Article Text
Abstract
Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) restriction of conventional T-cell targeting introduces complexity in generating T-cell therapy strategies for patients with cancer with diverse HLA-backgrounds. A subpopulation of atypical, major histocompatibility complex-I related protein 1 (MR1)-restricted T-cells, distinctive from mucosal-associated invariant T-cells (MAITs), was recently identified recognizing currently unidentified MR1-presented cancer-specific metabolites. It is hypothesized that the MC.7.G5 MR1T-clone has potential as a pan-cancer, pan-population T-cell immunotherapy approach. These cells are irresponsive to healthy tissue while conferring T-cell receptor(TCR) dependent, HLA-independent cytotoxicity to a wide range of adult cancers. Studies so far are limited to adult malignancies. Here, we investigated the potential of MR1-targeting cellular therapy strategies in pediatric cancer. Bulk RNA sequencing data of primary pediatric tumors were analyzed to assess MR1 expression. In vitro pediatric tumor models were subsequently screened to evaluate their susceptibility to engineered MC.7.G5 TCR-expressing T-cells. Targeting capacity was correlated with qPCR-based MR1 mRNA and protein overexpression. RNA expression of MR1 in primary pediatric tumors varied widely within and between tumor entities. Notably, embryonal tumors exhibited significantly lower MR1 expression than other pediatric tumors. In line with this, most screened embryonal tumors displayed resistance to MR1T-targeting in vitro. MR1T susceptibility was observed particularly in pediatric leukemia and diffuse midline glioma models. This study demonstrates potential of MC.7.G5 MR1T-cell immunotherapy in pediatric leukemias and diffuse midline glioma, while activity against embryonal tumors was limited. The dismal prognosis associated with relapsed/refractory leukemias and high-grade brain tumors highlights the promise to improve survival rates of children with these cancers.
- immunotherapy
- pediatrics
- cell engineering
Data availability statement
Data are available in a public, open access repository. CPM for MR1, HLA-A, HLA-B, and HLA-C genes were retrieved via the Princess Máxima Center Biobank and Data Access Committee (BDAC) (EGAC00001001864). The code and data used in the analyses are available via https://github.com/VanHeeschLab/Cornel_et_al_2023. The single cell RNA sequencing data from the two analyzed hepatoblastoma organoids are available via ref.40 Data of functional assays is available upon request.
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Introduction
Unconventional T-cell populations that recognize their ligand beyond the context of major histocompatibility complexes (MHC) are increasingly recognized for their potential in cellular cancer immunotherapy. Examples of unconventional T-cell populations include invariant NKT-cells (iNKT), γδ T-cells, mucosal-associated invariant T-cells (MAIT), and MR1T-cells. Unlike conventional T-cells, which rely on polymorphic MHC molecules for target recognition, these unconventional T-cells recognize their cognate target in the context of monomorphic MHC-like molecules. 1 This majorly decreases the complexity of the generation of cell therapy products suitable for individuals with diverse human leukocyte antigen (HLA) backgrounds. One interesting unconventional T-cell population is the so-called MR1T-cell population, which recognizes their cognate target in the context of MHC class I-related protein 1 (MR1).
The MHC-I-like MR1 molecule is ubiquitously expressed in most nucleated human cells.2 Six different allelic MR1 variants are described, of which the vast majority of the population possess the wildtype MR1*01 allele.1 Unlike conventional MHC-I molecules, however, cell surface expression on healthy cells is low to undetectable.3 MR1 is retained in the endoplasmic reticulum until an antigen is loaded, resulting in transient cell surface expression after dimerization with β2M.4 MR1 complexes with intermediate metabolites produced by cells during metabolic stress, resulting in stress-induced MR1 translocation to the cell surface.3 Until recently, MR1 was mainly considered in association with MAIT cells. MAITs recognize intermediate metabolites derived from bacterial vitamin B2 and B9 molecules presented in MR1 to detect bacterial infection in mucosal tissues.3 5–7
Interest in the field of cancer immunotherapy spiked after publication of two recent studies highlighting the discovery of a distinct subpopulation of cancer-specific MR1-restricted T-cells, distinctive from MAITs.3 6 These MR1T-cells recognize MR1-presented cancer-specific metabolite(s) on the cell surface of cancer cells, the exact nature of which remains unidentified.8 Crowther and colleagues isolated an MR1-restricted, tumor-reactive T-cell clone from peripheral blood of a healthy donor.6 The clone is irresponsive to healthy tissue, while conferring HLA-independent cytotoxicity towards a diverse array of adult cancer cells. They emphasize the potential of this MC.7.G5 MR1T-cell clone as a pan-cancer, pan-population T-cell immunotherapy approach.9
The study conducted by Crowther et al. thus far focused exclusively on adult malignancies.6 Pediatric tumors exhibit distinct characteristics compared with adult tumors, including a scarcity of targetable molecules due to their low mutational burden. Consequently, there is a critical need to identify tumor-specific antigens in pediatric tumors. Even though both classified as ‘cancer’, it is now widely accepted that the pathobiology of pediatric tumors deviates from that of adult tumors.10 Therefore, it remains to be studied whether the MC.7.G5 MR1T-cell clone’s reactivity towards adult tumors translates to pediatric tumors. In the present study, we investigated the potential of MR1-targeted T-cell therapy in pediatric oncology using a comprehensive panel of pediatric tumor models.
Methods
Bulk RNA sequencing
Parents of patients from whom tumors were RNA sequenced signed informed consent forms approved by the responsible authority. Sequencing library preparation and data preprocessing from fresh frozen primary tumor samples from the 812 included pediatric patients was done a priori according to the institute’s standardized pipelines and guidelines.11 12 In short, sequencing reads were aligned to the Genome Reference Consortium Human Build 38 assembly (GRCh38.p12) using STAR V.2.7.2d.13 Duplicates were marked using the Genome Analysis Toolkit’s (GATK) Picardtools V.2.20.1 MarkDuplicates. Base calling quality was reassessed with GATK V.4.2 BaseRecalibrator. Quality was assessed using Picard’s CollectMultipleMetrics, EstimateLibraryComplexity and MultiQC V.1.9 was used to aggregate all reports per sample. Exons based on the GENCODE V.31 gene annotation were quantified using FeatureCounts from the Subread V.1.6.4 package14 and normalized to gene counts per million (CPM). CPM for MR1, HLA-A, HLA-B, and HLA-C genes were retrieved via the Princess Máxima Center Biobank and Data Access Committee (BDAC) (EGAC00001001864). The code and data used in the analyses are available via https://github.com/VanHeeschLab/Cornel_et_al_2023.
Cell culture
In vitro pediatric cancer models, including neuroblastoma (NBL), acute myeloid leukemia (AML), B-cell/T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL, T-ALL), diffuse midline glioma (DMG), hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), hepatoblastoma (HBL), and malignant rhabdoid tumors (MRT), were included; origin and culture conditions are summarized in table 1.15–24 The adult chronic myeloid leukemia K562 line and adult T-ALL Jurkat line were used as a positive control.6 MR1 allelic variant expression of cell lines was derived from public databases (CCLE and Crown Bioscience). MR1 overexpressing cell lines were generated as described in the online supplemental methods. All cells were cultured under standard culturing conditions, refreshed and passaged biweekly, and checked every other month for mycoplasma infection and authenticity.
Supplemental material
Generation and culturing of MC.7.G5 TCR+ T-cells
The MC.7.G5 TCR sequence was retrieved from the manuscript of Crowther and colleagues.6 MC.7.G5 TCR expressing T-cells were generated as described in the online supplemental methods.25–27 T-cells were stimulated once every other week using a rapid expansion protocol containing pooled irradiatedperipheral blood mononuclear cells (35 Gy), LCL-TM (80 Gy), 1 μg/mL PHA (Oxoid BV), and 50 U/mL IL-2 (Novartis) in RPMI supplemented with 5% pooled human serum and 1% P/S.28 T-cells were phenotyped by flow cytometry after expansion to confirm stable MC.7.G5 TCR expression. T-cells were used in functional assays 10–14 days after stimulation.
Functional T-cell assays
Cytotoxicity assay
The cytotoxic capacity of MC.7.G5 TCR+ T-cells was assessed using a flow cytometry-based cytotoxicity assay. Indicated target cells were labeled with Cell-Tracer Violet (CTV) (Life Technologies) according to manufacturer’s instructions. In cocultures with organoids and patient-derived xenograft cells, T-cells were labeled instead. Effects of labeling on the cytotoxic capacity of T-cells was ruled out. Cells were cocultured overnight (16–18 hours) at an effector-to-target ratio (E:T) of 10:1, unless otherwise indicated. After coculture, cells were spun down, supernatant was partly removed, and 7-AAD was added to evaluate cytotoxicity.
Cytokine secretion assay
Indicated target cells were co-cultured with MC.7.G5 TCR+ T-cells (or donor-matched, untransduced controls) overnight at an E:T of 1:1. Supernatants were harvested to determine secretion of cytokines using Legendplex according to manufacturer’s instructions (Biolegend).
MHC-I blocking assay
MHC-I independent cytotoxicity was confirmed in an MHC-I blocking assay. 697 target cells were preincubated with 50 μg/mL panHLA-ABC blocking antibody (Clone W6/32, Biolegend) for 1 hour.29 Cells were subsequently cultured with effector cells at an E:T of 10:1 for 5 hours. HLA-A2 restricted Wilms’ Tumor 1 (WT1)-specific T-cells30 acted as a positive control for MHC-I block. Isotype IgG antibody acted as a negative control.29
Flow cytometry analyses were performed on a BD FACSCanto (cytotoxicity and MHC-I blocking) or BD Fortessa (TCR expression & Cytokine Secretion Assay) (BD Biosciences). Results were standardized to cocultures with untransduced, donor-matched T-cells (online supplemental figure S3) using the formula: % cytotoxicity = (% dead cells in MC.7.G5 coculture − % dead cells in untransduced coculture)/(100 − % dead cells in untransduced coculture) × 100. Targeting was defined as >15% standardized killing. Data are shown as mean±SEM. K562 served as a positive control in all performed assays.
Quantitative real-time PCR analysis
Cells were pelleted, RNA was extracted with the RNeasy mini extraction kit (Qiagen), and cDNA was synthesized using the RevertAid H Minus First Strand cDNA Synthesis Kit with random hexamer primers (Life Technologies). mRNA expression of MR1 was subsequently quantified using SYBR Select Master Mix (Life Technologies), the forward 5′-TAATGTGGCTCACACCATCAA-3′ and reverse 5′-GTCTTTCCCATACTCCAGGAATC-3′ MR1 primers. Expression was determined relative to β-actin (forward primer: 5′-AGCGGGAAATCGTGCGTGAC-3′, reverse primer: 5′-CAATGGTGATGACCTGGC CGT-3′). Expression analysis was performed using the QuantStudio 3 Real-Time PCR System (Life Technologies). Relative expression is visualized as 2−ΔCt, data shown as mean±SD.
Single cell RNA sequencing data analysis
Single cell RNA-seq data of HBL organoid models HB13E and HB13F were retrieved from and analyzed as in Kluiver and Lu et al.17 The immune activation score gene signature was based on Sengupta et al.31 and scores were calculated using the Seurat’s AddModuleScore function.32 Gene set enrichment analysis was performed using the fgsea package,33 with GO Biological Process gene sets downloaded from www.gsea-msigdb.org.
Data analysis
Flow cytometric analyses were performed with FlowJo V.10.7.1. Graphs were generated using Rstudio and Graphpad Prism V.9. Differences in expression between two (embryonal vs other tumors) or more groups (different tumor entities) were evaluated using a non-parametric Mann-Whitney U or Kruskall-Wallis test between separate groups, respectively. Correlation between two genes were calculated using Pearson correlation, correlation between killing and MR1 expression was calculated using linear regression. P values of<0.05 were considered significant.
Results
Transcriptome analysis of primary pediatric tumors reveals variable MR1 RNA expression across tumor entities
MR1 RNA expression was analyzed using bulk RNA-seq in 812 primary pediatric tumors from newly diagnosed patients. Despite the large variation in expression within and between tumor entities, significant differences in MR1 expression were observed between tumor types (p<0.0001) (figure 1A). Across all tumors, low/high grade glioma (L/HGG), B-cell and T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B/T-ALL), acute myeloid leukemia (AML), and ependymoma expressed relatively high levels of MR1. Interestingly, tumors classified as embryonal (medulloblastoma (MB), atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumors (ATRT), neuroblastoma (NBL), malignant rhabdoid tumors (MRT), and hepatoblastoma (HBL)) expressed significantly lower levels of MR1 (p<0.0001) compared with other types of tumors (figure 1B).
Embryonal tumors present in early childhood are thought to develop due to neoplastic transformation of embryonal cell stages during fetal development.34 Many of these tumors exert low immunogenicity,29 35–38 among others characterized by low expression of the MHC-I coding HLA-A/B/C genes, which is thought to be a derivative of their origin. We determined correlation of MR1 and HLA-A/B/C expression (figure 1C (HLA-C) and online supplemental figure S1 (HLA-A and HLA-B)) and observed a significant correlation between expression of these markers (r=0.71–0.72, p<0.001). This supports the hypothesis that low expression of MR1 is part of the low immunogenic phenotype of embryonal tumors.
MC.7.G5 MR1T-cells target pediatric leukemias and glioma, but not neuroblastoma and malignant rhabdoid tumors
We next screened available in vitro pediatric tumor models for their susceptibility to MR1T-cell targeting. MC.7.G5 MR1T-cells were generated by lentiviral TCR introduction and variable beta chain-based FACS sorting (online supplemental figure S2A), after which functionality and MHC-I independency was confirmed in line with previously confirmed susceptibility (online supplemental figure S2B, C).6
Overnight coculture experiments were conducted to assess the targeting capacity of MR1T-cells in cell lines and patient-derived organoids (figure 2A). Adult leukemia lines served as positive controls (K562 and Jurkat6). We observed a variable targeting capacity among screened pediatric cancer models. The largest potential of MR1-directed T-cell therapy was observed in DMG and leukemic models. Both screened patient-derived DMG models were targeted by MC.7.G5 MR1T cells. Similarly, the majority of screened leukemic models demonstrated susceptibility to MC.7.G5 MR1T targeting. Interestingly, each leukemic tumor entity included one resistant model. In contrast, most of the screened NBL models (8 out of 9) and all screened MRT models were resistant to MC.7.G5 targeting. Presence of cytokines and cytotoxic granular proteins in supernatants of targeted models validated these findings (online supplemental figure S4). Consistent with the observed lower expression of MR1 observed in embryonal tumors (figure 1), our results demonstrated that embryonal tumor models displayed significantly reduced susceptibility to MC.7.G5 MR1T-cell targeting compared with other tumor entities (figure 2B). Targeting was not restricted to an allelic MR1 variant (online supplemental table S1).
Given the unknown MR1-presented ligand recognized by the MC.7.G5 TCR, we were unable to rely on presence of the metabolite in tumors to predict susceptibility to MC.7.G5 targeting. Therefore, we investigated whether MR1 expression could serve as a reliable marker to predict susceptibility. Since MR1 surface expression required for cancer cell recognition is below the threshold for antibody staining,6 we quantified MR1 mRNA expression levels and correlated this with susceptibility to MC.7.G5-mediated cytotoxicity. A significant but weak correlation (p<0.001, R2=0.385) was observed between MR1 expression and susceptibility to targeting (figure 2C). All tumor models with a high relative expression (>0.01) were targeted, models with a low relative MR1 expression (<0.002) were resistant to MC.7.G5-mediated cytotoxicity. Sensitivity of models with intermediate MR1 expression levels was less predictive (0.002–0.01). Overall, cells susceptible to MC.7.G5 MR1T-targeting exhibited higher relative MR1 expression compared with resistant cells (p<0.001) (figure 2D).
To further substantiate the hypothesis that low MR1 expression, and not availability of the targeted antigen, limits MC7.G5 targeting, we induced overexpression of MR1 in three resistant tumor models (CHP212, IMR32, and CCRF-CEM) and K562 as a positive control (online supplemental figure S5). MR1 overexpression significantly sensitized resistant models to MC.7.G5 MR1T-cell cytotoxicity (figure 2E). We next compared single cell sequencing data of the two screened HBL models that were established from the same patient, of which HB13F was susceptible to MC.7.G5 MR1T-cell targeting, while HB13E was resistant. While we observe major differences in both immunogenicity (figure 2F) and metabolic pathway enrichment (figure 2G) between the two models, we do not find enrichment of metabolic gene sets involved in nucleobase adduct generation and formation of reactive oxygen species, two processes recently suggested to be important in generation of MR1 presentable antigens8 (online supplemental figure S6).
Discussion
The recent identification of T-cells that recognize an unknown cancer-specific metabolite presented by the monomorphic MHC-I-related protein MR1 posed the question of their potential as a pan-cancer, pan-population cellular immunotherapy approach.6 In this study, we investigated the potential of MR1-targeting cellular therapy strategies in pediatric cancer. Our findings revealed promise of targeting pediatric leukemias and brain tumors with MC.7.G5 T-cell-based immunotherapy, while targeting of embryonal cell-derived pediatric tumors was limited.
Pediatric tumors share a common low mutational burden, which critically limits the development of tumor-specific immunotherapeutic strategies.39 40 Metabolic dysregulation is observed across all pediatric tumors, making the targeting of aberrant metabolites presented in the context of MR1 of particular interest. It is hypothesized that tumor antigens with a tumor-supporting role have the highest potential as a therapeutic target, as this could minimize the risk of immune escape due to antigen loss.41 The CRISPR-Cas9 screen that identified MR1 specificity of the MC.7.G5 clone6 did not yield genes related to metabolic pathway(s) involved in the generation of the unknown MR1-presented metabolite. This observation suggests that the ligand of interest is likely part of a metabolic pathway essential for cancer cell survival. Interestingly, a more recent CRISPR-Cas9 screen using several other MR1T-cell clones, found that formation of nucleobase adducts, reactive oxygen species, and carbonyl species are all important in the formation of the MR1-presented antigenic metabolite(s).8
The current study indicates that embryonal tumors, characterized by a low immunogenic phenotype,29 35–38 also have low or absent MR1 expression. This limits the applicability of MR1-targeting immunotherapies in embryonal tumors. Nonetheless, the fact that two of the screened embryonal tumor models (GIMEN and HB13F) are susceptible to MC.7.G5 targeting does suggest the potential of inducing MR1 presentation in these tumor types. Interestingly, the GIMEN cell line is the only model out of the eight screened NBL models that reflects the mesenchymal NBL cell lineage,42 which is reported to be more immunogenic than adrenergic counterparts.29 31 In addition, we previously established two different hepatoblastoma organoid models using tumor tissue from the same patient.17 The HB13F organoid, which resembles the more differentiated fetal HBL tumor subtype,43 is susceptible to MC7.G5 targeting, while HB13E model, resembling the poorly differentiated embryonal HBL tumor subtype,43 is resistant to such targeting. The targeting potential in a subset of embryonal tumors indicates the opportunity to induce susceptibility to MR1-restricted immunotherapeutic strategies. The fact that both MR1T-sensitive and MR1T-resistant cancer cells can be isolated from the same patient does, however, warrant studying of MR1 downregulation as a resistance mechanism against MR1-based immunotherapies.
It should be noted that the MC.7.G5 sensitivity of leukemic models was variable. This may be resulting from the stage of hematopoiesis from which the leukemic cells arose. The resistant Kasumi-1 line, for example, arose from very early myeloid stem cells that may lack immunological features like MR1 expression.44 This further substantiates the hypothesis that the low immunogenicity of embryonal tumors causes a lack of susceptibility to MR1-mediated cytotoxicity. Future studies into cancer-specific MR1-targeting immunotherapy strategies should focus on stratification of subtypes of tumor entities susceptible to MR1T targeting. This will help to identify the specific tumor subtypes that would benefit from MR1-targeting immunotherapies.
We studied the correlation between MR1 mRNA levels and sensitivity to targeting by the MC.7.G5 TCR to determine whether targeting efficacy could be predicted. Although the correlation was significant, the data indicate that mRNA expression of MR1 is not the only prerequisite for efficient targeting. Overexpression of MR1 in resistant cell lines, however, did sensitize cells to MC.7.G5 cytotoxicity, indicating that the targeted antigen is present in these resistant models. Unraveling the presented metabolite(s)8 to MR1T is key to efficiently predict, and potentially pharmacologically increase, sensitivity to MR1T-cell cytotoxicity.
Recent studies found several single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the MR1 gene, generating six different allelic MR1 variants.1 One of these SNPs, present in the MR1*04 allelic variant represented in 1% of the population, diminishes loading of the MAIT ligand 5-(2-oxopropylideneamino)-6-D-ribitylaminouracil.45 This indicates that MR1 is not as monomorphic as previously assumed, which may have implications for the pan-population applicability of MR1T-based immunotherapies. A recent study suggests that a murinized version of the MC.7.G5 TCR may preferentially recognize ligand loaded MR1*04 complexes, also on healthy B-cells and monocytes of MR1*04 individuals.46 Consequently, it is important to study on-target and off-target reactivity of MR1T-based immunotherapies in tumor and healthy tissue of individuals with the several MR1 allelic variants. The fact that we and/or Crowther and colleagues show reactivity of the MC.7.G5 clone against MR1*01 (71% population), MR1*02 (25% population), and MR1*04 (1% population) expressing cancer cells indicates on-target reactivity of the clone across several allelic variants.6 46
In conclusion, while MR1T-cell therapy may not be universally applicable to all pediatric cancers, it holds significant potential for the treatment of various pediatric tumor types. Future studies should particularly focus on the potential of MR1 targeting therapy in patients with relapsed/refractory AML and T-ALL, DMG, and ependymoma, as these patients currently have a dismal prognosis. The unique features of MR1, including its relatively monomorphic nature, widespread expression in various pediatric tumors, and the tumor-specific metabolic disruption targeted by MR1T-cells, highlight the promise of MR1T-based cellular therapy as a cost-effective approach to improve the survival rates of children with cancer.
Data availability statement
Data are available in a public, open access repository. CPM for MR1, HLA-A, HLA-B, and HLA-C genes were retrieved via the Princess Máxima Center Biobank and Data Access Committee (BDAC) (EGAC00001001864). The code and data used in the analyses are available via https://github.com/VanHeeschLab/Cornel_et_al_2023. The single cell RNA sequencing data from the two analyzed hepatoblastoma organoids are available via ref.40 Data of functional assays is available upon request.
Ethics statements
Patient consent for publication
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References
Supplementary materials
Supplementary Data
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Footnotes
Contributors The manuscript was written by AMC with critical comments of SN, WCP, OTH, SvH, JTvD, EH, JK, ZS, LLN. The pediatric cancer models were cultured by LvdS, MA, MvH, ED, AMC, NMMD, JMvR, DAMHvdB, JLB, AdC, FB, YL, and AKH. Functional assays and qPCR were performed and supervised by LvdS, MA, AMC, ED, MvH, NMMD, LD. RNA sequencing analysis was performed by JvD, TAK, APPL. Figures were generated by AMC, JvD, TAK, LvdS. Conceptualization was performed by AMC and SN.
Funding This work was supported by the Villa Joep Foundation (IWOV-Actief.51391.180034).
Competing interests ZS and JK are inventors on different patents for γδ TCR sequences, recognition mechanisms and isolation strategies. JK is scientific cofounder and shareholder of Gadeta (www.gadeta.nl). The remaining authors declare no competing interests.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
Supplemental material This content has been supplied by the author(s). It has not been vetted by BMJ Publishing Group Limited (BMJ) and may not have been peer-reviewed. Any opinions or recommendations discussed are solely those of the author(s) and are not endorsed by BMJ. BMJ disclaims all liability and responsibility arising from any reliance placed on the content. Where the content includes any translated material, BMJ does not warrant the accuracy and reliability of the translations (including but not limited to local regulations, clinical guidelines, terminology, drug names and drug dosages), and is not responsible for any error and/or omissions arising from translation and adaptation or otherwise.