcttgctata gcttgctagtaacagtggcctttattattttctgggtgaggagtaagagg agcaggctcctgcacagtgactacatgaacatgactccccgccgccccgg gcccacccgcaagcattaccagccctatgccccaccacgcgacttcgcag cctatcgctccAGAGTGAAGTTCAGCAGGAGCGCAGACGCCCCCGCGTAC CAGCAGGGCCAGAACCAGCTCTATAACGAGCTCAATCTAGGACGAAGAGA GGAGTACGATGTTTTGGACAAGAGACGTGGCCGGGACCCTGAGATGGGGG GAAAGCCGCAGAGAAGGAAGAACCCTCAGGAAGGCCTGTACAATGAACTG CAGAAAGATAAGATGGCGGAGGCCTACAGTGAGATTGGGATGAAAGGCGA GCGCCGGAGGGGCAAGGGGCACGATGGCCTTTACCAGGGTCTCAGTACAG CCACCAAGGACACCTACGACGCCCTTCACATGCAGGCCCTGCCCCCTCGC TAA SEQIDNO:4:taggaattcflankingvectorwithEcoR Isite(italics)
(84) SEQ ID NO: 5 is the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 3 (mouse PLAP-CD28-CD3zeta CAR): signaling peptide-VH-linker (in italics smaller font GSSSSx3)-VL-h-CD28?CD3. Sequence in bold is mouse PLAP scFv; CDR 1,2,3 underlined; VH-linker in italics-VL.
(85) TABLE-US-00004 (SEQIDNO:5) MALPVTALLLPLALLLHAARPASQV QLKESGPGLVAPSQSLSITCTVSGF SLTSYGVSWVRQPPRKGLEWLGVIW EDGSTNYHSALISRLSINKDNSKSQ VFLKLNSLQTDDTATYYCAKPHYGS SYVGAMEYWGQGTSVTVSS
DIQMTQSPAS LTASVGETVTITCRASENIYSYVAW YQQKQGKSPQFLVYNAKSLAEGVPS RFSGXGSGTQFSLKINSLQPEDFGN YYCQHHYVSPWTFGGGTKLEIRRLE KPTTTPAPRPPTPAPTIASQPLSLR PEASRPAAGGAVHTRGLDFASDKPF WVLVVVGGVLACYSLLVTVAFIIFW VRSKRSRLLHSDYMNMTPRRPGPTR KHYQPYAPPRDFAAYRSRVKFSRSA DAPAYQQGQNQLYNELNLGRREEYD VLDKRRGRDPEMetGGKPQRRKNPQE GLYNELQKDKMAEAYSEIGMKGERR RGKGHDGLYQGLSTATKDTYDALHM QALPPR MouseVH(withunderlinedCDR1,2,3), SEQIDNO:6 QVQLKESGPGLVAPSQSLSITCTVS GFSLTSYGVSWVRQPPRKGLEWLGV IWEDGSTNYHSALISRLSINKDNSK SQVFLKLNSLQTDDTATYYCAKPHY GSSYVGAMEYWGQGTSVTVSS MouseVL(withunderlinedCDR1,2,3), SEQIDNO:7 DIQMTQSPASLTASVGETVTITCRA SENIYSYVAWYQQKQGKSPQFLVYN AKSLAEGVPSRFSGXGSGTQFSLKI NSLQPEDFGNYYCQHHYVSPWTFGG GTKLEIRR MousePLAPscFv, SEQIDNO:8 QVQLKESGPGLVAPSQSLSITCTVS GFSLTSYGVSWVRQPPRKGLEWLGV IWEDGSTNYHSALISRLSINKDNSK SQVFLKLNSLQTDDTATYYCAKPHY GSSYVGAMEYWGQGTSVTVSS
DIQMTQSPASLTAS VGETVTITCRASENIYSYVAWYQQK QGKSPQFLVYNAKSLAEGVPSRFSG XGSGTQFSLKINSLQPEDFGNYYCQ HHYVSPWTFGGGTKLEIRR
(86) The scheme of CAR construct is shown below, which shows the sub-domain sequences of SEQ ID NO: 3.
(87) TABLE-US-00005 <huCD8signalpeptide> SEQIDNO:9 ATGGCCTTACCAGTGACCGCCTTGCTCCTGCCGCTGGCCTTGCTGCTCCA CGCCGCCAGGCCG <NheIrestrictionsite> GCTAGC <MousePLAPscFv(VH-linker-VL)> SEQIDNO:10 ATGGCCTTACCAGTGACCGCCTTGCTCCTGCCGCTGGCCTTGCTGCTCCA CGCCGCCAGGCCGgctagcCAGGTGCAGCTGAAGGAGTCAGGACCTGGCC TGGTGGCGCCCTCACAGAGCCTGTCCATCACATGCACTGTCTCAGGGTTC TCATTAACCAGTTATGGTGTAAGCTGGGTTCGCCAGCCTCCAAGAAAGGG TCTGGAGTGGCTGGGAGTAATATGGGAAGACGGGAGCACAAATTATCATT CAGCTCTCATATCCAGACTGAGCATCAACAAGGATAACTCCAAGAGCCAA GTTTTCTTAAAACTGAACAGTCTGCAAACTGATGACACAGCCACGTACTA CTGTGCCAAACCCCACTACGGTAGCAGCTACGTGGGGGCTATGGAATACT GGGGTCAAGGAACCTCAGTCACCGTCTCCTCA
GACATCCAGATGACTCAGTCTCCAGCCTCCCTAACT GCATCTGTGGGAGAAACTGTCACCATCACCTGTCGAGCA AGTGAAAATATTTACAGTTATGTAGCATGGTATCAG CAGAAACAGGGAAAATCTCCTCAGTTCCTGGTCTATAAT GCAAAATCCTTAGCAGAGGGTGTGCCATCAAGGTTCAGT GGCAGYGGATCAGGCACACAGTTTTCTCTGAAGATC AACAGCCTGCAGCCTGAAGATTTTGGGAATTATTACTGT CAACATCATTATGTTAGTCCGTGGACGTTCGGTGGAGGC ACCAAGCTGGAAATCAGACGG <XhoIrestrictionsite> CTCGAG <CD8> SEQIDNO:11 AAGCCCACCACGACGCCAGCGCCGCGACCACCAACACCGGCGCCCACCAT CGCGTCGCAGCCCCTGTCCCTGCGCCCAGAGGCGAGCCGGCCAGCGGCGG GGGGCGCAGTGCACACGAGGGGGCTGGACTTCGCCAGTGATaagccc <CD28TM/activation> SEQIDNO:12 TTTTGGGTGCTGGTGGTGGTTGGTGGAGTCCTGGCTTGCTATAGCTTGCT AGTAACAGTGGCCTTTATTATTTTCTGGGTGAGGAGTAAGAGGAGCAGGC TCCTGCACAGTGACTACATGAACATGACTCCCCGCCGCCCCGGGCCCACC CGCAAGCATTACCAGCCCTATGCCCCACCACGCGACTTCGCAGCCTATCG CTCC <CD3zeta> SEQIDNO:13 AGAGTGAAGTTCAGCAGGAGCGCAGACGCCCCCGCGTACCAGCAGGGCCA GAACCAGCTCTATAACGAGCTCAATCTAGGACGAAGAGAGGAGTACGATG TTTTGGACAAGAGACGTGGCCGGGACCCTGAGATGGGGGGAAAGCCGAGA AGGAAGAACCCTCAGGAAGGCCTGTACAATGAACTGCAGAAAGATAAGAT GGCGGAGGCCTACAGTGAGATTGGGATGAAAGGCGAGCGCCGGAGGGGCA AGGGGCACGATGGCCTTTACCAGGGTCTCAGTACAGCCACCAAGGACACC TACGACGCCCTTCACATGCAGGCCCTGCCCCCTCGCTAATAG <EcoRIrestrictionsite> Gaattc
Example 3. PLAP CAR with Humanized Antibody h1
(88) SEQ ID NO: 14 (human h1 PLAP CAR), starting with ATG and ending with a stop codon TAA (underlined). The sequence starts with a signaling peptide, then the humanized PLAP scFv h1. The nucleotide sequence has the same structure as SEQ ID NO: 2 except the scFv portion. The bold sequence is humanized h1 PLAP-1 scFv (CDRs 1, 2, 3 are underlined). Different nucleotides in humanized frame regions compared with mouse are underlined but not bolded.
(89) TABLE-US-00006 (SEQIDNO:14) ATGGCCTTACCAGTGACCGCCTTGCTCCTGCCGCTGGCCTTGCTGCTCCA CGCCGCCAGGCCGgctagcCAGGTCCAACTGCAGGAGAGCGGTCCAGGTC TTGTGAGACCTAGCCAGACCCTGAGCCTGACCTGCACCGTGTCTGGCTTC ACCTTCACCAGTTATGGTGTAAGCTGGGTGAGACAGCCACCTGGACGAGG TCTTGAGTGGATTGGAGTAATATGGGAAGACGGGAGCACAAATTATCATT CAGCTCTCATATCCAGAGTGACAATGCTGGTAGACACCAGCAAGAACCAG TTCAGCCTGAGACTCAGCAGCGTGACAGCCGCCGACACCGCGGTCTATTA TTGTGCAAGACCCCACTACGGTAGCAGCTACGTGGGGGCTATGGAATACT GGGGTCAAGGCAGCCTCGTCACAGTCTCCTCA
GACATCCAGATGACCCAGAGCCCAAGCAGCCTGAGC GCCAGCGTGGGTGACAGAGTGACC ATCACCTGTCGAGCAAGTGAAAATATTTACAGTTAT GTAGCATGGTACCAGCAGAAG CCAGGTAAGGCTCCAAAGCTGCTGATCTACAATGCA AAATCCTTAGCAGAGGGTGTGCCAAGC AGATTCAGCGGTAGCGGTAGCGGTACCGACTTCACC TTCACCATCAGCAGCCTCCAG CCAGAGGACATCGCCACCTACTACTGCCAACATCAT TATGTTAGTCCGTGGACGTTCGGCCAA GGGACCAAGGTGGAAATCAAACGT ctcgagAAGCCCACCACGACGCCAGCGCCGCGACCACCAACACCGGCGCC CACCATCGCGTCGCAGCCCCTGTCCCTGCGCCCAGAGGCGAGCCGGCCAG CGGCGGGGGGCGCAGTGCACACGAGGGGGCTGGACTTCGCCAGTGATaag cccttttgggtgctggtggtggttggtggagtcctggcttgctatagctt gctagtaacagtggcctttattattttctgggtgaggagtaagaggagca ggctcctgcacagtgactacatgaacatgactccccgccgccccgggccc acccgcaagcattaccagccctatgccccaccacgcgacttcgcagccta tcgctccAGAGTGAAGTTCAGCAGGAGCGCAGACGCCCCCGCGTACCAGC AGGGCCAGAACCAGCTCTATAACGAGCTCAATCTAGGACGAAGAGAGGAG TACGATGTTTTGGACAAGAGACGTGGCCGGGACCCTGAGATGGGGGGAAA GCCGCAGAGAAGGAAGAACCCTCAGGAAGGCCTGTACAATGAACTGCAGA AAGATAAGATGGCGGAGGCCTACAGTGAGATTGGGATGAAAGGCGAGCGC CGGAGGGGCAAGGGGCACGATGGCCTTTACCAGGGTCTCAGTACAGCCAC CAAGGACACCTACGACGCCCTTCACATGCAGGCCCTGCCCCCTCGCTAA
(90) SEQ ID NO: 15 is humanized h1 PLAP-1 CAR amino-acid sequence; it has the same structure as mouse PLAP-CAR except the scFv portion; sequence in bold is humanized h1 PLAP-1 ScFv, CDR 1, 2, 3 are in italics and underlined; linker are in a smaller font; different amino-acids in CDR regions in regular font; different amino-acids from mouse sequence in frame region are underlined.
(91) TABLE-US-00007 (SEQIDNO:15) MALPVTALLLPLALLLHAARPASQV QLQESGPGLVRPSQTLSLTCTVS WVRQPPGRGLEWIG
RVTMLVDTSKNQFSLRLSSVT AADTAVYYCA
WGQGSLVTVSS
DIQMTQSPSSLSASVGDRVTITC
AWYQQKPGKAPKLLIY
EGVPSRFSGSGSGTDFTFT ISSLQPEDIATYC
TFGQG TYKVEIKRLEKPTTTPAPRPPTPAP TIASQPLSLREASRPAAGGAVHTRP GLDFASDKPFWVLVVVGGVLACYSL LVTVAFIIFWVRSKRSRLLHSDYMN MTPRRPGPTRKHYQPYAPPRDFAAY RSRVKFSRSADAPAYQQGQNQLYNE LNLGRREEYDVLDKRRGRDPEMGGK PQRRKNPQEGLYNELQKDKMAEAYS EIGMKGERRRGKGHDGLYQGLSTAT KDTYDALHMQALPPR Humanizedh1PLAP-1VH (SEQIDNO:16) QVQLQESGPGLVRPSQTLSLTCTVS
TF
VSWVRQPPGRGLEWIGV
NYHSALISRVTMLVDTSK NQFSLRLSSVTAADTAVYYC
WGQGSLVTVSS Humanizedh1PLAP-1VL (SEQIDNO:17) DIQMTQSPSSLSASVGDRVTITCRA S
VAWYQQKPGKAPKLLIYN AKSLAEGVPSRFSGSGSGTDFTFTI SSLQPEDIATYYC
GQ GTKVEIKR Humanizedh1PLAP-1scFv (SEQIDNO:18) QVQLQESGPGLVRPSQTLSLTCTVS
TF
VSWVRQPPGRGLEWIGV
NYHSALISRVTMLVDTSK NQFSLRLSSVTAADTAVYYCAR
WGQGSLVTVSS
DIQMTQSPSS LSASVGDRVTITCRAS
VAW YQQKPGKAPKLLIYNAKSLAEGVPS RFSGSGSGTDFTFTISSLQPEDIAT YYC
GQGTKVEIKR
Example 4. PLAP CAR with Humanized Antibody h2
(92) The bioinformatics approach was performed to generate additional humanized versions of PLAP CAR. The sequences were codon-optimized for higher expression of CAR.
(93) The sequence starts with a signaling peptide (underlined, codon optimized), then the humanized PLAP scFv (bold). The nucleotide sequence has the same structure as SEQ ID NO: 3, except the scFv portion. The bold sequence is humanized PLAP-h2 (PMC409) scFv, the rest is same structure as mouse PLAP-CAR (SEQ ID NO: 5).
(94) TABLE-US-00008 HumanizedPLAPh2-CAR.Nucleotidesequence(codon optimized), SEQIDNO:19 ATGGCCTTACCAGTGACCGCCTTGCTCCTGCCGCTGGCCTTGCTGCTCCA CGCCGCCAGGCCGgctagc CAGGTGCAGCTTCAGGAAAGTGGACCGGGCCTTGTC AAACCGTCAGAGACCCTTTCACTGACTTGCACTGTAAGT GGTTTCTCCCTGACAAGCTACGGAGTCTCCTGGATA CGCCAGCCAGCGGGGAAAGGGCTTGAGTGGATCGGTGTG ATCTGGGAAGACGGGAGTACAAACTATCACTCAGCA CTCATTAGTCGAGTAACAATGTCCGTTGACACTTCCAAG AATCAATTCAGTTTGAAACTGTCTAGTGTGACGGCT GCGGATACAGCGGTTTATTACTGTGCCAGGCCTCATTAC GGAAGTTCTTATGTTGGTGCAATGGAGTATTGGGGA GCCGGCACAACTGTCACTGTGAGCTCCGGCGGGGGCGGA AGTGGGGGAGGAGGCTCAGGCGGAGGTGGAAGTGAT ATACAGATGACCCAGAGTCCTAGCTCACTCTCTGCGTCC GTAGGGGACCGGGTAACCATCACATGCCGCGCCAGCGAG AATATATACAGTTACGTTGCATGGTACCAGCAAAAA CCTGGCAAGGCGCCGAAGCTGTTGATCTACAACGCCAAA AGTCTCGCTTCCGGGGTCCCCAGCCGATTTTCTGGC TCAGGTAGTGGCACAGATTTCACACTCACAATAAGCTCT CTCCAGCCCGAAGACTTTGCGACGTACTACTGCCAG CATCATTATGTTAGTCCTTGGACGTTTGGCGGAGGCACA AAATTGGAAATAAAA ctcgagAAGCCCACCACGACGCCAGCGCCGCGACCACCAACACCGGCGCC CACCATCGCGTCGCAGCCCCTGTCCCTGCGCCCAGAGGCGAGCCGGCCAG CGGCGGGGGGCGCAGTGCACACGAGGGGGCTGGACTTCGCCAGTGATaag cccttttgggtgctggtggtggttggtggagtcctggcttgctatagctt gctagtaacagtggcctttattattttctgggtgaggagtaagaggagca ggctcctgcacagtgactacatgaacatgactccccgccgccccgggccc acccgcaagcattaccagccctatgccccaccacgcgacttcgcagccta tcgctccAGAGTGAAGTTCAGCAGGAGCGCAGACGCCCCCGCGTACCAGC AGGGCCAGAACCAGCTCTATAACGAGCTCAATCTAGGACGAAGAGAGGAG TACGATGTTTTGGACAAGAGACGTGGCCGGGACCCTGAGATGGGGGGAAA GCCGCAGAGAAGGAAGAACCCTCAGGAAGGCCTGTACAATGAACTGCAGA AAGATAAGATGGCGGAGGCCTACAGTGAGATTGGGATGAAAGGCGAGCGC CGGAGGGGCAAGGGGCACGATGGCCTTTACCAGGGTCTCAGTACAGCCAC CAAGGACACCTACGACGCCCTTCACATGCAGGCCCTGCCCCCTCGCTAA
(95) The humanized PLAP h2 CAR amino-acid sequence is shown in SEQ ID NO: 20. It has the same structure as Mouse PLAP-CAR except the scFv portion; sequence in bold is humanized PLAP ScFV consisting from VL-linker-VL.
(96) TABLE-US-00009 (SEQIDNO:20) MALPVTALLLPLALLLHAARPASQV QLQESGPGLVKPSETLSLTCTVSGF SLTSYGVSWIRQPAGKGLEWIGVIW EDGSTNYHSALISRVTMSVDTSKNQ FSLKLSSVTAADTAVYYCARPHYGS SYVGAMEYWGAGTTVTVSSGGGGSG GGGSGGGGSDIQMTQSPSSLSASVG DRVTITCRASENIYSYVAWYQQKPG KAPKLLIYNAKSLASGVPSRFSGSG SGTDFTLTISSLQPEDFATYYCQHH YVSPWTFGGGTKLEIKLEKPTTTPA PRPPTPAPTIASQPLSLRPEASRPA AGGAVHTRGLDFASDKPFWVLVVVG GVLACYSLLVTVAFIIFWVRSKRSR LLHSDYMNMTPRRPGPTRKHYQPYA PPRDFAAYRSRVKFSRSADAPAYQQ GQNQLYNELNLGRREEYDVLDKRRG RDPEMGGKPQRRKNPQEGLYNELQK DKMAEAYSEIGMKGERRRGKGHDGL YQGLSTATKDTYDALHMQALPPR HumanizedPLAPh2VH (SEQIDNO:21) QVQLQESGPGLVKPSETLSLTCTVS GFSLTSYGVSWIRQPAGKGLEWIGV IWEDGSTNYHSALISRVTMSVDTSK NQFSLKLSSVTAADTAVYYCARPHY GSSYVGAMEYWGAGTTVTVSS HumanizedPLAPh2VL,CDR1,2,3,underlined (SEQIDNO:22) DIQMTQSPSSLSASVGDRVTITCRASENIYSYVAWYQQKPGKAPKLLIYN AKSLASGVPSRFSGSGSGTDFTLTISSLQPEDFATYYCQHHYVSPWTFGG GTKLEIK HumanizedPLAPh2scFv (SEQIDNO:23) QVQLQESGPGLVKPSETLSLTCTVS GFSLTSYGVSWIRQPAGKGLEWIGV IWEDGSTNYHSALISRVTMSVDTSK NQFSLKLSSVTAADTAVYYCARPHY GSSYVGAMEYWGAGTTVTVSSGGGG SGGGGSGGGGSDIQMTQSPSSLSAS VGDRVTITCRASENIYSYVAWYQQK PGKAPKLLIYNAKSLASGVPSRFSG SGSGTDFTLTISSLQPEDFATYYCQ HHYVSPWTFGGGTKLEIK
Example 5. PLAP CAR with Humanized Antibody h4
(97) The humanized PLAP h4 CAR (PMC410) codon optimized nucleotide sequence starts with a signaling peptide (underlined, SEQ ID NO: 9, codon optimized), then the humanized PLAP scFv (bold). The bold sequence is humanized PLAP-h4 (PMC410) scFv,
(98) TABLE-US-00010 SEQIDNO:24isthehumanizedPLAPh4-CARnucleo- tidesequence(codonoptimized). ATGGCCTTACCAGTGACCGCCTTGCTCCTGCCGCTGGCCTTGCTGCTCCA CGCCGCCAGGCCGgctagc CAGGTTCAACTTCAAGAATCAGGACCGGGCTTGGTT AAACCTTCCGAAACTCTGAGCCTTACTTGTACAGTGTCT GGTGGATCTATTACGAGCTACGGAGTAAGTTGGATC CGGCAACCACCCGGGAAAGGGCTCGAATGGATAGGGGTG ATATGGGAGGATGGTTCAACCAACTACCATAGCGCT CTGATCAGCCGGGTGACCATTAGTGTCGACACTTCCAAA AACCAGTTTTCATTGAAGCTCTCAAGCGTAACTGCG GCGGATACCGCCGTATACTATTGTGCGCGGCCACATTAC GGGTCCTCTTATGTTGGGGCGATGGAATATTGGGGG GCAGGTACAACGGTCACGGTGTCTTCAGGAGGAGGAGGG TCAGGTGGTGGTGGTTCAGGAGGCGGGGGTAGCGAC ATACAGATGACTCAAAGCCCCTCTTCACTGTCTGCATCA GTCGGGGACAGAGTCACAATAACCTGCAGAGCGAGCGAG AATATCTACTCTTATGTAGCCTGGTATCAGCAAAAA CCCGGCAAGGCGCCGAAATTGCTCATCTATAATGCGAAA TCCTTGGCCAGTGGGGTCCCATCACGGTTCAGTGGC TCCGGCTCTGGAACCGATTTCACACTCACAATCTCTAGC CTCCAGCCCGAAGACTTCGCCACATACTATTGCCAA CATCACTATGTCAGCCCATGGACATTTGGGGGAGGTACG AAACTTGAAATTAAA ctcgagAAGCCCACCACGACGCCAGCGCCGCGACCACCAACACCGGCGCC CACCATCGCGTCGCAGCCCCTGTCCCTGCGCCCAGAGGCGAGCCGGCCAG CGGCGGGGGGCGCAGTGCACACGAGGGGGCTGGACTTCGCCAGTGATaag cccttttgggtgctggtggtggttggtggagtcctggcttgctatagctt gctagtaacagtggcctttattattttctgggtgaggagtaagaggagca ggctcctgcacagtgactacatgaacatgactccccgccgccccgggccc acccgcaagcattaccagccctatgccccaccacgcgacttcgcagccta tcgctccAGAGTGAAGTTCAGCAGGAGCGCAGACGCCCCCGCGTACCAGC AGGGCCAGAACCAGCTCTATAACGAGCTCAATCTAGGACGAAGAGAGGAG TACGATGTTTTGGACAAGAGACGTGGCCGGGACCCTGAGATGGGGGGAAA GCCGCAGAGAAGGAAGAACCCTCAGGAAGGCCTGTACAATGAACTGCAGA AAGATAAGATGGCGGAGGCCTACAGTGAGATTGGGATGAAAGGCGAGCGC CGGAGGGGCAAGGGGCACGATGGCCTTTACCAGGGTCTCAGTACAGCCAC CAAGGACACCTACGACGCCCTTCACATGCAGGCCCTGCCCCCTCGCTAAt ag SEQIDNO:25isthehumanizedPLAPh4CARamino- acidsequence:ScFvsequenceisinbold. MALPVTALLLPLALLLHAARPASQV QLQESGPGLVKPSETLSLTCTVSGG SITSYGVSWIRQPPGKGLEWIGVIW EDGSTNYHSALISRVTISVDTSKNQ FSLKLSSVTAADTAVYYCARPHYGS SYVGAMEYWGAGTTVTVSSGGGGSG GGGSGGGGSDIQMTQSPSSLSASVG DRVTITCRASENIYSYVAWYQQKPG KAPKLLIYNAKSLASGVPSRFSGSG SGTDFTLTISSLQPEDFATYYCQHH YVSPWTFGGGTKLEIKLEKPTTTPA PRPPTPAPTIASQPLSLRPEASRPA AGGAVHTRGLDFASDKPFWVLVVVG GVLACYSLLVTVAFIIFWVRSKRSR LLHSDYMNMTPRRPGPTRKHYQPYA PPRDFAAYRSRVKFSRSADAPAYQQ GQNQLYNELNLGRREEYDVLDKRRG RDPEMGGKPQRRKNPQEGLYNELQK DKMAEAYSEIGMKGERRRGKGHDGL YQGLSTATKDTYDALHMQALPPR HumanizedPLAP-h4VH(SEQIDNO:26).CDR1,2,3 underlined QVQLQESGPGLVKPSETLSLTCTVS G VSWIRQPPGKGLEWIGV IWEDGSTNYHSALISRVTISVDTSK NQFSLKLSSVTAADTAVYYCARPHY GSSYVGAMEYWGAGTTVTVSS HumanizedPLAP-h4VL(SEQIDNO:22) HumanizedPLAP-h4scFv(SEQIDNO:27)
Example 6. PLAP CAR with Humanized Antibody h3
(99) TABLE-US-00011 SEQIDNO:28isthehumanizedPLAP-h3(PMC407) nucleotidesequence: ATGGCCTTACCAGTGACCGCCTTGCTCCTGCCGCTGGCCTTGCTGCTCCA CGCCGCCAGGCCGgctagc CAGGTTCAATTGCAAGAATCAGGCCCTGGGCTTGTT AAGCCGTCAGAGACGCTTTCACTGACCTGTACCGTGAGC GGGTTCAGCCTCACTTCCTATGGTGTTTCTTGGATA CGACAACCACCCGGAAAGGGCCTGGAATGGATCGGGGTC ATTTGGGAAGATGGATCCACAAACTACAATCCTTCA CTTAAATCCCGAGTTACTATCTCTGTTGACACCAGTAAA AATCAATTCAGTCTCAAACTGTCCAGTGTGACAGCC GCCGACACAGCAGTCTACTATTGCGCTCGCCCACATTAC GGCTCCAGCTACGTTGGGGCGATGGAATATTGGGGA GCTGGTACCACAGTCACGGTTAGTAGTGGAGGAGGTGGT TCCGGGGGAGGGGGGAGCGGCGGAGGTGGATCTGAT ATCCAGATGACTCAGTCTCCAAGTTCCCTTTCTGCAAGC GTAGGTGATCGAGTCACTATCACATGCAGGGCGTCCGAG AACATATACAGTTATGTTGCATGGTACCAACAGAAG CCAGGTAAAGCGCCTAAGCTGCTTATTTATAACGCTAAA TCTCTTGCTTCTGGGGTACCATCCCGATTCTCAGGG TCTGGAAGTGGCACTGATTTCACGTTGACTATTTCCTCC CTTCAACCGGAGGATTTTGCAACGTACTACTGTCAG CATCATTATGTCAGCCCGTGGACGTTCGGTGGCGGCACG AAACTTGAGATTAAA ctcgagAAGCCCACCACGACGCCAGCGCCGCGACCACCAACACCGGCGCC CACCATCGCGTCGCAGCCCCTGTCCCTGCGCCCAGAGGCGAGCCGGCCAG CGGCGGGGGGCGCAGTGCACACGAGGGGGCTGGACTTCGCCAGTGATaag cccttttgggtgctggtggtggttggtggagtcctggcttgctatagctt gctagtaacagtggcctttattattttctgggtgaggagtaagaggagca ggctcctgcacagtgactacatgaacatgactccccgccgccccgggccc acccgcaagcattaccagccctatgccccaccacgcgacttcgcagccta tcgctccAGAGTGAAGTTCAGCAGGAGCGCAGACGCCCCCGCGTACCAGC AGGGCCAGAACCAGCTCTATAACGAGCTCAATCTAGGACGAAGAGAGGAG TACGATGTTTTGGACAAGAGACGTGGCCGGGACCCTGAGATGGGGGGAAA GCCGCAGAGAAGGAAGAACCCTCAGGAAGGCCTGTACAATGAACTGCAGA AAGATAAGATGGCGGAGGCCTACAGTGAGATTGGGATGAAAGGCGAGCGC CGGAGGGGCAAGGGGCACGATGGCCTTTACCAGGGTCTCAGTACAGCCAC CAAGGACACCTACGACGCCCTTCACATGCAGGCCCTGCCCCCTCGCTAAt ag SEQIDNO:29isthePLAPh3CARamino-acid sequence(ScFvsequencebold). MALPVTALLLPLALLLHAARPASQV QLQESGPGLVKPSETLSLTCTVSGF SLTSYGVSWIRQPPGKGLEWIGVIW EDGSTNYNPSLKSRVTISVDTSKNQ FSLKLSSVTAADTAVYYCARPHYGS SYVGAMEYWGAGTTVTVSSGGGGSGG GGSGGGGSDIQMTQSPSSLSASVGD RVTITCRASENIYSYVAWYQQKPGK APKLLIYNAKSLASGVPSRFSGSGS GTDFTLTISSLQPEDFATYYCQHHY VSPWTFGGGTKLEIKLEKPTTTPAP RPPTPAPTIASQPLSLRPEASRPAA GGAVHTRGLDFASDKPFWVLVVVGG VLACYSLLVTVAFIIFWVRSKRSRL LHSDYMNMTPRRPGPTRKHYQPYAP PRDFAAYRSRVKFSRSADAPAYQQG QNQLYNELNLGRREEYDVLDKRRGR DPEMGGKPQRRKNPQEGLYNELQKD KMAEAYSEIGMKGERRRGKGHDGLY QGLSTATKDTYDALHMQALPPR HumanizedPLAP-h3VH,SEQIDNO:30. QVQLQESGPGLVKPSETLSLTCTVS GFSLTSYGVSWIRQPPGKGLEWIG RVTISVDTS KNQFSLKLSSVTAADTAVYYCARPH YGSSYVGAMEYWGAGTTVTVSS HumanizedPLAPh3VL,SEQIDNO:22 HumanizedPLAPh3scFv,SEQIDNO:31
Example 7. PLAP CAR with Humanized Antibody h5
(100) TABLE-US-00012 SEQIDNO:32isthehumanizedPLAP-h5scFv nucleotidesequence,whichisinsertedbetweenXho andNheIsites: CAGGTCCAGCTGCAAGAATCAGGACCAGGACTGGTA AAGCCGTCCGAAACGCTCAGTTTGACGTGCACCGTGTCA GGCGGCAGTATAACATCCTACGGGGTCAGCTGGATC CGCCAACCGCCTGGGAAAGGCCTCGAATGGATAGGGGTG ATTTGGGAAGACGGGAGTACAAACTACAATCCGAGT TTGAAGAGCCGCGTGACGATAAGCGTTGACACAAGTAAG AACCAGTTTAGTCTCAAACTCTCCAGTGTAACAGCT GCTGATACAGCAGTGTACTACTGCGCTCGACCTCACTAT GGCTCTAGTTACGTCGGAGCTATGGAATACTGGGGG GCTGGCACTACAGTTACTGTGAGTTCCGGTGGCGGAGGA TCTGGTGGCGGTGGTTCCGGTGGGGGAGGATCCGAC ATACAGATGACGCAGTCCCCAAGTAGCTTGAGCGCATCA GTAGGAGACAGAGTCACCATTACATGCCGAGCTTCC GAGAACATCTACAGTTACGTAGCTTGGTATCAGCAA AAACCGGGGAAAGCACCTAAACTTCTCATCTACAACGCA AAAAGTCTGGCGAGTGGGGTTCCCTCAAGGTTCTCT GGAAGCGGGAGCGGAACGGATTTTACTCTGACTATTAGT AGTTTGCAACCAGAAGACTTTGCCACGTACTACTGT CAGCATCACTATGTCTCCCCTTGGACGTTCGGAGGAGGG ACCAAGCTCGAAATCAAA(SEQIDNO:31) HumanizedPLAPh5CARamino-acidsequence(SEQID NO:33) MALPVTALLLPLALLLHAARPASQV QLQESGPGLVKPSETLSLTCTVSGG SITSYGVSWIRQPPGKGLEWIGVIW EDGSTNYNPSLKSRVTISVDTSKNQ FSLKLSSVTAADTAVYYCARPHYGS SYVGAMEYWGAGTTVTVSSGGGGSG GGGSGGGGSDIQMTQSPSSLSASVG DRVTITCRASENIYSYVAWYQQKPG KAPKLLIYNAKSLASGVPSRFSGSG SGTDFTLTISSLQPEDFATYYCQHH YVSPWTFGGGTKLEIKLEKPTTTPA PRPPTPAPTIASQPLSLRPEASRPA AGGAVHTRGLDFASDKPFWVLVVVG GVLACYSLLVTVAFIIFWVRSKRSR LLHSDYMNMTPRRPGPTRKHYQPYA PPRDFAAYRSRVKFSRSADAPAYQQ GQNQLYNELNLGRREEYDVLDKRRG RDPEMGGKPQRRKNPQEGLYNELQK DKMAEAYSEIGMKGERRRGKGHDGL YQGLSTATKDTYDALHMQALPPR HumanizedPLAP-h5VH,SEQIDNO:34.CDR1,2,3, underlined. QVQLQESGPGLVKPSETLSLTCTVSG VSWIRQPPGKGLE
RVTISVDTSKNQFSLKLSSVTAADTAVYYCA RPHYGSSYVGAMEYWGAGTTVTVSS HumanizedPLAPh5VL,SEQIDNO:22 HumanizedPLAPh5scFv,SEQIDNO:35 QVQLQESGPGLVKPSETLSLTCTVS GGSITSYGVSWIRQPPGKGLEWIGV IWEDGSTNYNPSLKSRVTISVDTSK NQFSLKLSSVTAADTAVYYCARPHY GSSYVGAMEYWGAGTTVTVSSGGGG SGGGGSGGGGSDIQMTQSPSSLSAS VGDRVTITCRASENIYSYVAWYQQK PGKAPKLLIYNAKSLASGVPSRFSG SGSGTDFTLTISSLQPEDFATYYCQ HHYVSPWTFGGGTKLEIK
Example 8. PLAP has Negative Expression in Most Normal Tissues and Expressed in Gastro-Intestinal Cancers
(101) We performed IHC staining with PLAP antibody on placenta, testis, colon cancer, ovarian cancer and other normal or malignant tissues from different types of cancer. Placenta had highest staining, testis, colon and ovarian cancer were positive, while other type of cancer (breast, lung, prostate cancer) were negative as well as normal tissues: pancreas, tonsil, rectum, muscle, esophagus, brain and other tissues. In addition, we evaluated mRNA expression of PLAP expression in silico across 1457 different malignant cell lines, including 63 colon cancer cell lines using the Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia (CCLE). Expression of PLAP was high in gastro-intestinal (GI) cancers: cancers of esophagus, upper aerodigestive organs, stomach, pancreatic and colon cancers. We also performed analysis using Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) database of PLAP expression in nonmalignant normal tissues. PLAP mRNA had minimal expression in many normal tissues (many had 0 TMP (transcript per million kb) mRNA level. In contrast when we analyzed EpCAM as a positive control, its expression was medium-high in many normal tissues with medium expression in colon 445 TMP (transcript per million kb), small intestine 391 and in thyroid 259. Thus, PLAP has negative expression in most normal tissues in contrast to other tumor-associated markers.
Example 9. PLAP is Expressed in Primary Colon Tumors and Colon Cancer Cell Lines
(102) We performed IHC staining with mouse PLAP antibody using 106 primary colon cancer tumors, and found PLAP expression in 25 of 106 samples that is 23.8% of all colon cancer tumors. We also tested PLAP expression by R2 genomics analysis and visualization platform in 557 primary colon cancer tumors and performed correlation with patient outcome (
(103) In addition, we tested PLAP mRNA level in 117 colon cancer cell lines using microarray assay, and detected that 21.3% of colon cancer cell lines expressed PLAP mRNA. We performed FACS assay and detected PLAP in colon cancer cell lines with high PLAP mRNA expression: Lovo, Caco-2 and LS123 cell lines (
Example 10. PLAP-CAR-T Cells Specifically Kill PLAP-Positive Cells but not PLAP-Negative Cells
(104) We designed second generation CAR construct using mouse monoclonal PLAP antibody ScFv, CD8 alpha hinge, CD28 transmembrane and co-stimulatory domain and CD3 activation domain (
(105) PLAP-CAR-T cells were used in a Real-time cytotoxicity assay (RTCA) with PLAP-positive target colon cancer cell lines: Lovo, and LS-123; and with PLAP-negative colon cancer cell lines: HT29, and HCT116. PLAP-CAR-T cells had significant killing activity compared with normal T cells against Lovo and LS-123 colon cancer target cells but did not have significant killing activity with PLAP-negative HCT116 and HT29 colon cancer cell lines (
Example 11. Humanized PLAP-CAR-T Cells (h2 and h4) Specifically Kill PLAP-Positive Cells
(106) To improve mPLAP-CAR-T cells, we humanized mouse PLAP ScFv, and generated humanized PLAP-CAR cells (
(107) PLAP-CAR-T cells (h2 and h4) significantly killed PLAP-positive cells compared to Mock control CAR-T cells and did not kill significantly PLAP-negative cells in RTCA assay (
Example 12. Humanized PLAP-CAR-T Cells (h2 and h4) Significantly Decrease Colon Cancer Xenograft Tumor Growth
(108) We analyzed PLAP-CAR-T cell efficacy in Lovo xenograft mouse model in vivo (
(109) To test toxicity of CAR-T cells, we performed analysis of several enzymes from mouse blood serum: AST, ALT and amylase (
Example 13. Humanized PLAP-CAR-T Cells (h5) Specifically Kill PLAP-Positive Cells
(110) Real-time cytotoxicity assay (RCTA) and IFN-? assay were performed according to Example 1.
(111)
(112) These data show that humanized PLAP h5-CAR-T cells specifically and effectively killed PLAP-positive colon cancer cells and specifically secreted IFN-gamma against PLAP-positive colon cancer cell line.
Example 14. Combination of PLAP-CAR-T Cells with Checkpoint Inhibitors Increased Activity of CAR-T Cells
(113) We tested expression of PDL-1 on colon cancer target cells in response to hPLAP-CAR-T cells when we co-cultured them for 24 hours (
(114) Since Lovo cells activated PDL-1 significantly more in response to PLAP-CAR-T cells than in response to IFN-gamma (
(115) To evaluate up-regulation of checkpoint proteins in CAR-T cells after co-incubation with colon cancer cells, we tested several checkpoint proteins: PD-1, TIM-3, TIGIT and LAG-3. Only PD-1 was significantly up-regulated in CAR-T cells after co-culture with PALP-positive colon cancer target cells than before co-culture (
(116) To test checkpoint inhibitors in combination with PLAP-CAR-T cells, we used PLAP-h2-CAR-T cells in combination with either PD-1 antibody or LAG-3 antibody and performed RTCA assay with Lovo target cells (
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