SUMMARY/ABSTRACT While improvements in immune therapies have revolutionized treatments in some cancers, pediatric brain tumors are especially resistant to current immunotherapy treatments, including immune check point inhibitors. This may be because many pediatric brain tumors have been characterized as “immune cold”, with little to no immune cell infiltration. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapies have shown promise against fatal brain tumors such as diffuse midline glioma (DMG) in early clinical studies. However, in early studies, patients inevitably succumb to this fatal disease. This raises important questions about mechanisms of CAR T cell resistance and devising strategies to improve and prolong CAR T cell function. Targeting epigenetic programs has been identified as one strategy to overcome deficient immune responses in solid tumors through both tumor cell intrinsic and tumor microenvironment mechanisms. We have shown in DMG that inhibition of DNA methylation activates innate immune pathways that may stimulate immune cell recruitment and activity (Krug et al., Cancer Cell, 2019). Our data in CAR T cells deficient for a DNA methyl transferase (DNMT3A) displays reduced exhaustion and enhanced anti-tumor activity against multiple tumor models, including brain tumors (Prinzing et al., Science Translational Medicine, 2021). We hypothesize that combinatorial approaches that target distinct DMG and CAR T cell DNA methylomes represents a rational strategy to enhance CAR T cell therapy. We propose to test this in two specific aims: AIM1: Determine how tumor DNA demethylation in DMG impacts CAR T cell recruitment and function. We will test the hypothesis that inhibition of DNA methylation induced endogenous retroviral activation will enhance CART cell activation and persistence. AIM2: Determine if CAR T cell effector function is improved by DNA methylation inhibition in DMG. We will test the hypothesis that inhibition of DNA methylation in CAR T cells is a phenotype that translates to DMG, by preventing T cell exhaustion and improving long-term effector function.