3 research outputs found

    Phenotypic and functional characterization of pharmacologically expanded VĪ³9VĪ“2Ā T cells in pigtail macaques

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    Summary: While gaining interest as treatment for cancer and infectious disease, the clinical efficacy of VĪ³9VĪ“2Ā T cell-based immunotherapeutics has to date been limited. An improved understanding of Ī³Ī“ TĀ cell heterogeneity across lymphoid and non-lymphoid tissues, before and after pharmacological expansion, is required. Here, we describe the phenotype and tissue distribution of VĪ³9VĪ“2Ā T cells at steady state and following inĀ vivo pharmacological expansion in pigtail macaques. Intravenous phosphoantigen administration with subcutaneous rhIL-2 drove robust expansion of VĪ³9VĪ“2Ā T cells in blood and pulmonary mucosa, while expansion was confined to the pulmonary mucosa following intratracheal antigen administration. Peripheral blood VĪ³9VĪ“2Ā T cell expansion was polyclonal, and associated with a significant loss of CCR6 expression due to IL-2-mediated receptor downregulation. Overall, we show the tissue distribution and phenotype of inĀ vivo pharmacologically expanded VĪ³9VĪ“2Ā T cells can be altered based on the antigen administration route, with implications for tissue trafficking and the clinical efficacy of VĪ³9VĪ“2Ā T cell immunotherapeutics

    Stem cellā€“derived CAR T cells traffic to HIV reservoirs in macaques

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    Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) with CCR5ā€“ donor cells is the only treatment known to cure HIV-1 in patients with underlying malignancy. This is likely due to a donor cellā€“mediated graft-versus-host effect targeting HIV reservoirs. Allo-HSCT would not be an acceptable therapy for most people living with HIV due to the transplant-related side effects. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) immunotherapies specifically traffic to malignant lymphoid tissues (lymphomas) and, in some settings, are able to replace allo-HSCT. Here, we quantified the engraftment of HSC-derived, virus-directed CAR T cells within HIV reservoirs in a macaque model of HIV infection, using potentially novel IHC assays. HSC-derived CAR cells trafficked to and displayed multilineage engraftment within tissue-associated viral reservoirs, persisting for nearly 2 years in lymphoid germinal centers, the brain, and the gastrointestinal tract. Our findings demonstrate that HSC-derived CAR+ cells reside long-term and proliferate in numerous tissues relevant for HIV infection and cancer
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