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Noninvasive detection of tumor-infiltrating T cells by PET reporter imaging
Melissa N. McCracken, Dimitrios N. Vatakis, Dhaval Dixit, Jami McLaughlin, Jerome A. Zack, Owen N. Witte
Melissa N. McCracken, Dimitrios N. Vatakis, Dhaval Dixit, Jami McLaughlin, Jerome A. Zack, Owen N. Witte
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Technical Advance Oncology

Noninvasive detection of tumor-infiltrating T cells by PET reporter imaging

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Abstract

Adoptive transfer of tumor-reactive T cells can successfully reduce tumor burden; however, in rare cases, lethal on-target/off-tumor effects have been reported. A noninvasive method to track engineered cells with high sensitivity and resolution would allow observation of correct cell homing and/or identification of dangerous off-target locations in preclinical and clinical applications. Human deoxycytidine kinase triple mutant (hdCK3mut) is a nonimmunogenic PET reporter that was previously shown to be an effective tool to monitor whole-body hematopoiesis. Here, we engineered a construct in which hdCK3mut is coexpressed with the anti-melanoma T cell receptor F5, introduced this construct into human CD34 cells or PBMCs, and evaluated this approach in multiple immunotherapy models. Expression of hdCK3mut allowed engrafted cells to be visualized within recipient bone marrow, while accumulation of [18F]-L-FMAU in hdCK3mut-expressing T cells permitted detection of intratumoral homing. Animals that received T cells coexpressing hdCK3mut and the anti-melanoma T cell receptor had demonstrably higher signals in HLA-matched tumors compared with those in animals that received cells solely expressing hdCK3mut. Engineered T cells caused cytotoxicity in HLA/antigen-matched tumors and induced IFN-γ production and activation. Moreover, hdCK3mut permitted simultaneous monitoring of engraftment and tumor infiltration, without affecting T cell function. Our findings suggest that hdCK3mut reporter imaging can be applied in clinical immunotherapies for whole-body detection of engineered cell locations.

Authors

Melissa N. McCracken, Dimitrios N. Vatakis, Dhaval Dixit, Jami McLaughlin, Jerome A. Zack, Owen N. Witte

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Figure 5

hdCK3mut-expressing T cells developed in vivo are capable of cytokine production and activation.

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hdCK3mut-expressing T cells developed in vivo are capable of cytokine pr...
(A) Representative FACS plots of cultures incubated with PMA/ionomycin or (B) untreated. Subgate on CD8 cells showing intracellular IFN-γ by intracellular flow cytometry. IgG isotype was used as a control for background staining. (C) Percentage of CD8 cells that produce IFN-γ, shown as mean ± SD. K562 aAPCs and T cells were cocultured for 72 hours. Representative flow cytometry plots from T cells of F5/hdCK3mut animals cocultured with (D) MART-1–expressing aAPCs or (E) hdCK3mut aAPCs. F5 T cells are shown on the top row, and CD8 T cells are shown on the bottom row. (F) Total activated T cells after 72 hours coculture with aAPCs (CD25+CD71+) for F5/hdCK3mut or hdCK3mut recipients. NS by 1-way ANOVA, shown as mean + SEM (n = 3). (G) Engineered F5 T cell activation with aAPCs (**P < 0.005), shown as mean + SEM (n = 3).

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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