Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy (Feb 2021)

Nanobody-based chimeric antigen receptor T cells designed by CRISPR/Cas9 technology for solid tumor immunotherapy

  • Fengzhen Mo,
  • Siliang Duan,
  • Xiaobing Jiang,
  • Xiaomei Yang,
  • Xiaoqiong Hou,
  • Wei Shi,
  • Cueva Jumbo Juan Carlos,
  • Aiqun Liu,
  • Shihua Yin,
  • Wu Wang,
  • Hua Yao,
  • Zihang Yu,
  • Zhuoran Tang,
  • Shenxia Xie,
  • Ziqiang Ding,
  • Xinyue Zhao,
  • Bruce D. Hammock,
  • Xiaoling Lu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41392-021-00462-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Chimeric antigen receptor-based T-cell immunotherapy is a promising strategy for treatment of hematological malignant tumors; however, its efficacy towards solid cancer remains challenging. We therefore focused on developing nanobody-based CAR-T cells that treat the solid tumor. CD105 expression is upregulated on neoangiogenic endothelial and cancer cells. CD105 has been developed as a drug target. Here we show the generation of a CD105-specific nanobody, an anti-human CD105 CAR-T cells, by inserting the sequences for anti-CD105 nanobody-linked standard cassette genes into AAVS1 site using CRISPR/Cas9 technology. Co-culture with CD105+ target cells led to the activation of anti-CD105 CAR-T cells that displayed the typically activated cytotoxic T-cell characters, ability to proliferate, the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines, and the specific killing efficacy against CD105+ target cells in vitro. The in vivo treatment with anti-CD105 CAR-T cells significantly inhibited the growth of implanted CD105+ tumors, reduced tumor weight, and prolonged the survival time of tumor-bearing NOD/SCID mice. Nanobody-based CAR-T cells can therefore function as an antitumor agent in human tumor xenograft models. Our findings determined that the strategy of nanobody-based CAR-T cells engineered by CRISPR/Cas9 system has a certain potential to treat solid tumor through targeting CD105 antigen.