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Glioblastoma: new treatment attacks brain tumors from multiple angles

tissue cross-sections of a mouse brain
Microscopic image of tissue cross-sections of a mouse brain with a glioblastoma. The tumor cells are shown in turquoise, the CAR-T cells injected into the tumor in yellow and the immune cells (macrophages and microglia) adjacent to the tumor in pink. (Image: University of Basel, Tomás A. Martins)

Glioblastoma is the most common kind of malignant brain tumor in adults. So far, no treatment has been able to make this aggressive tumor permanently disappear. The tumor cells are too varied, and the microenvironment is too tumor-friendly. Researchers at the University of Basel and University Hospital Basel have now developed an immunotherapy that not only attacks the tumor—it also turns its microenvironment against it.

12 November 2024 | Angelika Jacobs

tissue cross-sections of a mouse brain
Microscopic image of tissue cross-sections of a mouse brain with a glioblastoma. The tumor cells are shown in turquoise, the CAR-T cells injected into the tumor in yellow and the immune cells (macrophages and microglia) adjacent to the tumor in pink. (Image: University of Basel, Tomás A. Martins)

For some years now, CAR T-cells have been bringing new momentum to immunotherapies against cancer. How it works: experts take the patient's T-cells and reprogram them in the lab so that they can recognize structures on cancer cells with the help of a receptor called chimeric antigen receptor (CAR). Once back in the body, the T-cells hunt down and eradicate the cancer cells. This method has already been very successful in some forms of leukemia.

But solid tumors and especially brain tumors present obstacles to the success of CAR T-cells. First, it's difficult for the cancer hunters to get inside a tumor. Second, not all the cancer cells necessarily have the structure the T-cells can recognize and attack. And third, solid tumors in human tissue have a microenvironment that fends off immune system attacks. “Especially in the brain, where T-cells aren't normally found, the environment is really hostile to them,” explains Professor Gregor Hutter of the University of Basel and the University Hospital Basel.

Tenacious tumors

Hutter and his team are searching for ways to fight glioblastoma. These brain tumors are unfortunately tenacious, usually returning even after operation and treatment. However, the time gained by an operation could be used to reprogram the patient's own T-cells into CAR T-cells in the lab. Injecting these directly into the regrowing tumor avoids the obstacle of the CAR T-cells not being able to get to the cancer. Once inside, the T-cells attack all cancer cells that carry the recognized structure.

From pro- to anti-tumor

The CAR T-cells developed by Hutter's team have an extra feature aimed at altering the microenvironment. The researchers also give the therapeutic T-cells a blueprint for a molecule. This molecule blocks the signals the tumor uses to hijack the immune cells in its environment for its own purposes. These signals allow the tumor to turn immune cells, or more precisely microglia and macrophages, into traitors to their own body. Instead of attacking the cancer, they prevent the immune system from attacking it.

Traitors turn back into defenders

Once the implanted molecule stops these tumor signals, macrophages and microglia can support the CAR T-cells in their attack on the glioblastoma— even on cancer cells that lack the specific recognized structure.


Original publication

Tomás A. Martins et al.
Enhancing anti-1 EGFRvIII CAR T cell therapy against glioblastoma with a paracrine SIRPγ-derived CD47 blocker.
Nature Communications (2024), doi: 10.1038/s41467-024-54129-w

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