Journal article

A novel peptide-mhc targeted chimeric antigen receptor t cell forms a t cell-like immune synapse

SS Wang, K Luong, FM Gracey, S Jabar, B McColl, RS Cross, MR Jenkins

Biomedicines | MDPI | Published : 2021

Abstract

Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T cell therapy is a promising form of adoptive cell therapy that re-engineers patient-derived T cells to express a hybrid receptor specific to a tumour-specific antigen of choice. Many well-characterised tumour antigens are intracellular and therefore not accessible to antibodies at the cell surface. Therefore, the ability to target peptide-MHC tumour targets with antibodies is key for wider applicability of CAR T cell therapy in cancer. One way to evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of ligating tumour target cells is studying the immune synapse. Here we generated a second-generation CAR to targeting the HLA-A*02:01 restricted H3.3K27M epitope, identifie..

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Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

We thank the following for financial support: NHMRC, RCD Foundation, and Isabella and Marcus Foundation. SSW is funded by the Matthew Rathbone Clinical Research Fellowship and My Room Children's Cancer Charity, MRJ is funded by a NHMRC Investigator Grant (APP1172858). RSC was funded by Cure Brain Cancer Foundation Fellowship.