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Stem cell memory EBV-specific T cells control EBV tumor growth and persist in vivo.


ABSTRACT: Adoptive T cell therapy (ACT), the therapeutic transfer of defined T cell immunity to patients, offers great potential in the fight against different human diseases including difficult-to-treat viral infections, but persistence and longevity of the cells are areas of concern. Very-early-differentiated stem cell memory T cells (TSCMs) have superior self-renewal, engraftment, persistence, and anticancer efficacy, but their potential for antiviral ACT remains unknown. Here, we developed a clinically scalable protocol for expanding Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-specific TSCM-enriched T cells with high proportions of CD4+ T cells and broad EBV antigen coverage. These cells showed tumor control in a xenograft model of EBV-induced lymphoma and were superior to previous ACT protocols in terms of tumor infiltration, in vivo proliferation, persistence, proportion of functional CD4+ T cells, and diversity of EBV antigen specificity. Thus, our protocol may pave the way for the next generation of potent unmodified antigen-specific cell therapies for EBV-associated diseases, including tumors, and other indications.

SUBMITTER: Palianina D 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC11343021 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Stem cell memory EBV-specific T cells control EBV tumor growth and persist in vivo.

Palianina Darya D   Mietz Juliane J   Stühler Claudia C   Arnold Brice B   Bantug Glenn G   Münz Christian C   Chijioke Obinna O   Khanna Nina N  

Science advances 20240823 34


Adoptive T cell therapy (ACT), the therapeutic transfer of defined T cell immunity to patients, offers great potential in the fight against different human diseases including difficult-to-treat viral infections, but persistence and longevity of the cells are areas of concern. Very-early-differentiated stem cell memory T cells (T<sub>SCMs</sub>) have superior self-renewal, engraftment, persistence, and anticancer efficacy, but their potential for antiviral ACT remains unknown. Here, we developed  ...[more]

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