Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell adoptive therapy is set to transform the treatment of a rapidly expanding range of malignancies. Although the activation process of normal T cells is well characterized, comparatively little is known about the activation of cells via the CAR. Here we have used flow cytometry together with single-cell transcriptome profiling to characterize the starting material (peripheral blood mononuclear cells) and CAR therapeutic products of 3 healthy donors in the presence and absence of antigen-specific stimulation. Analysis of 53,191 single-cell transcriptomes showed APRIL-based CAR products to contain several subpopulations of cells, with cellular composition reproducible from donor to donor, and all major cellular subsets compatible with CAR expression. Only 50% of CAR-expressing cells displayed transcriptional changes upon CAR-specific antigen exposure. The resulting molecular signature for CAR T-cell activation provides a rich resource for future dissection of underlying mechanisms. Targeted data interrogation also revealed that a small proportion of antigen-responding CAR-expressing cells displayed an exhaustion signature, with both known markers and genes not previously associated with T-cell exhaustion. Comprehensive single-cell transcriptomic analysis thus represents a powerful way to guide the assessment and optimization of clinical-grade CAR-T-cells, and inform future research into the underlying molecular processes.
Keywords: CAR-T exhaustion; T cell activation; chimeric antigen receptor; single-cell transcriptomics.
© 2021 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.