Investigator

Mirjam H M Heemskerk

Professor in immunotherapy of cancer, with a particular focus on the development of cellular therapies · Leiden University Medical Center, Hematology

About

MHMMirjam H M Heemsk…
Papers(1)
WT1-specific TCRs dir…
Collaborators(2)
Peter A van VeelenRosa A van Amerongen
Institutions(1)
Leiden University

Papers

WT1-specific TCRs directed against newly identified peptides install antitumor reactivity against acute myeloid leukemia and ovarian carcinoma

Background Transcription factor Wilms’ tumor gene 1 (WT1) is an ideal tumor target based on its expression in a wide range of tumors, low-level expression in normal tissues and promoting role in cancer progression. In clinical trials, WT1 is targeted using peptide-based or dendritic cell-based vaccines and T-cell receptor (TCR)-based therapies. Antitumor reactivities were reported, but T-cell reactivity is hampered by self-tolerance to WT1 and limited number of WT1 peptides, which were thus far selected based on HLA peptide binding algorithms. Methods In this study, we have overcome both limitations by searching in the allogeneic T-cell repertoire of healthy donors for high-avidity WT1-specific T cells, specific for WT1 peptides derived from the HLA class I associated ligandome of primary leukemia and ovarian carcinoma samples. Results Using broad panels of malignant cells and healthy cell subsets, T-cell clones were selected that demonstrated potent and specific anti-WT1 T-cell reactivity against five of the eight newly identified WT1 peptides. Notably, T-cell clones for WT1 peptides previously used in clinical trials lacked reactivity against tumor cells, suggesting limited processing and presentation of these peptides. The TCR sequences of four T-cell clones were analyzed and TCR gene transfer into CD8+ T cells installed antitumor reactivity against WT1-expressing solid tumor cell lines, primary acute myeloid leukemia (AML) blasts, and ovarian carcinoma patient samples. Conclusions Our approach resulted in a set of naturally expressed WT1 peptides and four TCRs that are promising candidates for TCR gene transfer strategies in patients with WT1-expressing tumors, including AML and ovarian carcinoma.

130Works
1Papers
2Collaborators

Positions

2022–

Professor in immunotherapy of cancer, with a particular focus on the development of cellular therapies

Leiden University Medical Center · Hematology

2009–

Associate professor, Head of Laboratory of experimental hematology

Leiden University Medical Center · Department of Hematology

Education

1998

Post-doc

Netherlands Cancer Institute · Immunology

1994

PhD

Veterinary Faculty · Immunology

1990

Master in Science

Universiteit Leiden · Biomedische wetenschappen

Country

NL

Keywords
TCR gene therapyCancerImmunotherapyT cellsT cell therapy