Journal of Translational Medicine (Nov 2021)

Contextual reprogramming of CAR-T cells for treatment of HER2+ cancers

  • Zhifen Yang,
  • Lingyu Li,
  • Ahu Turkoz,
  • Pohan Chen,
  • Rona Harari-Steinfeld,
  • Maggie Bobbin,
  • Ofir Stefanson,
  • Hana Choi,
  • Violena Pietrobon,
  • Bennett Alphson,
  • Angshumala Goswami,
  • Vitaly Balan,
  • Alper Kearney,
  • Dharmesh Patel,
  • Jin Yang,
  • Damla Inel,
  • Veena Vinod,
  • Alessandra Cesano,
  • Bing Wang,
  • Kyung-Ho Roh,
  • Lei S. Qi,
  • Francesco M. Marincola

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12967-021-03132-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Background Adoptive transfer of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-engineered T cells combined with checkpoint inhibition may prevent T cell exhaustion and improve clinical outcomes. However, the approach is limited by cumulative costs and toxicities. Methods To overcome this drawback, we created a CAR-T (RB-340-1) that unites in one product the two modalities: a CRISPR interference-(CRISPRi) circuit prevents programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) expression upon antigen-encounter. RB-340-1 is engineered to express an anti-human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) CAR single chain variable fragment (scFv), with CD28 and CD3ζ co-stimulatory domains linked to the tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease and a single guide RNA (sgRNA) targeting the PD-1 transcription start site (TSS). A second constructs includes linker for activation of T cells (LAT) fused to nuclease-deactivated spCas9 (dCas9)-Kruppel-associated box (KRAB) via a TEV-cleavable sequence (TCS). Upon antigen encounter, the LAT-dCas9-KRAB (LdCK) complex is cleaved by TEV allowing targeting of dCas9-KRAB to the PD-1 gene TSS. Results Here, we show that RB-340-1 consistently demonstrated higher production of homeostatic cytokines, enhanced expansion of CAR-T cells in vitro, prolonged in vivo persistence and more efficient suppression of HER2+ FaDu oropharyngeal cancer growth compared to the respective conventional CAR-T cell product. Conclusions As the first application of CRISPRi toward a clinically relevant product, RB-340-1 with the conditional, non-gene editing and reversible suppression promotes CAR-T cells resilience to checkpoint inhibition, and their persistence and effectiveness against HER2-expressing cancer xenografts.