Effective control of acute myeloid leukaemia and acute lymphoblastic leukaemia progression by telomerase specific adoptive T-cell therapy Journal Article


Authors: Sandri, S.; De Sanctis, F.; Lamolinara, A.; Boschi, F.; Poffe, O.; Trovato, R.; Fiore, A.; Sartori, S.; Sbarbati, A.; Bondanza, A.; Cesaro, S.; Krampera, M.; Scupoli, M. T.; Nishimura, M. I.; Iezzi, M.; Sartoris, S.; Bronte, V.; Ugel, S.
Article Title: Effective control of acute myeloid leukaemia and acute lymphoblastic leukaemia progression by telomerase specific adoptive T-cell therapy
Abstract: Telomerase (TERT) is a ribonucleoprotein enzyme that preserves the molecular organization at the ends of eukaryotic chromosomes. Since TERT deregulation is a common step in leukaemia, treatments targeting telomerase might be useful for the therapy of hematologic malignancies. Despite a large spectrum of potential drugs, their bench-to-bedside translation is quite limited, with only a therapeutic vaccine in the clinic and a telomerase inhibitor at late stage of preclinical validation. We recently demonstrated that the adoptive transfer of T cell transduced with an HLA-A2-restricted T-cell receptor (TCR), which recognize human TERT with high avidity, controls human B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B-CLL) progression without severe side-effects in humanized mice. In the present report, we show the ability of our approach to limit the progression of more aggressive leukemic pathologies, such as acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) and B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (B-ALL). Together, our findings demonstrate that TERT-based adoptive cell therapy is a concrete platform of T cell-mediated immunotherapy for leukaemia treatment.
Journal Title: Oncotarget
ISSN: 1949-2553; 1949-2553
Publisher: Unknown  
Journal Place: United States
Date Published: 2017
Language: eng
DOI/URL:
Notes: LR: 20170606; JID: 101532965; OTO: NOTNLM; 2016/11/08 [received]; 2017/05/12 [accepted]; aheadofprint