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Pharmacological interventions enhance virus-free generation of TRAC-replaced CAR T cells

Authors :
Jonas Kath
Weijie Du
Alina Pruene
Tobias Braun
Bernice Thommandru
Rolf Turk
Morgan L. Sturgeon
Gavin L. Kurgan
Leila Amini
Maik Stein
Tatiana Zittel
Stefania Martini
Lennard Ostendorf
Andreas Wilhelm
Levent Akyüz
Armin Rehm
Uta E. Höpken
Axel Pruß
Annette Künkele
Ashley M. Jacobi
Hans-Dieter Volk
Michael Schmueck-Henneresse
Renata Stripecke
Petra Reinke
Dimitrios L. Wagner
Source :
Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development, Vol 25, Iss , Pp 311-330 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2022.

Abstract

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) redirected T cells are potent therapeutic options against hematological malignancies. The current dominant manufacturing approach for CAR T cells depends on retroviral transduction. With the advent of gene editing, insertion of a CD19-CAR into the T cell receptor (TCR) alpha constant (TRAC) locus using adeno-associated viruses for gene transfer was demonstrated, and these CD19-CAR T cells showed improved functionality over their retrovirally transduced counterparts. However, clinical-grade production of viruses is complex and associated with extensive costs. Here, we optimized a virus-free genome-editing method for efficient CAR insertion into the TRAC locus of primary human T cells via nuclease-assisted homology-directed repair (HDR) using CRISPR-Cas and double-stranded template DNA (dsDNA). We evaluated DNA-sensor inhibition and HDR enhancement as two pharmacological interventions to improve cell viability and relative CAR knockin rates, respectively. While the toxicity of transfected dsDNA was not fully prevented, the combination of both interventions significantly increased CAR knockin rates and CAR T cell yield. Resulting TRAC-replaced CD19-CAR T cells showed antigen-specific cytotoxicity and cytokine production in vitro and slowed leukemia progression in a xenograft mouse model. Amplicon sequencing did not reveal significant indel formation at potential off-target sites with or without exposure to DNA-repair-modulating small molecules. With TRAC-integrated CAR+ T cell frequencies exceeding 50%, this study opens new perspectives to exploit pharmacological interventions to improve non-viral gene editing in T cells.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23290501
Volume :
25
Issue :
311-330
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.007e0c658baf459b90751503a142b022
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.omtm.2022.03.018