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A foundation for universal T-cell based immunotherapy: T cells engineered to express a CD19-specific chimeric-antigen-receptor and eliminate expression of endogenous TCR

Authors :
Dean A. Lee
Helen Huls
Michael C. Holmes
Pei-Qi Liu
Chiara Bonini
Laurence J.N. Cooper
Partow Kebriaei
Yuanyue Zhou
Sourindra Maiti
Richard E. Champlin
Edward J. Rebar
Luigi Naldini
Brian Rabinovitch
Hiroki Torikai
Philip D. Gregory
Ling Zhang
Andreas Reik
Jeffrey C. Miller
Torikai, H1
Reik, A
Liu, Pq
Zhou, Y
Zhang, L
Maiti, S
Huls, H
Miller, Jc
Kebriaei, P
Rabinovitch, B
Lee, Da
Champlin, Re
Bonini, MARIA CHIARA
Naldini, Luigi
Rebar, Ej
Gregory, Pd
Holmes, Mc
Cooper, Lj
Source :
Blood, Blood; Vol 119
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Clinical-grade T cells are genetically modified ex vivo to express a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) to redirect specificity to a tumor associated antigen (TAA) thereby conferring antitumor activity in vivo. T cells expressing a CD19-specific CAR recognize B-cell malignancies in multiple recipients independent of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) because the specificity domains are cloned from the variable chains of a CD19 monoclonal antibody. We now report a major step toward eliminating the need to generate patient-specific T cells by generating universal allogeneic TAA-specific T cells from one donor that might be administered to multiple recipients. This was achieved by genetically editing CD19-specific CAR+ T cells to eliminate expression of the endogenous αβ T-cell receptor (TCR) to prevent a graft-versus-host response without compromising CAR-dependent effector functions. Genetically modified T cells were generated using the Sleeping Beauty system to stably introduce the CD19-specific CAR with subsequent permanent deletion of α or β TCR chains with designer zinc finger nucleases. We show that these engineered T cells display the expected property of having redirected specificity for CD19 without responding to TCR stimulation. CAR+TCRneg T cells of this type may potentially have efficacy as an off-the-shelf therapy for investigational treatment of B-lineage malignancies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
119
Issue :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7ada2876bd543b5915b436e8a3c47f79
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2012-01-405365