Myeloma cell-intrinsic ANXA1 elevation and T cell dysfunction contribute to BCMA-negative relapse after CAR-T therapy.

Journal: Molecular Therapy : The Journal Of The American Society Of Gene Therapy
Published:
Abstract

Multiple myeloma (MM) relapse still occurs after a durable response to anti-B cell maturation antigen (BCMA) chimeric antigen receptor-engineered T (CAR-T) cell therapy with less-defined factors. Herein, we investigated a CAR-T-exposed MM patient who relapsed after 12 months of remission by single-cell transcriptome sequencing. The bone marrow CAR-T population at relapse exhibited exhaustion and proliferation attenuation. The recurrent myeloma cells were deficient in or weakly expressed TNFRSF17 (BCMA) but possessed an identical immunoglobulin clonality to the baseline tumor. Interestingly, combined with the transcriptome profile of the myeloma strains, MM cells with BCMA negativity featured high ANXA1 expression that was identified as an inferior prognostic indicator for MM patients. At a single-cell resolution, BCMA-negative myeloma could be present in the MM patients without CAR-T cell exposure and displayed an increased level of intrinsic ANXA1 transcripts. In vitro assays unveiled that Annexin A1 (ANXA1) elevation conferred growth capacity to BCMA-negative myeloma cells via AMPKα signaling activation and disturbed CAR-T cell fitness. Blockade of Annexin A1 reduced BCMA-negative myeloma cell proliferation. Murine models further demonstrated that Annexin A1 inhibition could effectively diminish BCMA-negative myeloma that escaped from CAR-T's attack. Together, our data identified ANXA1 as a potential target for BCMA-negative myeloma clearance. The ANXA1-targeting strategy might be helpful for CAR-T treatment optimization.

Authors
Shuangshuang Yang, Guixiang Wang, Jiahuan Chen, Wu Zhang, Jing Wu, Weiqing Liu, Ling Bai, Peide Huang, Jianqing Mi, Jie Xu
Relevant Conditions

Multiple Myeloma