Molecular Medicine Israel

Loss of the HVEM Tumor Suppressor in Lymphoma and Restoration by Modified CAR-T Cells

Highlights

  • The interaction between HVEM and BTLA is lost in most follicular lymphomas
  • Loss of HVEM activates B cells and induces a supportive microenvironment
  • Soluble HVEM (solHVEM) restores the inhibitory BTLA signal and kills lymphoma cells
  • CAR-T cells that produce solHVEM (“micro-pharmacies”) are active against lymphoma

Summary

The HVEM (TNFRSF14) receptor gene is among the most frequently mutated genes in germinal center lymphomas. We report that loss of HVEM leads to cell-autonomous activation of B cell proliferation and drives the development of GC lymphomas in vivo. HVEM-deficient lymphoma B cells also induce a tumor-supportive microenvironment marked by exacerbated lymphoid stroma activation and increased recruitment of T follicular helper (TFH) cells. These changes result from the disruption of inhibitory cell-cell interactions between the HVEM and BTLA (B and T lymphocyte attenuator) receptors. Accordingly, administration of the HVEM ectodomain protein (solHVEM(P37-V202)) binds BTLA and restores tumor suppression. To deliver solHVEM to lymphomas in vivo, we engineered CD19-targeted chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells that produce solHVEM locally and continuously. These modified CAR-T cells show enhanced therapeutic activity against xenografted lymphomas. Hence, the HVEM-BTLA axis opposes lymphoma development, and our study illustrates the use of CAR-T cells as “micro-pharmacies” able to deliver an anti-cancer protein.

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