- Jilani, Sameeha;
- Saco, Justin D;
- Mugarza, Edurne;
- Pujol-Morcillo, Aleida;
- Chokry, Jeffrey;
- Ng, Clement;
- Abril-Rodriguez, Gabriel;
- Berger-Manerio, David;
- Pant, Ami;
- Hu, Jane;
- Gupta, Rubi;
- Vega-Crespo, Agustin;
- Baselga-Carretero, Ignacio;
- Chen, Jia M;
- Shin, Daniel Sanghoon;
- Scumpia, Philip;
- Radu, Roxana A;
- Chen, Yvonne;
- Ribas, Antoni;
- Puig-Saus, Cristina
A major limitation to developing chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell therapies for solid tumors is identifying surface proteins highly expressed in tumors but not in normal tissues. Here, we identify Tyrosinase Related Protein 1 (TYRP1) as a CAR-T cell therapy target to treat patients with cutaneous and rare melanoma subtypes unresponsive to immune checkpoint blockade. TYRP1 is primarily located intracellularly in the melanosomes, with a small fraction being trafficked to the cell surface via vesicular transport. We develop a highly sensitive CAR-T cell therapy that detects surface TYRP1 in tumor cells with high TYRP1 overexpression and presents antitumor activity in vitro and in vivo in murine and patient-derived cutaneous, acral and uveal melanoma models. Furthermore, no systemic or off-tumor severe toxicities are observed in an immunocompetent murine model. The efficacy and safety profile of the TYRP1 CAR-T cell therapy supports the ongoing preparation of a phase I clinical trial.