Back to Search Start Over

Latent human herpesvirus 6 is reactivated in chimeric antigen receptor T cells

Authors :
Caleb A. Lareau
Yajie Yin
Katie Maurer
Katalin D. Sandor
Garima Yagnik
José Peña
Jeremy Chase Crawford
Anne M. Spanjaart
Jacob C. Gutierrez
Nicholas J. Haradhvala
Tsion Abay
Robert R. Stickels
Jeffrey M. Verboon
Vincent Liu
Jackson Southard
Ren Song
Wenjing Li
Aastha Shrestha
Laxmi Parida
Gad Getz
Marcela V. Maus
Shuqiang Li
Alison Moore
Rafael G. Amado
Aimee C. Talleur
Paul G. Thomas
Houman Dehghani
Thomas Pertel
Anshul Kundaje
Stephen Gottschalk
Theodore L. Roth
Marie J. Kersten
Catherine J. Wu
Robbie G. Majzner
Ansuman T. Satpathy
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Cell therapies have yielded durable clinical benefits for patients with cancer, but the risks associated with the development of therapies from manipulated human cells are still being understood. For example, we currently lack a comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms of neurotoxicity observed in patients receiving T cell therapies, including recent reports of encephalitis caused by human herpesvirus 6 (HHV-6) reactivation1. Here, via petabase-scale viral RNA data mining, we examine the landscape of human latent viral reactivation and demonstrate that HHV-6B can become reactivated in human CD4+ T cells in standard in vitro cultures. Using single-cell sequencing, we identify a rare population of HHV-6 ‘super-expressors’ (~1 in 300-10,000 cells) that possess high viral transcriptional activity in chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell culture before spreading to infect other cells in vitro. Through the analysis of single-cell sequencing data from patients receiving cell therapy products that are FDA-approved2 or used in clinical studies3,4, we identify the presence of CAR+, HHV-6 super-expressor T cells in vivo. Together, our study implicates cell therapy products as a source of lytic HHV-6 reported in clinical trials1,5–7 and has broad implications for the design, production, and monitoring of cell therapies.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4ec63a8c53880de2b646ab8bd497a0e0